Skip to content
Client Management

Net Promoter Score

What Net Promoter Score means in an agency context

Net Promoter Score, usually shortened to NPS, is based on one question: how likely is a client to recommend your agency to someone else? The answer comes back on a scale from 0 to 10. That sounds simple because it is simple. What matters is what the score is actually telling you.

For agencies, NPS is less about vanity reporting and more about relationship quality. A strong score usually means the client feels clear on progress, trusts the team, and sees enough value to put their name next to yours. A weak score usually means there is friction somewhere: approvals feel messy, communication feels reactive, or the client is not confident enough to recommend the relationship.

NPS is useful precisely because it is narrow. It does not try to measure every part of account health. It gives you a fast signal: is this relationship strong enough that the client would actively advocate for the agency, or not?

How NPS is calculated

The score comes from three groups. Clients who answer 9 or 10 are promoters. Clients who answer 7 or 8 are passives. Clients who answer 0 to 6 are detractors. To calculate NPS, subtract the percentage of detractors from the percentage of promoters.

Formula

NPS = % Promoters - % Detractors

Promoters

Scores 9 to 10. These clients are likely to refer, renew, and speak positively about the agency.

Passives

Scores 7 to 8. These clients are broadly satisfied but not enthusiastic enough to advocate.

Detractors

Scores 0 to 6. These clients are at higher risk of churn, complaints, or silent dissatisfaction.

Practical shortcut: if you want to calculate a score quickly, use the NPS calculator and treat the result as the start of a conversation, not the finish line.

What a good NPS score looks like for agencies

There is no single magic number that tells you an agency relationship is healthy. A score in positive territory is usually a good sign. A negative score usually means you have a relationship problem worth investigating. But the score only makes sense in context.

A small boutique agency with ten long-term clients will interpret NPS differently from a product-led SaaS company surveying thousands of users. Agencies have fewer accounts, higher contract value, and more relationship depth per client. That means one detractor matters a lot. It may reflect a serious delivery issue, a fit problem, or a decision-maker who no longer trusts the team.

The useful question is not "is this score world-class?" The useful question is "is the score improving, stable, or drifting in the wrong direction, and what do client comments tell us about why?"

When agencies should send NPS

Timing matters. If you send NPS too early, the client has not experienced enough of the relationship to answer honestly. If you send it only once a year, the score becomes too late to act on. The best timing depends on the engagement model.

Retainer relationships

Send on a regular cadence, usually quarterly. That gives you a repeatable signal without survey fatigue.

Project work

Send shortly after a meaningful delivery milestone, once the client has seen enough value to judge the relationship fairly.

High-touch enterprise accounts

Pair the score with a direct conversation. On a large account, the comment matters as much as the number.

What to do with promoters, passives, and detractors

Promoters

Ask for the next step while the goodwill is real: testimonial, referral, case study, or expansion conversation. Do not let promoter energy go unused.

Passives

These clients are often the most useful to learn from. They are not angry, but something is holding them back from recommending the agency. Ask what feels unclear or incomplete.

Detractors

Follow up quickly, ideally in person or live. A detractor without a response becomes churn risk. A detractor who feels heard may become recoverable.

Where agencies misuse NPS

The most common mistake is treating NPS like a dashboard trophy. A score on its own does not improve anything. What improves the relationship is what the team does after the score lands.

Agencies also misuse NPS when they send it to the wrong person. If the day-to-day contact is happy but the final decision-maker is frustrated, the score will hide the real risk. Likewise, surveying after a recent win may temporarily flatter the number without telling you what the steady-state relationship feels like.

NPS works best alongside the operational signals that drive client experience: clear status visibility, faster approvals, smoother delivery, and structured communication. If those basics are weak, the score will eventually reflect it.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Net Promoter Score?
Net Promoter Score is a loyalty metric based on one question: how likely a client is to recommend your agency on a scale from 0 to 10.
How is NPS calculated?
Subtract the percentage of detractors (scores 0 to 6) from the percentage of promoters (scores 9 to 10). Passives (scores 7 to 8) count toward the response total but do not change the score directly.
When should an agency send an NPS survey?
The best moments are after a meaningful delivery milestone, at regular points in a retainer relationship, or shortly after a project wraps, once the client has enough experience to answer honestly.
What should an agency do with detractor responses?
Follow up quickly, ask for specific context, and treat detractor comments as a relationship-repair workflow, not a data point to file away.
Is NPS enough on its own?
No. NPS is useful as a directional signal, but agencies still need context from client comments, retention data, approvals, and account health conversations.

Related Terms

Sagely

Put it into practice

Sagely helps agencies manage clients without the chaos: branded portals, approval workflows, and structured communication in one place.

Start free trial
Also in the Handbook