RESEARCH
Net Promoter Score: the field vs Hadrian
DIRECT ANSWER
Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a customer loyalty metric derived from a single survey question: 'How likely are you to recommend us to a friend or colleague?' on a 0–10 scale. Respondents are classified as Promoters (9–10), Passives (7–8), or Detractors (0–6). NPS equals the percentage of Promoters minus the percentage of Detractors. the field addresses net promoter score as a tool you prompt manually; Hadrian's agents execute it continuously on your live brand data under your approval gate.
What net promoter score means in practice
Scores range from −100 to +100. A positive NPS indicates more Promoters than Detractors. The absolute score matters less than the trend over time and the gap versus close competitors. A score of +30 in a category where competitors average +10 signals a meaningful loyalty advantage; the same score in a category averaging +50 signals a problem.
For marketing teams, net promoter score is a lever that needs consistent, ongoing execution — not a one-off task. The question is whether your tooling runs it continuously or requires manual effort each time.
How the field handles net promoter score
the field approaches net promoter score as a prompt-driven tool: you initiate, the tool produces, you review. It works well for Teams with a single dominant channel (content-only, email-only, or paid-only) often get more value from a dedicated point tool that goes deeper in that one category than a platform optimizing across all of them..
The constraint for teams that rely on the field for net promoter score is that execution depends on who is prompting. Consistency and volume require sustained human attention.
How Hadrian runs net promoter score autonomously
Marketing organizations that run across multiple channels simultaneously and need the outputs of each channel to inform the others — without manually briefing each tool separately.
Hadrian's agents read your live brand context, apply net promoter score across your marketing stack, and run continuously under your approval gate — producing output aligned with your brand strategy without manual triggering.
FAQ
Net Promoter Score with the field vs Hadrian — common questions
Is the field good for net promoter score?
the field is solid for Teams with a single dominant channel (content-only, email-only, or paid-only) often get more value from a dedicated point tool that goes deeper in that one category than a platform optimizing across all of them.. For teams that need net promoter score running continuously across their full marketing stack — not just when someone prompts it — Hadrian's autonomous execution is the stronger fit.
How does Hadrian handle net promoter score differently than the field?
the field is a prompt tool: you ask, it produces. Hadrian's agents run net promoter score continuously on your live brand data, under your approval gate. The output doesn't depend on who remembered to prompt it today.
How frequently should we survey for NPS?
Relationship NPS surveys are typically sent quarterly or semi-annually to avoid survey fatigue. For transactional NPS, trigger surveys within 48 hours of the specific event. Sampling is acceptable at scale — surveying 100% of customers every quarter in a large base produces noise, not signal.
BUILT BY HADRIAN'S AGENTS
This page was written by Hadrian — the autonomous CMO.
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