CUSTOMER FEEDBACK: THE GROWTH SECRET MOST UGANDAN BUSINESSES IGNORE

0
7

In today’s fast-changing business environment, many Ugandan companies continue to invest heavily in marketing, product design, and technology yet overlook one of the simplest and most powerful drivers of growth: listening to their customers.

Businesses that master the art of listening often uncover untapped opportunities that make them more agile, trusted, and responsive. When treated as a strategic resource rather than a routine formality, customer feedback becomes a blueprint for innovation. It reveals gaps, highlights strengths, and guides smarter, data-driven decisions.

Globally, leading firms have built entire innovation strategies around customer insights. In Uganda, however, feedback is too often treated as an afterthought or reduced to a complaint log disconnected from real change. Yet when listening is embedded as a core business philosophy, it has the power to transform organizations from the inside out.

Experts agree that effective listening builds trust, strengthens customer loyalty, and fuels innovation. In an era where a single social media post can influence public perception overnight, trust has emerged as the new currency of business success.

According to Mark Muyobo, CEO of NCBA Bank Uganda, listening to customers is not merely a process, it is a culture.

“The customer-obsession culture we have at NCBA is grounded in the belief that customers are the best source of direction for innovation. Every month, we collect and analyze thousands of feedback points from branches, digital platforms, contact centers, social media, and other customer touchpoints. What sets us apart is how we act on that feedback,” Muyobo said.

He explained that customer insights have directly informed upgrades to NCBA’s mobile app, making it faster, more intuitive, and user-friendly. Feedback from corporate clients has driven the development of simplified digital payment and cash-management solutions, while input from retail customers has influenced branch layout redesigns and improvements in personal banking services.

“Every comment is a spark for innovation. A small business owner’s idea can inspire a new loan product. It’s about turning insights into action,” he added.

Judith Ssennoga, an accountant and business consultant, agrees that customer feedback remains one of the most valuable yet underutilized tools in Uganda’s business landscape.

“Customer feedback is free, real-time market intelligence. Interestingly, it doesn’t require huge budgets just a mindset shift from defending old practices to seeking deeper understanding,” she said.

Ssennoga noted that as Uganda’s economy becomes more digitized and competition intensifies, businesses that treat customer feedback as a strategic asset will gain a decisive edge.

“Listening turns complaints into opportunities and challenges into catalysts for progress. The most successful organizations will be those that don’t just talk at their customers, but truly listen and act with intent,” she said.

Ultimately, she added, the path to sustainable growth is not drawn in boardrooms alone, but shaped by the voices of customers themselves.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here