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воскресенье, 8 ноября 2015 г.

Competing on Customer Journeys


ARTWORK: HONG HAO, MY THINGS NO. 5, 2002, SCANNED OBJECTS, DIGITAL C-PRINT 120 X 210 CM

  • David C. Edelman and 
  • Marc Singer

  • The explosion of digital technologies over the past decade has created “empowered” consumers so expert in their use of tools and information that they can call the shots, hunting down what they want when they want it and getting it delivered to their doorsteps at a rock-bottom price. In response, retailers and service providers have scrambled to develop big data and analytics capabilities in order to understand their customers and wrest back control. For much of this time, companies have been reacting to customers, trying to anticipate their next moves and position themselves in shoppers’ paths as they navigate the decision journey from consideration to purchase.
    Now, leveraging emerging technologies, processes, and organizational structures, companies are restoring the balance of power and creating new value for brands and buyers alike. Central to this shift is a fresh way of thinking: Rather than merely reacting to the journeys that consumers themselves devise, companies are shaping their paths, leading rather than following. Marketers are increasingly managing journeys as they would any product. Journeys are thus becoming central to the customer’s experience of a brand—and as important as the products themselves in providing competitive advantage.
    Consider how one company, Oakland-based Sungevity, competes on its ability to shape the journey. At first glance, Sungevity looks like a typical residential solar panel provider. But closer inspection reveals that the company’s business is to manage the end-to-end process of sales and custom installation, coordinating the work of an ecosystem of companies that supply, finance, install, and service the panels. Sungevity’s “product” is a seamless, personalized digital customer journey, based on innovative management of data about the solar potential of each home or business. Sungevity makes the journey so compelling that once customers encounter it, many never even consider competitors.
    One of us (David) experienced the Sungevity journey firsthand. The process began when he received a mailing with the message “Open this to find out how much the Edelman family can save on energy costs with solar panels.” The letter within contained a unique URL that led to a Google Earth image of David’s house with solar panels superimposed on the roof. The next click led to a page with custom calculations of energy savings, developed from Sungevity’s estimates of the family’s energy use, the roof angle, the presence of nearby trees, and the energy-generation potential of the 23 panels the company expected the roof to hold.
    Another click connected David through his desktop to a live sales rep looking at the same pages David was. The rep expertly answered his questions and instantly sent him links to videos that explained the installation process and the economics of leasing versus buying. Two days later, Sungevity e‑mailed David with the names and numbers of nearby homeowners who used its system and had agreed to serve as references. After checking these references, David returned to Sungevity’s site, where a single click connected him to a rep who knew precisely where he was on the journey and had a tailored lease ready for him. The rep e‑mailed it and walked David through it, and then David e‑signed. When he next visited the website, the landing page had changed to track the progress of the permitting and installation, with fresh alerts arriving as the process proceeded. Now, as a Sungevity customer, David receives regular reports on his panels’ energy generation and the resulting savings, along with tips on ways to conserve energy, based on his household’s characteristics.
    Starting with its initial outreach and continuing to the installation and ongoing management of David’s panels, Sungevity customized and automated each step of the journey, making it so simple—and so compelling—for him to move from one step to the next that he never actively considered alternative providers. In essence, the company reconfigured the classic model of the consumer decision journey, immediately paring the consideration set to one brand, streamlining the evaluation phase, and delivering David directly into a “loyalty loop,” where he remains in a monogamous and open-ended engagement with the firm. Sungevity’s journey strategy is working. Sales have doubled in the past year to more than $65 million, exceeding growth targets and making Sungevity the fastest-growing player in the residential solar business.
    R1511E_EDELMAN_STREAMLINING

