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понедельник, 1 января 2018 г.

How to Succeed With a Customer-centric Marketing Strategy


A Modern Marketing Map for Customer-centric Success

You know that your customer is fundamental to your strategic success. At the heart everything you do and everything your organization does, should be an all-encompassing consideration of your customer.
Customer-core. Customer-centred. Customer-centric. Customer-obsessed.
Why?
Digital tools and channels have dramatically transformed the way buyers choose to purchase. They’re more empowered, and more inclined to research online before reaching out to a sales rep. Because of digital, the fate of marketing campaigns and sales pipelines lies very much in the hands of the buyer. And despite this shift in power, a large number of organizations still haven’t adopted a customer-centric approach to marketing and selling.
They’re preoccupied with their products, their marketing, their sales, their success. They’re preoccupied with themselves. But now it’s time to look at everything through the eyes of the customer. Your success starts with knowing thy buyer. 
What business problems do your customers face? What are their opportunities? What are they trying to accomplish? What is the environment in which they operate? These key questions should underpin the way in which you market and sell to them. Your primary motivation should be to identify and address the needs of the buyer. Or, in the words of renowned entrepreneur and marketer Seth Godin, “don’t find customers for your products, find products for your customers”.
So, are you ready to harness your own customer-centric attitude? I’ve developed a simple modern marketing map that you can use to chart your course to marketing strategy success. And it’s no surprise where you’ll find the customer… 

1st Pillar: INFLUENCERS

Establishing relationships with industry influencers is the first essential step in this modern marketing map. These are the people your potential customers trust, the people they listen to, the people they learn from. Associating yourself with these individuals not only increases your visibility; it increases your credibility too; according to McKinsey, peer recommendations generate more than twice the sales of paid advertising.
Influencer marketing has the power to humanize your brand and foster customer engagement in a much more organic way; the key is to accurately identify the influencers, or “smarty pants people” in your buyer’s world that can enhance your offering. For example, if you’re selling data solutions, who are the experts on big data? If you’re selling within the Internet of Things space, who are the bloggers covering the topic? Whether you’re using LinkedIn or social listening tools, you should be seeking out thought leaders, practitioners and early adopters. If an individual has authority in their industry, they have influence, and that influence can help you to amplify your message and become visible and credible to a much wider audience.
Reaching out to and engaging with influencers doesn’t just benefit marketers. Increasingly, salespeople aren’t just selling; in their efforts to add genuine value and educate the buyer, they’re becoming deep Subject Matter Experts, and should be learning from “smarty pants people” too!
When I was a sales rep at Eloqua, I considered SiriusDecisions to be the premiere research analysts, the smarty pants people, in the sales and marketing industry. As a kind of qualifying question, I would ask if my potential buyers were familiar with them; if not, I would share their content on modern marketing, because I knew it was the best in the field. I needed my buyer to become more knowledgeable, because the more informed they were, the more prepared they would be to purchase my product. I promoted SiriusDecisions heavily, joking that I was their best salesperson! But I wasn’t paid to promote them; I simply knew that their content and industry expertise would genuinely help my customers, as well as me.
I was attending industry events to learn where my buyers were learning. I needed to understand the world in which my buyers lived, so I needed to learn what they were learning, from whom they were learning it.

2nd Pillar: CONTENT

Self-empowered modern buyers are actively going out and seeking knowledge, trying to find their own solutions. Consequently, the problem that sellers and marketers are facing is that these buyers are no longer responding to cold outreach and traditional broadcast marketing techniques.
Call, email, call, email = ignore, delete, ignore, delete.
Traditional tactics aren’t working, as buyers turn to search engines and social networks to self-educate through the consumption of digital content. The important question is; what kind of content? After all, nobody Tweets your data sheet!
It’s important to align content to not only different stages of the buying process, but to specific buyer personas as well, as the kind of content that will engage and incentivize them will vary based on their characteristics and preferences. If your buyer is deeply technical, they’ll look for deeply technical content. If they’re highly strategic that same technically-oriented content won’t resonate with them in the same way.
Above all, you should look to create content that tells a story and is human, in a variety of formats. It could be a how-to video, an instructional webinar or podcast, a whitepaper (if your target audience is B2B), an ebook, an infographic. The format you select will ultimately depend on that buyer persona, and where they are in their customer journey. It’s important to not only create content, but curate it too. Content curation essentially involves sharing relevant third party content that will appeal to your target audience. More often than not then, you should be curating the content of the influencers that you’re trying to build relationships with.
Once created, you need to share your content in the space where your target audience exists, engages and learns, be it on LinkedIn, or via Twitter Chats. You want your audience to be compelled to curate your content. This is why content is a key pillar of social selling, as well as modern marketing; buyers are much more likely to consume content from people and peers than brands and logos. That’s why a piece of content’s “shareability” should be a key consideration for you during creation, curation and distribution.

