Practise the standard verbs for running a genuinely useful customer advisory board.
0 / 5 completed
1 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ a customer advisory board of our most engaged accounts twice a year, rather than guessing at their priorities from support tickets alone.'
We 'convene a board' — the standard, simple collocation for bringing together a customer advisory group. The other options are less idiomatic here.
2 / 5
Fill in: 'Skipping direct customer input in favour of internal assumptions can ___ a genuinely important need completely absent from the roadmap.'
We say internal-only assumptions will 'leave' a real need absent — the standard, natural collocation for the resulting blind spot. The other options aren't idiomatic here.
3 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ candid, critical feedback explicitly, since a board that only ever hears polite praise isn't actually giving us anything useful.'
We 'solicit feedback' — the standard, simple collocation for actively requesting honest customer input. The other options are less idiomatic here.
4 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ the board's recurring requests against our own roadmap honestly, rather than nodding along and quietly building something else entirely.'
We 'prioritize a request' — the standard, simple collocation for weighing customer input against actual plans. The other options are less idiomatic here.
5 / 5
Fill in: 'We ___ the loop with every board member afterward, showing what changed because of their input specifically.'
We 'close the loop' — the standard, simple collocation for reporting back on what came of an advisory group's input. The other options aren't idiomatic here.