    Getting Proactive

    McKinsey’s marketing and sales practice has spent more than six years studying consumers’ decision journeys. The term (as explained in “Branding in the Digital Age,” HBR, December 2010) broadly describes how people move from initially considering a product or service to purchasing it and then bonding with the brand. More narrowly, the term can refer to the sequence of interactions consumers have before they achieve a certain aim—for instance, transferring cable service to a new address, or even discovering and buying the right mascara. Many firms have become competent at understanding the journeys their customers take and optimizing their experience with individual touchpoints along the way. The more sophisticated companies have redesigned their operations and organizations to support integrated journeys (see “The Truth About Customer Experience,” HBR, September 2013). Still, firms have largely been reactive, improving the efficiency of existing journeys or identifying and fixing pain points in them.
    We’re now seeing a significant shift in strategy, from primarily reactive to aggressively proactive. Across retail, banking, travel, home services, and other industries, companies are designing and refining journeys to attract shoppers and keep them, creating customized experiences so finely tuned that once consumers get on the path, they are irresistibly and permanently engaged. Unlike the coercive strategies companies used a decade ago to lock in customers (think cellular service contracts), cutting-edge journeys succeed because they create new value for customers: Customers stay because they benefit from the journey itself.
    Best practitioners aim not just to improve the existing journey but to expand it.
    Through our experience advising more than 50 companies on journey architecture, infrastructure, and organizational design; our deep engagement with dozens of chief digital officers and more than 100 digital-business leaders worldwide; and our research involving more than 200 companies on best practices for building digital capabilities, we have seen this shift unfold. And although it is still early, we believe that an ability to shape customer journeys will become a decisive source of competitive advantage.

    Four Key Capabilities

    Companies building the most effective journeys master four interconnected capabilities: automation, proactive personalization, contextual interaction, and journey innovation. Each of these makes journeys “stickier”—more likely to draw in and permanently capture customers. And although the capabilities all rely on sophisticated IT (see the sidebar “New Journey Technologies”), they depend equally on creative design thinking and novel managerial approaches, as we’ll explore later.

    Automation.

    Automation involves the digitization and streamlining of steps in the journey that were formerly done manually. Consider the analog process of depositing a check, which used to require a trip to the bank or ATM. With digital automation, you simply photograph the check with your smartphone and deposit it via an app. Similarly, researching, buying, and arranging delivery of, say, a new TV can now be a one-stop digital process. By allowing consumers to execute formerly complex journey processes quickly and easily, automation creates the essential foundation for sticky journeys. This may seem self-evident, but companies have only recently started to build robust automation platforms expressly designed to enhance journeys. And consumers can readily see who does it well. Superior automation, while highly technical, is something of an art, turning complex back-end operations into simple, engaging, increasingly app-based front-end experiences.
    Consider how Sonos, the intelligent connected music system, automates setup. The process used to involve threading wires throughout the house, hooking up speakers to a computer, and creating separate online accounts with music providers. Sonos streamlines setup with wireless speakers (just press a button to connect them) and an app that adds music-streaming sources with a few taps and allows users to select music, control volume, and choose what plays in which room—all from a mobile device.

    Proactive personalization.

    Building on the automation capability, companies should take information gleaned either from past interactions with a customer or from existing sources and use it to instantaneously customize the shopper’s experience. Amazon’s recommendation engine and intelligent reordering algorithm (it knows what printer ink you need) are familiar examples. But remembering customer preferences is only the beginning; the personalization capability extends to optimizing the next steps in a customer’s journey. At the moment a customer engages (for example, by responding to a message or launching an app), the firm must analyze the customer’s behavior and tailor its next interaction accordingly. Companies such as Pega and ClickFox (a firm in which McKinsey has an ownership stake) offer applications that track customers across many channels, blending data from multiple sources (such as transaction and browsing histories, customer service interactions, and product usage) to create a single view of what customers are doing and what happens as a result. This allows real-time insights about their behavior—in effect, isolating moments when the company can influence the journey—and permits customized messaging or functionality (for example, immediately putting a valued traveler on an upgrade list). The retailer Kenneth Cole reconfigures elements on its website according to a visitor’s interaction with the site over time: Some people see more product reviews, while others see more images, videos, or special offers. The company’s algorithm constantly learns which content and configuration work best for each visitor and renders the site accordingly, in real time.
    L’Oréal’s Makeup Genius app takes these capabilities a step further, allowing customers to try on makeup virtually and delivering ever-more-personalized real-time responses. The app photographs a customer’s face, analyzes more than 60 characteristics, and then displays images showing how various products and shade mixes achieve different looks. Customers can select a look they like and instantly order the right products online or pick them up in a store. As the app tracks how the customer uses it and what she buys, it learns her preferences, makes inferences based on similar customers’ choices, and tailors its responses. L’Oréal has created an enjoyable experience that quickly and seamlessly leads the customer along the path from consideration to purchase and, as the degree of personalization increases, into the loyalty loop. With 14 million users already, the app has become a critical asset both as a branded channel for engaging with customers and as a fire hose of incoming information on how customers engage.

    Contextual interaction.