3rd Pillar: COMMUNITY

I am a big believer in ecosystem and partnership. At Eloqua, for example, we founded a community called Topliners. It was an online space where our customers could interact, where our employees were engaged and our partners educated. We shared inspirational success stories, facilitated supportive forums and published informative content. We even hosted offline events to bring our community together.
Beyond facilitating valuable communication, we were able to segment our community based on industry, geography, whether they were B2B or B2C. This allowed us to build detailed customer personas and helped us to better understand what they cared about, the challenges they were faced with. Not only did we facilitate the customer conversation, we listened to it, and joined in. When nurtured properly, a community has the ability to produce authentic sharing, learning, teaching and engagement.
A company that has excelled at promoting a customer-centric community is Gainsight, who is helping to define and grow the customer success movement. A core piece of their mission is to build the “biggest community of Customer Success folks around”. They do this in four ways;
  • Their Customer Success University, which offers a series of e-learning modules to help Customer Success Managers upskill and provide more value to their employers
  • Pulse Local, a networking community with local chapters that hold meetings and networking receptions to complement their online discussion community.
  • Pulse Conference, an annual conference that favours thought leadership and relationship building over product-centricity.
  • Career Hub, job postings of companies looking to hire Customer Success professionals.
By creating opportunities to connect customers and cultivate a sense of community, you can enhance the ongoing effectiveness of your marketing strategy, build your brand’s reputation, earn the trust of your customers and drive revenue!

4th Pillar: ADVOCACY

Your best salespeople are not on your payroll. They’re your customers, who are willing to say good things about you. Buyers today not only have more choice, they have louder voice, which you can leverage to your brand’s advantage.
The traditional perception of customer advocacy is something like a reference program, which is based on gathering references to help sales reps enhance your company’s credibility and acquire more customers. But what does a customer reference program offer the customer in return for their reference? It’s a one-way approach that offers no benefit or incentive to the customer.
I think the best advocacy programs are those that find ways for you and your company to provide value to your customers. Examples of this would be if your customers are quoted or referenced in the media, if they’re speaking at events or winning awards; you could amplify their achievements through your own social media channels.
The key to developing advocacy is clear communication. It’s not overselling, or letting your customer buy before they’re ready. You have to create an amazing customer experience end-to-end; great products, honest and accurate marketing, responsible salespeople. Even as a sales rep, my job has never been to sell. It has been to understand where the customer is in their buying journey, help them be ready to buy, and then coach them to success
If you want to turn a potential buyer into an actual advocate, you have to design your entire process to create advocacy. Advocacy is not random, and it’s not by chance. It’s about people, about the relationships you create. You need to craft experiences that evoke emotion. Advocacy is reciprocal, and earned. Be an advocate for your customers so your customer will want to advocate for you. 

Summary

The most effective marketing strategies are driven by a customer-centric culture. A customer-centric organization is where every process starts and ends with customer success in mind. It’s a culture, not an event or a department.. Every aspect of your company should be aligned with the sole purpose of creating an optimal customer experience. When you do this for your customers, they will in turn champion your success.
About Jill Rowley - Evangelist and Start-Up Advisor
After 6 years in management consulting, 52 quarters in software sales at Salesforce and Eloqua, a year leading Social Selling at Oracle, Jill Rowley provides #SocialSelling evangelism, education and enablement services to help companies market and sell to the modern buyer. She is also an Advisory Board member at numerous tech companies including HubSpot, TrackMaven, Speakeasy, and Vidyard. 
Jill is passionate about culture, customers, content, connections and community. She is dedicated to elevating the sales profession and determined to inspire more colleges and universities to offer professional selling curriculum and degrees.
You can connect with Jill on LinkedIn or follow her on Twitter.
Sophie Elizabeth Smith
https://goo.gl/KyEK5V

