Returning
from an interesting SAP Now event in Berlin with a strong attendee
focus on customer experience is the perfect opportunity to start thinking about
how to thrive as a company in the age of the customer. Being busy with and at
our own valantic booth and an exciting IoT-Chatbot
showcase I sincerely could not attend as many presentations as I wanted to.
First let’s
establish what the age of the customer means.
What is the age of the customer?
A few years
ago the term ‚the customer is in control’ was coined. This was back in the
first hype around social media, around the same time the term ‚social CRM’ got
created. Some companies, for example Microsoft, are still using it. In the
beginning ‚the customer is in control’ referred to the idea that social media
put customers in a far more powerful position vs. businesses, because the
higher reach that social media offered, changed the balance of powers between
customers and vendors.
Or so
vendors of enterprise software argued.
The
‚customer being in control’ is certainly one way to describe an age of the
customer, even a very strong one.
Forrester Research is somewhat more balanced. Forrester
describes the age of the customer as the combination of a shift of power from
institutions to customers and the disruptive forces of digitalization. This
combination would “alter market fundamentals and force companies to change
strategic direction and rethink operating models”.
As part of
the vivid discussion following my post Ten Questions you always wanted to
ask about CX
on CustomerThink, Harley Manning, VP and Research Director covering customer
experience at Forrester Research added some clarification. He stated that the
change from analogue media (paper, rotary phone, etc.) to digital media allows
customers to more easily compare products and services online. Manning
describes this as a “POTENTIAL shift of power to consumers” (emphasis his). It,
however, is part of the customer’s job to use the tools they have at hand. This
is something they often do not do.
In
addition, companies also do (and need to) react to changing circumstances. They
do this in different ways.
As a
consequence there is a continuous pendulum situation instead of equilibrium.
Both parties, customers and vendors, are looking for their own advantage.
In the same
thread I defined the age of the customer as a vision: The age of the customer
is reached when companies are consistently adopting an outside-in view and
define their success based upon making their customers successful.
Additionally, there are equal powers of negotiation between customers and
vendors and an information balance.
As this
vision is not yet achieved, there is also lacking (mutual) trust. The result of
this lack of trust is often a ‘battle of tools’. Every time one side invents a
new method or tool, there is a counter-invention.
A mindset for the age of
the customer
The way out
could be very simple and is based on businesses applying the two concepts of a
trustful exchange of value and an outside-in view.
I hear you
saying that a purchase is an exchange of value. Glad you mentioned this. This
observation is right, or rather, it can be right. The concepts of receiving
value are vastly different between customers and businesses. For a customer
value comes out of the ability to achieve the desired goal out of a purchase,
for a business the value comes out of the transaction.
A customer
can gauge the value she gets only in use, which means well after the
transaction took place. In other words: The company received value (money)
while the customer appreciates value in use. This value may accumulate to the
purchasing price or not. As a consequence, customers need to show considerable
trust in the vendor’s product or service.
The second
concept evolves around answering the question what it is that the customer
expects and then delivering something as close as possible to this. An
important part of it is also being true to the own brand promise and the
matching brand messaging.
The consequence
is the need for a customer engagement strategy. As I, as well as several
others, have written, engaged customers are the better customers. Numerous
studies showed that experience has a measurable impact.
And
experiences can only be delivered through engagements.
Taking Action
Necessary
preconditions to successfully implementing the mindset necessary for thriving
in the age of the customer are building up a brand image (brand experience) and
a corporate culture with a messaging that consistently transports the desired brand
image.
Once this
is established, it is possible and necessary to look at the two concepts that
help implementing the customer orientated mindset.
About value
As said
above, customers need to exhibit a lot of trust into vendors. They need to
trust that they will eventually accrue the value they paid for.
One key way
business can earn and maintain this trust is by knowing their customer and
continuously engaging with them in a way that is meaningful for the customer.
That way, it is also possible to identify what customers actually consider as
value. One thing is for sure, customers’ view at value is different from a
business’s view.
Why is it
important? Well, simply because it helps in fulfilling the higher order
customer expectations and therefore building and increasing trust in the business.
However, an
important rule needs to be observed here: Only ask for data that is related to
the objective that the customer has in mind and only use it for purposes of
helping the customer achieve this objective.
About customer expectations
Customer
expectations can be divided into three layers, which also define their value to
the customers. The mere execution of delivering to a requirement fulfils the
base expectation and is not as valuable as also fulfilling higher level
expectations.
· Base expectations. These revolve
around the fulfilment of the desire that a customer has, be it a need for
information, service or an actual purchase. This is about reliability and
accuracy and there is no prize to be won on this level. On the other hand,
everything can be lost by not delivering on this level
· Efficiency expectations. Efficiency
is about making the fulfilment of the customer desire as frictionless as
possible for the customer as it can be done, given the constraints that a
business operates under. However, delivering to efficiency expectations becomes
increasingly important. However, their fulfilment is still not sufficient to thrive
in the age of the customer. But it is a mandatory precondition.
· Joy expectations. These are the
expectations that create loyal customers, if they are fulfilled. And these,
together with any bad experiences, create individual experiences that remain. On
the other hand, they can easily become base or efficiency expectations. That is
also why they need to be used with judgement. However, it is important that the
customers feel like they are treated as humans, by humans.
And that
determines the way ahead. First be clear about your current situation, what you
want to achieve and who the audience is. Then build your strategy, including
matching KPIs that you can use to determine your progress along the way.
Implement
it.
Measure
your progress using the KPIs and adapt regularly.
Think big,
act small.
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