    Another key capability involves using knowledge about where a customer is in a journey physically (entering a hotel) or virtually (reading product reviews) to draw him forward into the next interactions the company wants him to pursue. This may mean changing the look of a screen that follows a key step, or serving up a relevant message triggered by the customer’s current context. For example, an airline app may display your boarding pass as you enter the airport, or a retail site may tell you the status of your recent order the moment you land on the home page.
    More-sophisticated versions enable a series of interactions that further shape and strengthen the journey experience. Starwood Hotels, for example, is rolling out an app that texts a guest with her room number as she enters the hotel, checks her in with a thumbprint scan on her smartphone, and, as she approaches her room, turns her phone into a virtual key that opens the door. The app then sends well-timed and personalized recommendations for entertainment and dining.

    Journey innovation.

    Innovation, the last of the four required capabilities, occurs through ongoing experimentation and active analysis of customer needs, technologies, and services in order to spot opportunities to extend the relationship with the customer. Ultimately, the goal is to identify new sources of value for both the company and consumers.
    Best practitioners design journey software to enable open-ended testing. They continually do A/B testing to compare alternative versions of message copy and interface design to see which works better. And they prototype new services and analyze the results, aiming not just to improve the existing journey but to expand it, adding useful steps or features.
    A journey innovation may be as simple as Starwood’s introducing a prompt for ordering room service after a guest uses a key, remembering previous orders and using those as the initial options. Or it may be more sophisticated, expanding a journey by integrating multiple services into a single straight-through customer experience. Delta Air Lines’ mobile app, for example, has become a travel management tool for almost every aspect of an airplane trip, from booking and boarding to reviewing in-flight entertainment to ordering an Uber car upon landing. Kraft has expanded its recipe app to become a pantry management tool, generating a shopping list that seamlessly connects with the grocery delivery service Peapod. Key to these expanded journeys is often their integration with other service providers. Because this increases the value of the journey, carefully handing customers off to another firm can actually enhance the journey’s stickiness.

    Capabilities in Practice

    Let’s return to Sungevity to see how it combines these four capabilities to create a valuable and evolving journey.
    From initial customer contact to installation and beyond, Sungevity has automated most steps of the journey, including collecting and integrating customer data, calculating energy use, and creating personalized visualizations of the panels on a roof. Crucial here is sophisticated use of APIs (application interfaces) to pull data from other providers, such as Google Earth and the real estate service Trulia, to assemble a picture of the customer. Data analysis allowed proactive personalization that targeted David with customized information such as costs, timeline, and anticipated breakeven and savings, all available across multiple channels, including e‑mail, Sungevity’s site, and customer reps. Contextual interaction capabilities allowed Sungevity to serve the right content in the right channel for each of David’s interactions—for example, using APIs to track the panel installation by the company’s local contractor and then regularly updating David’s landing page with the latest status.
    Sungevity is continuing to pursue journey innovation, using what it knows about its customers to extend the journey into energy storage and conservation services. Not long ago, such activity might have been a generic upsell, blanketing a customer segment with pitches for a new offering. Today the outreach can be to a single individual, and the strategy not simply to sell another product but to invite customers to take the next step on their personalized journeys. With granular data on each household’s energy use and habits, Sungevity can advise people one-on-one about managing their energy consumption, and it can recommend a tailored package of products and services to help them reduce their dependence on the grid and reap savings. To this end, the firm will soon offer batteries from the German supplier Sonnenbatterie to store surplus electricity generated by the solar panels. It is also creating customer dashboards that track energy production and use. Ultimately, the firm plans to integrate its services with home-management networks that can automate energy conservation (adjusting lights and heating, for example) according to decision rules that Sungevity develops with each customer. Another project is to create conservation-oriented customer communities.

