{"site":{"name":"Koji","description":"AI-native customer research platform that helps teams conduct, analyze, and synthesize customer interviews at scale.","url":"https://www.koji.so","contentTypes":["blog","documentation"],"lastUpdated":"2026-05-11T15:26:44.424Z"},"content":[{"type":"documentation","id":"a18e71aa-1cec-4678-a643-32cd65b5a4d8","slug":"customer-quotes-guide","title":"Customer Quotes: How to Extract, Tag, and Use the Voice of Your Customer","url":"https://www.koji.so/docs/customer-quotes-guide","summary":"Customer quotes are the most persuasive evidence in product, marketing, and research arguments — but most teams have no system for collecting them at scale. A useful quote is specific, concrete, and action-driven (names a problem, quantifies cost, captures the switching trigger). Koji extracts 6-12 quote candidates per interview automatically, including verbatim text, audio timestamps, surrounding context, theme tags, and sentiment labels. For a 20-interview study this produces 120-240 organized, searchable quotes without manual transcript scrubbing. Teams use these quotes for product decisions, marketing copy, sales enablement, stakeholder readouts, and board updates. Koji insights chat lets you retrieve quotes by topic on demand, and integrations pipe quotes into Slack, Notion, and HubSpot.","content":"## Why customer quotes matter\n\nA single verbatim quote from a real customer is more persuasive than ten paragraphs of analysis. When a roadmap argument lands flat in a leadership meeting, it is almost always because the conclusion is presented without the customer voice that made it convincing in the first place. Quotes are the proof. They are what turn a chart into a decision.\n\nMarketing teams know this — they pay agencies thousands of euros to run focus groups just to harvest 6-8 quotes. Product teams know this too, but most of them don't have a system for collecting customer quotes at scale, so they default to \"I heard someone say…\" anecdotes that competitors can dismiss.\n\nThis guide covers what makes a customer quote useful, how to tag and store them so they're findable, and how Koji's AI research platform extracts quote-candidates from every interview automatically — turning every conversation into a searchable voice-of-customer library.\n\n## What makes a customer quote useful\n\nNot every line in an interview transcript is a usable quote. A good customer quote does at least one of the following:\n\n1. **Names a specific problem.** \"I spend three hours every Monday cleaning up data that the ingestion job missed\" beats \"data quality is a problem.\"\n2. **Quantifies the cost.** \"We lost two enterprise deals last quarter because we couldn't answer pricing questions fast enough\" beats \"pricing is confusing.\"\n3. **Reveals the emotional stakes.** \"I dread Mondays because that's when I have to do the reporting\" beats \"the reporting flow is painful.\"\n4. **Surfaces an unmet job.** \"I wish I could just ask the dashboard a question instead of building a filter\" beats \"I want better dashboards.\"\n5. **Captures the switching trigger.** \"The last straw was when our biggest client asked for a report and I had to say 'give me a week'\" beats \"we needed faster reporting.\"\n\nThe pattern: specific, concrete, action-driven. A quote that could be said by anyone about anything is not a useful quote. A quote that includes a moment in time, a number, or a feeling, is.\n\nBad quote: \"The product is good.\"\nGood quote: \"Last Tuesday I onboarded a new analyst in 15 minutes — that used to take a full day.\"\n\n## The traditional way: scrubbing transcripts manually\n\nThe old workflow for finding customer quotes looks like this:\n\n1. Record the interview\n2. Wait for transcription (Otter, Rev, or a researcher transcribing by hand)\n3. Read the transcript looking for memorable lines\n4. Copy-paste them into a quote bank document\n5. Tag the quote with the theme, the participant, and the study\n6. Hope you remember to search this document later\n\nFor a 10-interview study at 30 minutes per interview, this takes a junior researcher about 8-12 hours. For most teams it never happens at all — quotes get mentioned in a Slack thread and then disappear.\n\n## How Koji extracts customer quotes automatically\n\nKoji is built around the assumption that every conversation contains usable quotes, and they should be findable without humans scrubbing transcripts. Here is what happens after each interview:\n\n### Quote candidates per interview\n\nWhen the interview ends, Koji's analysis pipeline reads the full transcript and extracts quote candidates — lines that meet the \"specific, concrete, action-driven\" criteria above. Each candidate includes:\n\n- The verbatim line, exactly as the participant said it\n- The timestamp in the audio (for voice interviews) so you can verify tone and context\n- The surrounding context — what question prompted the quote, and what came right before and after\n- A theme tag based on the conversation's topics\n- A sentiment label (positive, negative, neutral)\n\nFor a 30-minute interview, Koji typically surfaces 6-12 quote candidates. For a study of 20 interviews, you end up with 120-240 quotes that are already organized, themed, and searchable.\n\n### Themes across the study\n\nQuotes from individual interviews aggregate into theme clusters across the study. If 8 participants mention slow reporting, those 8 quotes cluster under a \"Reporting speed\" theme automatically. You see the theme frequency, the average sentiment, and the strongest 3-5 supporting quotes for each one — without writing a single tag yourself.\n\nThis is the core advantage of an AI-native research platform. Manual coding takes hours per interview. Koji does it in under a minute.\n\n### Insights chat for finding the right quote\n\nWhen you need a quote for a specific argument, you can ask Koji directly: \"Find quotes about pricing being a blocker\" or \"What did people say about the onboarding flow?