Employee NPS® vs Customer NPS®: Understanding the Difference and Why Both Matter
In the quest to build thriving businesses, many companies focus heavily on customer satisfaction. After all, without customers, there’s no business. But increasingly, the savviest organisations are recognising that employee satisfaction is equally important - not only in its own right but because it directly influences the customer experience.
Two of the most popular metrics for assessing sentiment in these areas are Customer Net Promoter Score (NPS®) and Employee Net Promoter Score (eNPS). While similar in methodology, they serve distinct purposes and yield unique insights. So how do they differ, how are they connected, and why should leaders care about both?
Let’s explore.
What Is Net Promoter Score (NPS®)?
First introduced by Fred Reichheld in 2003, Net Promoter Score (NPS®) is a simple but powerful tool to measure loyalty and satisfaction. The standard NPS® question is:
“On a scale from 0 to 10, how likely are you to recommend our company to a friend or colleague?”
Based on the response, customers (or employees) are segmented into three groups:
The NPS® score is calculated by subtracting the percentage of Detractors from the percentage of Promoters.
For example, if 60% are Promoters and 20% are Detractors:
NPS = 60 - 20 = +40
What Is Customer NPS®?
Customer NPS® (or cNPS) measures how likely your customers are to recommend your business, product, or service to others. It’s used to assess customer loyalty and satisfaction across the customer journey—from first interaction to post-purchase support.
Why Customer NPS® Matters
However, it’s not perfect. NPS® is not diagnostic: it tells you there’s a problem (or success), but not why. This is why most NPS programs include an open-text follow-up like “Why did you give that score?” This is also why customer-focused organisations often engage in ‘Voice of the Customer’ programs and conduct deeper interviews with either their top customers or a representative sample.
What Is Employee NPS®?
Employee NPS® (eNPS) adapts the same core question for internal use:
“On a scale of 0 to 10, how likely are you to recommend our organisation as a place to work?”
It’s a measure of employee sentiment and loyalty and is often used as a proxy for engagement.
Why Employee NPS® Matters
Just like customer NPS®, employee NPS® is most useful when paired with qualitative feedback to understand the “why” behind the scores.
Key Differences Between Employee NPS® and Customer NPS®
Dimension |
Customer NPS (cNPS) |
Employee NPS (eNPS) |
Audience |
External: Customers, clients |
Internal: Employees, staff |
Question Focus |
Product/service recommendation |
Workplace recommendation |
Goal |
Measure loyalty and satisfaction |
Measure engagement and employee sentiment |
Drivers |
Product quality, service, price, support |
Culture, leadership, work-life balance |
Response Bias Risk |
Varies across segments, often voluntary |
Can be skewed by fear, anonymity concerns |
Frequency |
Post-interaction or regular pulse checks |
Quarterly or biannually |
Business Impact |
Direct impact on revenue and growth |
Indirect impact via productivity and culture |
How They Influence Each Other
While they measure different things, customer and employee NPS® are strongly interconnected. In fact, some experts suggest that employee satisfaction is a leading indicator of customer satisfaction: Happy employees make happy customers.
Going further, the British entrepreneur Sir Richard Branson has been quoted as saying “Clients do not come first. Employees come first. If you take care of your employees, they will take care of the clients.”
Here’s how we see this working:
Employees who feel empowered, supported, and motivated tend to deliver better customer service. This improves the customer experience, which, in turn, boosts customer NPS®.
Employees who are promoters often act as brand ambassadors. Their enthusiasm is contagious: on social media, in recruitment, and even in direct customer interactions.
When company values resonate with employees, they embody them more naturally in their interactions. This leads to authentic, consistent customer experiences.
Engaged employees are more likely to take initiative, solve problems, and improve processes, all of which directly enhance customer experience.
When and How to Use Each Metric
When to Use Customer NPS®
When to Use Employee NPS®
Best Practices for Customer NPS®
Best Practices for Employee NPS®
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
For Customer NPS®
For Employee NPS®
Should You Prioritise One Over the Other?
In short: no.
Both customer and employee sentiment are, in our opinion, essential. Focusing only on customers without listening to employees leads to burnout and turnover. On the other hand, prioritising employees without understanding customer needs may result in misaligned efforts.
Instead, adopt a holistic feedback strategy. Use cNPS and eNPS together, supported by qualitative insights, to get a rounded view of your organisation’s health.
Bringing It All Together: A Feedback Culture
To get the most value from NPS® - whether customer or employee - you need more than just the score. You need a feedback culture that values listening, reflection, and action.
Here are some final tips:
Conclusion
Employee NPS® and Customer NPS® may look similar on the surface, but they measure different relationships: internal loyalty vs. external loyalty. When used together, they create a powerful lens into the emotional and experiential heart of your business.
By listening to both employees and customers, being empathetic to their needs and ideas, acting on what you learn, and committing to continuous improvement, you lay the foundations for a business that grows with its people and its audience. Listening. Empathy. Action.
Need help setting up your customer and/or employee feedback strategy? At Kinvale, we specialise in helping B2B organisations design and execute effective and appropriate satisfaction programs. Whether you need to capture and interrogate customer or employee feedback, go further and carry out detailed interviews, or you are simply looking for some advice, we’re here to help.
👉 Contact us for a free consultation.