    The Rise of the Journey Product Manager

    Technology smarts are necessary but not sufficient for designing competitive, continuously improving journeys; companies also need new organizational structures and types of management. We have worked with many “digital native” firms that have had the luxury of building organizations optimized from the outset for creating effective journeys—and their experience offers lessons for traditional firms. We have found that traditional companies are most successful when they focus on selected high-value journeys and create dedicated teams to support them, drawing from across the firm’s functions.
    While we’ve seen many different organizational models for product-managing journeys (and an array of titles for the executives involved), they generally have a similar structure.
    R1511E_EDELMAN_ORGANIZATION
    Overseeing all of a firm’s interactions with customers is someone in the role of chief experience officer, a relatively new position in the C-suite. Chief digital officers are also starting to have this top-level responsibility. Typically reporting to this executive is a journey-focused strategist who helps guide decisions on which journey investments and customer segments to focus on; he or she prioritizes current journeys for digital development and spots opportunities for new ones.
    Sitting at the center of the action for a given journey is new type of leader, the “journey product manager.” People in this role (more commonly called “solution managers,” “experience managers,” or “segment managers”) are the journey’s economic and creative stewards. They have ultimate accountability for its business performance, managing it as they would any product. And like other product managers, they are judged according to how well they meet an array of product-specific measures, including journey ROI (see the sidebar “Holding Journey Managers Accountable”).
    Guided by the firm’s business priorities (for example, growing market share, increasing revenue, and improving customer satisfaction), they explore ways to expand and optimize the journeys they’re responsible for, increase their stickiness, engage new partners, fend off competitors, and cut costs, particularly through digitizing manual processes. More operationally, it’s their job to understand how customers move through the journey, to spot unusual customer behaviors (such as detouring or abandonment at a critical touchpoint), and to discern what attracts new customers—or dissuades them from engaging.
    To build successful journeys, these managers rely on “scrum teams” of specialists from across IT, analytics, operations, marketing, and other functions. The teams are execution-oriented, fast, and agile, constantly testing and iterating improvements. Collectively, the team members work to understand customers’ wants and needs at each step of the journey and make taking the next step worthwhile. They ask questions such as “What types of functionality, look and feel, and message will propel customers to the next step?” and “How does the timing of prompts affect customers’ responses?” Pursuing answers to questions like these, teams enter into rounds of development, piloting iterative digital-journey prototypes, analyzing operational and customer-use data, and then measuring the impact on customer behavior produced by each tweak to the journey.
    Nordstrom is one company that has used this scrum-team approach. To enhance the journey around shopping for sunglasses, for example, a team set up temporary camp in the retailer’s flagship store and launched a series of weeklong experiments to perfect a new app. The app was envisioned to guide customers through the selection process by matching sunglasses styles with their facial characteristics and preferences. Right in the store, team members mocked up paper prototypes of the app and studied how shoppers tapped on them, as if using a live version. Throughout the process, they asked customers which app features seemed helpful, unnecessary, or distracting. On the basis of that feedback, the team’s coders built a live version of the app for customers to test, making real-time adjustments as they received more input. After a week of tweaking, they released it on tablets to the store’s sales associates, who use it alongside customers to help them choose sunglasses.
    Typically, journey managers bring scrum teams together on-site (as Nordstrom did) or in war rooms for design sprints, in which teams pitch new journey paths and features and then develop, test, and scale prototypes. Experiments may focus on anything from designing landing pages and devising live chats with reps to optimizing back-end processes and improving “experience flow” (how a customer moves from one journey step to another).
    While the best journey product managers work in this way to continually refine existing journeys, they’re also looking at the bigger picture, introducing larger-scale innovations that extend the journey and increase its value and stickiness. Consider, for example, how one of our clients, a global consumer electronics company, is developing and marketing a new countertop cooker. The product has programmable compartments that can be controlled by an app, allowing customers to simultaneously cook different parts of a meal. This creates opportunities to build an array of services that help customers get the most from the cooker.
    Although the firm had long experience with product design, as it began adding connectivity to its products, management realized that it knew relatively little about creating services to enhance them. Recognizing that it would need a new structure for designing and managing such services, the company created a global experience-innovation team, led by a new-business-development executive and supported by a product design executive. Essentially serving together as chief experience officers for the new services envisioned, these executives oversee all of the firm’s connected-product initiatives and supervise the journey product managers (or “innovation leaders”) in charge of these programs.
    The cooker’s journey product manager was tasked with creating various related services (help with meal planning, ingredient purchasing, and meal prep) and building the journeys that would deliver them. With his scrum team of designers, programmers, operations managers, and marketers, the manager has led the development of a service that provides recipes through the cooker app, tracks what customers make, and then personalizes suggestions over time. The team is now developing weekly meal-planning apps, and it has partnered with food producers to create recipes and offer discount coupons for key ingredients. Ultimately, the team plans to support a customer community whose members create and share their own recipes.
    To do all this, the team scrutinizes data flowing from the app: what percentage of customers download it, how many register, how (and how often) they use it, how cooker use and meal type vary by geography, and, for those who stop using the app, at what point they defect. This data informs the team’s tuning of the app’s navigation and prompts, along with the meal ideas and incentives the firm provides customers to keep them engaged. Analysts within the broader work group focus on narrow segments of the user base, typically zooming in on different countries to understand how usage patterns vary. This tracking extends to the level of the individual, revealing what recipes a given customer tries, how often she uses the cooker and the app, and which app features she uses—all of which allows continuing innovation and personalization of the journey.
    The move from selling products to managing a permanent customer journey has required mastering the four capabilities that all companies will need to compete: automation (in this case, the ability to control the cooker from an app); personalization (offering tailored recipes); contextual interaction (changing the app interface as customers move from purchasing ingredients to cooking); and journey innovation (adding new recipes, online purchase capabilities, and community).
    In perfecting these capabilities, the firm has made the continuing customer journey as much a part of the brand as the cooker itself—and as important a source of value. Leveraging its new journey-focused managerial structure, the company is now developing service-based journeys for other home health and household management products.
    Thinking about the customer journey as a product is leading to a major shift in how product investments are determined, prioritized, funded, and measured. Increasingly, firms will be focusing on how an investment improves the economics of delivering products and journeys to a customer segment—and how powerfully it reinforces engagement—rather than just how it drives sales or reduces costs. Particularly for companies that are somewhat distant from customer transactions, such as consumer-goods makers and B2B firms, this requires developing fundamentally new skills and structures for gathering and analyzing customer data, interacting with customers, and focusing on the experience design along with product and creative design. Today, winning brands owe their success not just to the quality and value of what they sell, but to the superiority of the journeys they create.