\" The insights chat searches across all interviews in the study and returns the strongest quote candidates with citations back to the original interview — so you can verify the context and audio.\n\nFor marketing teams writing case studies or pitch decks, this collapses a half-day of transcript scrubbing into a 10-second prompt.\n\n## How to use customer quotes in your work\n\n### Product decisions\n\nWhen you propose a feature, lead with the customer quote that motivated it. \"Three of our last ten interviews said 'I waited a week to get this report.'\" beats \"users want faster reporting.\" Pin the quotes to your Linear or Jira tickets so they survive turnover.\n\n### Marketing copy\n\nUse real customer phrasing as headlines. If five customers said \"I dread Mondays\" about your category's pain, \"Stop dreading Mondays\" is a better landing-page hook than anything a copywriter can invent. Koji teams routinely mine the most-repeated phrases across interviews for ad copy and landing pages.\n\n### Sales enablement\n\nKeep a quote library by buyer persona. When the AE walks into a discovery call with a CFO, they should have three quotes from CFOs already in the deck. Koji exports quotes by theme and persona to CSV, JSON, or Notion (via the MCP integration).\n\n### Stakeholder readouts\n\nNever present a research finding without the supporting quote. The quote is the proof. A theme without a quote is an opinion.\n\n### Investor and board updates\n\nQuotes from real customers carry more weight than NPS scores. A founder showing three verbatim quotes in a board deck signals \"we talk to customers\" in a way no chart can.\n\n## What to avoid\n\n- **Cherry-picking confirmation quotes.** If 7 of 10 people said the feature was confusing and you quote the 3 who liked it, you're lying to yourself. Koji shows theme frequency to keep you honest.\n- **Anonymizing too aggressively.** \"A customer said…\" is weak. \"Sarah, a marketing director at a 200-person SaaS company, said…\" is strong. Even when you anonymize for privacy, keep enough context to make the quote credible.\n- **Editing for grammar.** Verbatim means verbatim. The pauses, the hedges, the colloquialisms — that's what makes the quote believable.\n- **Using quotes from low-quality interviews.** Koji's quality gate filters out drive-by interviews automatically; manually-collected quotes don't have this filter.\n\n## Setting up a customer-quote system in 4 steps\n\n1. **Run interviews with an AI moderator** so transcripts and quotes are extracted automatically. Even 5-10 interviews a month builds a meaningful quote library.\n2. **Let themes form across studies** — Koji tags interviews automatically and clusters quotes by topic, so you don't have to.\n3. **Make quotes searchable** — use the insights chat to retrieve quotes by topic, sentiment, or persona on demand.\n4. **Pipe quotes into your tools** — Koji integrates with Slack (for daily/weekly quote digests), Notion (via MCP), and HubSpot (for sales enablement). Set the integration up once and never copy-paste a quote again.\n\nOnce you have this loop running, every cross-functional argument gets sharper — because the customer is always in the room, in their own words.\n\n## Related Resources\n\n- [Real-Time Research Insights](/docs/real-time-research-insights) — see quotes and themes the moment an interview completes\n- [Understanding Themes & Patterns](/docs/understanding-themes-patterns) — how Koji clusters quotes into themes\n- [AI-Generated Insights](/docs/ai-generated-insights) — the full analysis pipeline behind quote extraction\n- [Structured Questions Guide](/docs/structured-questions-guide) — pair quantitative answers with qualitative quotes\n- [Generating Research Reports](/docs/generating-research-reports) — reports with theme-grouped supporting quotes\n- [Exporting Research Data](/docs/exporting-research-data) — pull quotes into CSV, JSON, or your CRM\n- [Voice of Customer Research Program](/docs/voice-of-customer-research-program) — building a continuous quote pipeline","category":"Analysis & Synthesis","lastModified":"2026-05-11T03:21:52.859903+00:00","metaTitle":"Customer Quotes: Extract, Tag, and Use Voice of Customer","metaDescription":"Customer quotes turn analysis into decisions. Learn what makes a quote useful, how Koji extracts quotes automatically from every interview, and how to use them in product and marketing.","keywords":["customer quotes","voice of customer quotes","customer quote library","user research quotes","interview quotes","customer testimonial extraction","verbatim quotes","customer feedback quotes","interview highlights","quote extraction software"],"aiSummary":"Customer quotes are the most persuasive evidence in product, marketing, and research arguments — but most teams have no system for collecting them at scale. A useful quote is specific, concrete, and action-driven (names a problem, quantifies cost, captures the switching trigger). Koji extracts 6-12 quote candidates per interview automatically, including verbatim text, audio timestamps, surrounding context, theme tags, and sentiment labels. For a 20-interview study this produces 120-240 organized, searchable quotes without manual transcript scrubbing. Teams use these quotes for product decisions, marketing copy, sales enablement, stakeholder readouts, and board updates. Koji insights chat lets you retrieve quotes by topic on demand, and integrations pipe quotes into Slack, Notion, and HubSpot.","aiPrerequisites":["Familiarity with user research interviews","Basic understanding of qualitative analysis"],"aiLearningOutcomes":["What makes a customer quote useful vs. throwaway","How to extract quotes from interviews without manual transcript scrubbing","How Koji surfaces quote candidates automatically per interview","How to use customer quotes in product, marketing, sales, and stakeholder readouts","How to set up a continuous customer-quote pipeline in Koji"],"aiDifficulty":"beginner","aiEstimatedTime":"10 min read"}],"pagination":{"total":1,"returned":1,"offset":0}}