3 Ways Customer Listening Powers Marketing Effectiveness


Today customers can make sure that their voice is heard like never before. And, if marketers don’t have measures in place to listen, they are turning a deaf ear to potentially significant problems and missing out on essential insights for improving their customer experience.
Following are 3 ways to leverage customer listening and examples of how companies are putting these strategies into action.
1. Realize that Customer Listening (and Responding) is a 360-Degree Commitment.
Engagement with customers includes business partners who are also the face of your brand. So, how every aspect of your brand listens to the voice of your customer and responds is key.
For example, NASCAR made the decision to revamp its marketing and listening in five key areas. But that’s not where it ended. NASCAR also encouraged its business partners and drivers to do the same.
“We developed an industry action plan,” stated Steve Phelps NASCAR CMO, “… A plan for digital and social, a plan for driver star power–and within each plan, [we came up with] a number of different action items … [In an] effort to be thought leaders who provide the best available experience to our fans. We strongly encourage those across the entire landscape of the sport to embrace digital and social media — from drivers and teams to tracks and corporate partners.”
2. Customers are More Than Numbers, They are People, Talk to Them … (And listen.) 
Data gives you a good view of what customers are doing. However, it is not going to tell you why or give you the emotional factors like a conversation. Personal interactions can be more valuable than all the big data you will ever collect. 

Starting in October, Flow and Columbus Business Solutions, a telecommunications company serving the Caribbean, asked customers to tell them how they felt. Michele English, Columbus’ executive vice president and chief customer officer noted, “Our plan is to significantly enhance our customer ‘listening’ systems and ensure that feedback is integrated into our daily decisions and connected to our customers’ experiences across the organization… we have to design and implement [operational processes] to ensure that every customer touch point in the organization can support our customers’ needs efficiently and effectively… We now look forward to more customer feedback. “

The Company designed an easy to use online customer survey and sent communications to customers to encourage them to complete the survey and tell the company what matters. 
3. Make Conversation (and Listening) Easy with Social Communities Online communities enable the exchange of ideas in discussion forums, polls and social media. They provide brand information, mitigate problems and provide opportunities for a collaborative two-way conversation.
Southwest Airlines launched a Listening Center to monitor its online communities using a keyword-based listening tool that pulls in mentions from social platforms. The Listening Center monitors insights in real time to quickly identify issues and immediate engagement opportunities. Customers can connect their Twitter handles to their Rapid Rewards frequent flier numbers to get personalized servicesSouthwest Airlines also leverages the Listening Centers to send apology letters for delays, find new opportunities for engagement and implement company-wide customer care.

Alice Wilson, social business advisor for Southwest’s marketing organization notes that sharing the information collected is the key to listening success. “The customer feedback means something different to each [department] and can inform each group in a different way…From a social care standpoint, [employees] want to help assist and resolve. But somebody from the marketing team may be looking at that [data and ask], how do we alter communications to help these future situations?…The point is not to keep it as a silo.”
Keys to Effectively Listening to the Voice of Your Customer:
  • Listening should be at the heart of your marketing strategy.
    Listening lets you understand the “why” of what your customers are doing and experiencing so that operational issues, communication, and experience can be overhauled for a more positive overall brand impression.
  • Learnings from Listening Needs to be Shared with Every Part of your Business.
    Having data without acting on the implications does nothing for your business. Set standards for how the insights from your listening programs are regularly integrated and shared with all departments so that changes and actions are put in motion to respond to customer needs and comments.
  • Meaningful Dialogue Based on Listening.
    Develop authentic, honest and direct conversations based on listening, which lead to meaningful connections and two-way dialogue.
  • Use Listening to Develop Strategies.
    Once you launch programs to listen, develop means for incorporating these learnings into new strategies that address the issues identified in customer conversations. Put in motion ongoing review of the data collected through listening programs so that you have a clear roadmap that delineates what customers are expecting, their pain points and their current/future demands.
  • Listening Objectives Must be Established.
    If you don’t know how you are going to listen, you will not be able to hear what your customers are trying to tell you. Whether you have the means to set up a full scale listening center, a social monitoring program, a survey, or a call center monitoring program, know what you are implementing and how you will regularly harvest and utilize the insights.
In summary, customers have a lot to say and they want you to listen. The good news is that customers generally have valid concerns and smart advice to offer. Marketers and customers will both benefit if the marketer creates multichannel ways of listening to customers and processes for acting quickly on their input.\

вторник, 26 сентября 2017 г.

Thinking Outside The Box

In digital, it’s all about personalization. Isn’t it time pharma caught up with other industries?