    вторник, 5 мая 2015 г.

    How new KPIs are helping companies become more customer-centric

    PHOTODISC_THINKSTOCK


    According to Forrester Research, organisations in industries ranging from airlines to health insurance have the potential to gain hundreds of millions in revenue when they provide a better experience for their customers. This revenue is typically driven by increased purchases, reduced churn, and improved word of mouth promotion.

    To truly engage with customers and reap the full rewards of a customer-centric focus, however, companies need to build a deep understanding of their customers' journeys across all touchpoints.
    Today, many organisations are exploring more sophisticated ways to build that level of understanding to provide consistent, contextual and personalised experiences - no matter which channels customers use to engage with their brand. It has become imperative for organisations to consider end-to-end approaches to collecting, analysing, and utilising customer data across all channels.
    To that end, the following new key performance indicators (KPIs) are helping organisations shift the paradigm to view interactions from the customer's perspective rather than the company's, resulting in a much better understanding of customer needs and engagement:
    • Customer effort score looks at making the overall customer experience as effortless as possible. Customers dislike having to contact an organisation multiple times to resolve an issue, having to repeat information, or having to be transferred from one agent to another. Organisations are analysing both structured and unstructured data mined across multiple channels - including phone and branch interactions, emails, chat sessions, and social postings - to determine how easy or difficult it is for customers to interact with them.
    • First contact resolution is an important element in the customer effort score. This metric has evolved from a single-siloed measurement to an omnichannelmeasurement. This is done by trying to map the end-to-end journey customers experience across channels to achieve full resolution. For example, speech analyticscan help analyse phone interactions to identify when a customer says he/she was promised something in a previous conversation or has tried communicating via other channels. This would then be tagged as a repeat contact journey, even if it may be the customer's first phone call or a call that is beyond the time window associated with traditional first contact resolution.
    • Customer health score examines how a customer might rate an organisation and allows a business to use the information to pinpoint loyal and content customers who might want to increase their purchases - and even help promote the brand. The score also helps to identify unhappy customers who need more personalised attention from agents to prevent them from churning or becoming brand detractors. The customer health score and relevant personalised suggestions should be presented to the agent every time she serves the customer. Armed with this information, agents are better equipped to handle customer interactions in a personalised and contextual way - which also helps to achieve true customer engagement.
    An effective way to meet consumer demand for personalised service and a positive customer experience is to utilise these detailed metrics in tandem with customer journey mapping to create a clear view into the customer relationship lifecycle. By being able to create an illustration of this lifecycle, employees across departments gain a much deeper understanding of the customer experience. They are primed to influence and optimise customer engagement and, if need be, change existing processes and procedures.
    A customer journey map is a visual representation of the end-to-end service journey of a customer, including customer expectations before the first encounter. It shows the customer perspective from the beginning, middle, and end as they engage in different services and departments to achieve their goal. This helps to illustrate the range of tangible and quantitative interactions, triggers, and touch points, as well as the intangible and qualitative motivations, frustrations and meanings.
    Creating a customer journey map is one of the most effective methods for understanding how customers interact with companies, whether they are satisfied or dissatisfied (including ways to address specific areas of dissatisfaction). It typically involves interviews within the organisation and customers, as well as customer-facing employees across all business areas, to get a full perspective of all the customer touchpoints.
    As a way to augment customer journey mapping strategies, organisations can now employ more dynamic customer journey mapping solutions by leveraging new analytics platforms to capture, analyse and correlate customer interactions, behaviours and journeys across all channels. These new engagement analytics platforms allow for real-time information to reflect the inevitable changes in customer interactions and behaviours. Because customers use so many communication channels - often simultaneously - organisations need a single view of the customer journey, pinpointing areas of opportunity and deficiency, and developing actionable strategies to address them.
    Dynamic dashboards, advanced data visualisation tools and sophisticated engagement analytics capabilities are now helping leading organisations to truly understand and affect the end-to-end customer journey. But these insights need to be applied and used by employees who interact with customers as well as back-office employees, who sometimes have a huge impact on these interactions as well. This emerging new space is called 'customer engagement optimisation', which combines advanced analytics capabilities with engagement management solutions that include unified agent desktop powered by contextual knowledge management for the front and back office, as well as optimised self-service solutions that are constantly fed by analytics insights.
    Customer engagement is high on the priority list of senior executives because of the quantifiable links among customer experience, loyalty and revenue. The most successful organisations are adapting metrics and processes to reflect a more personalised customer-centric perspective. For organisations seeking to optimise customer engagement, ongoing assessment and evaluation and a willingness to update traditional metrics and business processes can provide a clearer picture of how to engage customers on their own terms, which ultimately benefits customers and company alike.
    Daniel Ziv is vice president of customer analytics at Verint.

    суббота, 2 мая 2015 г.

    Customer experience ROI building blocks

    Starting Customer Experience

    There's a natural flow to generating customer experience ROI. In laws of nature, short-circuiting the flow is self-defeating.
    The building-blocks formula for sustained customer experience ROI is C5 + I2 + E2 = CX ROI.
    1) Set the stage for CX ROI
    C5 =
    Customer voice
    Customer experience strategy
    Customer-centric culture
    Customer intelligence
    Customer lifetime value
    2) Adapt your company to customers
    I2 =
    Improving customer experience
    Innovating customer experience
    3) Engage employees and customers
    E2 =
    Engaging internally
    Engaging externally


    C5

    Customer retention and loyalty are outcomes of a system that has a distinct natural flow.
    1st Steps to CX ROI
    These 3 building-blocks work hand-in-hand, like a 3-legged stool. With any one of them missing, things will be lop-sided. They're the foundation that keeps your company from limping along in your quest for customer retention and loyalty business results.

    Customer intelligence and customer lifetime value help you prioritize your efforts, resources, and roadmap components. Don’t fly in the dark! Connect the dots across information from your customers, and quantify the upside of keeping existing customers as well as the downside of losing them.
    2nd Steps to CX ROI

    E2
    Always think about the entire system. "The system" is the only "silver bullet" for CX ROI. Example:
    1. While you are setting up a shared vision (CX strategy/culture) . . .
    2. You may collect existing customer comments (customer voice) and
    3. Connect the comments to operational data (customer intelligence) and
    4. Prioritize the comments based on customer revenue or cost (CLV) and
    5. Engage some teams in resolving the blaring issues (improvement) and
    6. Inspire some teams in creativity around the blaring opportunities (innovation)
    7. Share selected comments on your intranet site (engaging internally) and
    8. Adapt your customer engagement to be sensitive to the blaring issues/opportunities (engaging externally).
    Like any system, removing a component will eventually render it useless. Make sure your customer experience management journey keeps all the system components in top form, and reflects the left-to-right flow of the CX ROI building-blocks model.

     CX ROI Maturity

    3 levels of ROI maturity
    http://clearactioncx.com/customer-experience-maturity-assessment/

     CX ROI Mini-Assessment

    7 keys to breaking through plateaus
    http://clearactioncx.com/customer-experience-enablement-mini-assessment/

     Return on CX Investment

    "Middleware" is essential to CX ROI
    http://clearactioncx.com/return-on-customer-experience-investment/

    https://clearactioncx.com/customer-experience-roi-building-blocks/

    понедельник, 9 марта 2015 г.