By Adam Chapman


Soon, the pharma industry will face a stern ultimatum – diversify or die. The internet – that majestic marketplace of ideas – has been busy empowering consumers through unfettered access to information and services. Now that customers know what they want (and when they want it), holding their hold their attention means tracking and reacting to the minutiae of their online movements. 

This sophisticated idea is at the center of Volkswagen’s marketing model, says Adel Baraja, Sales and Marketing Consultant at Volkswagen, who believes a high level of personalization will provide exponential growth in the pharma industry.

“Marketing channels like outdoors, out-of-home, pay-view or TV deliver one message that aims to suit everybody,” he says. “In digital, we are trying to give our customers or prospects a totally different message.”

It’s mass media but it’s also custom, he says. “We highlight people's interests, from either their browsing behavior or online habits, and we identify the people in the marketplace who want to buy a car. In a way, it’s not invasive at all; Netflix or Amazon make suggestions based on books read or programs watched in a similar way.” 

In tracking a customer’s online activity, connectedness is the starting point, says Baraja. “We are looking for the connected customer, people that use their phone or multiple devices to get online. Those are the ones that are always searching, always looking up items – recipes, advice, do-it-yourself guides.”

Where does Volkswagen mine this data? “We work with multiple agencies and service providers, who gather and analyze all this big data. We do not have to do it manually, we can’t even see them – the data or the people – as it's anonymous. We just know that they have set the criteria that we are looking for,” he says.

Pooling data from third-parties can provide a general overview of behavioral patterns, then Volkswagen uses sophisticated metrics to tailor its message to each individual visitor on its website. “We know how these customer are coming in, for example, if they clicked on a banner, but we also know now – through advanced algorithms – that somebody browsing a website has an attention span of eight seconds – that’s less than a goldfish. They get distracted by another website or by a TV set and they leave your website,” says Baraja.

Many marketers would give up at this point – after all, they’ve served the ad, had a click and a visit, and formed a bond. “We keep connecting to that same client; we might be able to serve him a different ad. If he has seen the exterior of the car, we serve him another ad inviting him to see the interior,” he says, adding that if a customer leaves the website midway through customizing a car, a third ad can then be deployed on a third-party website asking them to come back and complete the customization. “The whole idea is to re-target the same customer again and again because they are the highest potential, rather than focusing on a new one with the least potential.” 

Baraja rejects the idea that this approach would not work in pharma. “A lot of people say: If people are healthier, pharmaceutical companies are going to lose money. But look at cooking shows; chefs show you their recipe and they show you how to make the food, but you will still go to the restaurant to eat it. It doesn't mean that if you are being helpful, showing them how to be healthy, people will stop coming back to you. They know you, you will become the one they take advice from, they will listen to you. If you throw anything at them they will buy it because they trust you.”

The right attitude and internal awareness are essential to successfully implement a personalized digital strategy. The increasing ubiquity of the digital world must be mirrored by the marketing strategy, he says. “Digital is no longer a separate strategy to the sales strategy, conventional marketing strategy or branding strategy. It is one strategy that takes a different direction, developing and evolving.”

The impact across the organization requires a top to bottom understanding, he says. “Marketing has become involved in IT – there is a lot of software and processes involved and it will continue to become more sophisticated. We will always have a CEO that understands where both digital and marketing is going. A CEO that also supports the vision and understands this is the requirement,” says Baraja.

суббота, 17 июня 2017 г.