    Customer Journey Mapping (CJM)


    Introduction

    One of the biggest challenges facing companies when they want to become customer focused is that their own organisation is based around functional silos. This is not only noticeable to customers as they are passed from function to function looking for service, but also to companies themselves either when they look to start a customer improvement initiative, or look to implement change based around customer feedback. With organisational hierarchy based around functions the ability to make effective decisions and push through change is fundamentally opposite to how a customer wants to experience dealing with them. A customer wants to experience an organisation that provides a single seamless journey across all touchpoints from initial enquiry right through to any required post sales support. An approach to overcome these barriers is to consider the total customer journey.

    We have all experienced the situation where you are told one thing before purchasing a service / product, whether that is by a sales person, reading through general marketing literature, or reading the company’s website, and then post sale receiving a completely different experience. It is as if you are dealing with at least two different organisations. Every time a customer contacts the organisation or its representatives, there is an opportunity for a customer “moment of truth”. These “moments of truth” are opportunities for the organisation to make a good or bad impression on the customer and are key moments in the customer journey. My recent example was buying a washing machine from a well known white goods manufacturer, which was actually supplied through a website of a high street retailer, and the after sales service being provided by a third branded party. Although I later found out that the after sales company was actually owned by the manufacturer no one would take ownership of the total experience from what I thought I had bought, to the level of service that I did (or didn’t in this particular case) receive from the after sales organisation. They couldn’t understand my frustration! In my experience with the white goods manufacturer, my “moments of truth” were overwhelmingly negative – not conducive to placing my custom with them next time. Perhaps what had happened was the colliding of more than one customer journey.
    So what is Customer Journey Mapping (CJM)?

    It looks at mapping out the total customer experience across all touchpoints between the customer and the organisation, from initial contact, through purchasing, after sales support, and hopefully onto renewal / repurchase. It maps the experience that:
    you want to provide to the customer
    the customer would like to receive

    And what are the most important factors from the customers’ perspective in determining whether they will remain loyal to your brand?

    The gaps between the desired customer experience and the one actually received – the “moments of truth” – indicate where the actions need to be focused.

    In the outline Customer Journey map below we have listed what could be the key elements in the customer journey starting with Awareness and progressing through Purchasing right through to Renewal.



    Each element of the customer journey (e.g. Aware, Query …) will probably have a number of customer touchpoints such as accessing the website, or calling the organisation. Possible touchpoints (or opportunities for customer moments of truth) are illustrated below. What the company needs to do is ensure the customer receives the quality of experience they require at each of these touchpoints, thereby providing positive customer moments of truth.



    For each of these customer touchpoints against each element of the customer journey, the organisation then needs to identify:
    An owner
    The impact it has upon the customers’ experience
    The gaps between desired and current performance

    This then allows the organisation to focus on issues that are key for both the customer and them. The creation of the journey highlights to different functions across the business where they come into contact with customers and where they influence the customers’ experience and have the opportunity to provide positive customer moments of truth, which may also be at a much later point in the journey. A recent example for me was when buying a settee I was told by the sales person the delivery date. I therefore scheduled decorating and removal of the old settee around that date. A whole month before it was due I was told by the delivery company that it had arrived and I needed to accept delivery within the next week. So an expectation set at the point of sale had a major impact at the point of delivery. Different functions within the same business but all part of the same customer journey.
    What are the key benefits of Customer Journey Mapping (CJM)?

    A summary of the key benefits of Customer Journey Mapping and drawing up Customer Journey maps would be:
    Provides a single cross business unit view of the experience delivered by all customers facing functions
    Defines key enabling requirements (skills, data, processes, measures, etc.)
    Highlights areas of importance (where effort should be applied) and areas not valued by customers (so costs can be optimised)
    So when should Customer Journey Mapping (CJM) be utilised?

    You should expect to receive significant benefit through utilising this approach when you want to achieve any of the following:
    Understand the experience of different groups of customers
    Improve efficiency and remove inconsistencies in the customer’s experience
    Identify a more seamless experience across businesses, functional silos and channels
    Design a new customer experience
    Assess the impact of wider internal developments on the customer’s experience
    Establish development priorities
    Develop cross business alignment across the organisation
    Improve your single overall measure of customer expereince

    With growing utilisation of this approach there are an increasing number of examples of organisations that are reaping the benefits of either utilising this approach, or one closely related to it. A variety of industries are being covered included airlines, hotel and hospitality, mobile phone companies, public sector organisations, financial services industries etc.

    Customer Journey Mapping: Apply Insights Everywhere


    Customer journey mapping is a big investment in most companies, and money is being left on the table. That's because there are many more applications for customer experience insights than first meets the eye. While the sponsoring organization may feel like their hands are full in applying the journey map findings to their corner of the company, there are likely other departments that could benefit from the new-found intelligence. As the famous phrase in the movie Jerry Maguire goes: "Help me help you!"
    Additionally, customer experience insights should be woven into strategies, organization structure, processes, policies, hiring and promotion criteria, training and performance assessment, and the general psyche of the company. Yes, there's a reason why executives are still saying: "Show me the money!"
    In this 3-part series, we're looking at 3 keys to getting it right: focus on the customers' experience journeymap for actionability, and apply insights everywhere. This post takes on the third key:
    Apply Insights Everywhere: Application to front-line employees and customer touch-points, and conversations about how to un-silo processes and information are huge steps forward, yet insufficient if you seek to maximize business results.
    DO THIS: Plan from the beginning to involve everyone in understanding and managing their ripple effect on customer experience.
    1. Based on the segmentation of expectation sets described in the first "do this" tip in Customer Experience Journeys: Map for Actionability, characterize customer experience personas by what they expect in each step of their journey, what pains they deal with, their typical workarounds, and their "wildest dreams" wish list. Plan your research accordingly. You can add demographic and psychographic characterizations secondarily to the expectations information. This type of persona can be useful to every functional area in preventing negative ramifications to customers and anticipating and creating value-enhancing aspects of the customer experience.
    2. Think of each customer touch-point as a long chain of value enablers/inhibitors going back into your entire company and the companies you rely upon.
    3. Value potential savings as strongly as potential revenue. By saving time, effort, worry, risk, and money for customers, you're earning the right to receive higher share of budget/wallet and longer relationships with customers. By saving time, effort, worry, and money for employees, you're enabling happier employees to enable happier customers. And you're aligning the company to focus on value that's rewarded by customers.
    4. Focus innovations on what the customers are trying to get done: what are they integrating your product/service with, and how can you make it easier and more successful for them? In this sense, innovations are not just new revenue streams, but also new ways to enhance the customer experience (differentiate your company), before, during, and after purchase or touch-points.
    5. Adjust your voice-of-the-customer methods to reflect what you've learned about customers' realities, expectations, and preferences.
    6. Apply your customers' goals to your executives' and employees' goals.
    7. Refine your corporate and business line strategies, processes, policies, organization structure, business models, promotion and compensation, training and recognition, messaging internally and externally, etc. according to what you've learned from your customer experience journey mapping.
    NOT THAT: Even if your job role, as initiator of a journey map effort, may be relatively narrow, resist the temptation to use the map only within your organization, as other organizations DO impact your success, and most importantly, the customers' success.
    1. Don't confuse expectation-set segmentation with psychographic segmentation. If you believe that unhappy customers are caused by reality not living up to expectations, then one of the most valuable things your voice-of-the-customer research can reveal is how to recognize and proactively manage customers' expectations.
    2. Don't assume that customer experience personas initiated by engineering (R&D) are only applicable to that function (and vice versa for branding, advertising, marketing, sales, or service-initiated customer experience personas). Share insights widely and deeply to get everyone on the same page and reap the most value from your research investment.
    3. Don't think only of "onstage and backstage" people, processes, and systems that contribute to and determine customer experience success. Be holistic, and get specific in order to drive ownership and action across the chain leading up to what customers see. A chain is only as strong as its weakest link.
    Customer journey maps are a means to an end, not an end in themselves. They are one of many alternatives you can select to understand your customers' world. The purpose of understanding your customers' world is to become their preferred source toward achieving the capabilities they're seeking. That's what creates a revenue machine with strong profit growth. Remember that popular practice does not necessarily imply best practice. A sensible approach to customer experience journey mapping — and all other voice-of-the-customer and customer experience intelligence methods — is what's needed for sustained customer experience ROI.
     
    Notes:
    1. Customer Journey Mapping is part of VoC, Customer Insight & Understanding, which is one of the six domains in thebody of knowledge advocated by the Customer Experience Professionals Association (CXPA). (ClearAction offers aCCXP Exam Prep Course.)
    2. The concept of "Do This, Not That" is borrowed from the popular book "Eat This, Not That", where the weaknesses of common practices and myths are brought to light and sensible replacements are recommended. (For assistance with CX journey mapping methodology or actionability, see http://clearactioncx.com/customer-experience-journey-mapping/).
    Contact the author, Lynn Hunsaker, to find out how to customize these practices to your situation.