Companies That Learn Together, Earn Together




You and your customers may work in different sectors of an industry, operate within different organizational structures, or be located in different geographies, but you have one very important thing in common: you both need to learn in order to adapt and succeed. So why not learn alongside your customers and strengthen your relationships in the process? That’s the idea behind a trend that can best be described as customer-centric co-learning, where organizations and their customers come together to learn side by side in an executive education–type setting.
General Electric is already famous for the leadership development programs for company managers that it offers at its leadership center in Crotonville, New York. It is also one of the best examples of a company that has embraced—and benefitted from—a customer-centric co-learning model. Over the past few years, I’ve had the privilege of teaching at more than half a dozen of GE’s co-learning events around the globe, and I can tell you firsthand that the inherent value of co-learning with customers is immense. Not unlike the benefits of co-creation, which show that developing beta products with active users works much better than traditional iterative improvement techniques, co-learning offers the opportunity to work collaboratively with key influencers to strengthen business relationships in ways that can’t necessarily be achieved otherwise.
In GE’s case, here’s how it works:
The company identifies its top customers and partners and invites them to send a small cohort of executives to participate in the learning experience. Most events I’ve been involved with are capped at about 120 participants (10 senior executives from 12 customer companies), which is a small enough group to remain intimate, while also offering diverse perspectives and viewpoints.
The course, which typically runs for one week, is designed to focus on one area or theme that is particularly relevant for the specific audience. The company assembles a team of presenters—educators and thought leaders who specialize in that area—while tapping GE representatives to moderate and facilitate group work. During the course, teams learn how to apply relevant concepts within their own organizations. At face value, this setup may very well look like any other executive education event—but it’s not.
Here’s why it works. Customer-centric co-learning enables organizations to do the following:
  • Get closer to their customers. The opportunity to spend a week, or even a few days, interacting with customers outside of the normal course of business doesn’t come around often. But when it does, it enables both parties to learn things about the other they may not otherwise know—things that may not be directly connected to their business dealings at the moment, but that lead to a deeper understanding and enable companies to better serve their customers in the short and long term. It is also worth noting that greater trust and collegiality are by-products of this sort of transparency.
  • Break free from sales tensions.These engagements are about learning and relationship building—not making another sale (although that may happen as a longer-term result). Sales conversations are prohibited during these programs, unless initiated by the customer, freeing participants from their everyday vendor–customer mode and encouraging customers to share freely without needing to fend off sales pitches.
  • Encourage outside-in thinking.When customers and partners from various industries come together, everyone benefits from different viewpoints. Too often leaders are limited by their own perspectives, but a diverse group of peers can help one another see the bigger picture and adopt a more macro lens that can help them on a strategic level. 
  • Demonstrate their investment in customer success.Including customers in such a high-caliber learning event clearly demonstrates that an organization values its partnerships. It sends the message that the organization is vested, and invested, in its customers’ success. It’s not unusual for companies to commit substantial resources to make this all happen, and while there is no guaranteed hard return on investment, it pays dividends in building long-term business relationships.
For all of these reasons, I’m convinced that companies that learn together, earn together. While GE is not alone in its co-learning endeavors, most organizations have yet to recognize its value, let alone take the plunge. But those willing to try will reap the rewards.

воскресенье, 16 апреля 2017 г.

10 Signs of a Company That Really Cares About Customers


Did you know that there’s such a thing as International Clients’ Day? Although I’ve been in customer service for more than a decade, I first learned of it last week through a special offer email that I got in my inbox. Did you happen to hear about it too?
Whether or not, the fact is that this informal holiday has not been around for that long. Actually, it was proposed (and celebrated for the first time) by Lithuanian and Russian businessmen on March 19, 2010 as an opportunity to show gratitude to their customers. Since then, the occasion has been supported by many organizations and businesses in Western Europe, and it’s constantly expanding, with more companies joining the initiative year by year. Would you join the club too?

Isn’t It Nice?

I was surprised and amused to discover this interesting fact, and as I pondered over it, I began to realize that I definitely like the idea. Along with the discount offer on the special occasion, I got the acknowledgment of how much the company appreciates me as a loyal customer and that it cares about the relationship. For me, it’s certainly a good sign, important and valuable for further business relationship. Later on it served as an inspiration for my article, as I decided to extend on it a little bit.
In this post, I would like to speak about the signs that show a company cares about its customers in deed and not in name. I managed to come up with my own version of 10 things that are truly important for me as a customer. Take a read and let me know if you can find out a bit more!

What Do Companies That Really Care Have in Common?

1. Providing Easy-to-Access Customer Support Options

Today’s consumers expect that the process of contacting customer service is seamless and straightforward. Statistically, 83% of online customers require some degree of support to complete a purchase and 71% expect to be able to access help online within 5 minutes.
Top performing companies realize that their customer service channels should include many, if not all, of the options available today. Be it email, phone, Live Chat, social media channels, FAQs or self-service, companies that care about customers ensure their contact details and other relevant information can be easily found, all of the options are working properly, and agents are swiftly responding when their help is needed.

2. Being Obsessed with Customer Service Excellence

According to another research, 89% of consumers have stopped doing business with a company after experiencing poor customer service, and 40% are sure they will cease doing business with a company if they happen to experience it. That sounds too disturbing to ignore.
These days we witness high product availability, increasing choice options, and more competitive prices. Business competition has evolved into the challenge of building and maintaining exceptional customer experiences. Companies that stand apart recognize the importance of excellent customer service for keeping customers feeling positive and happy about their experiences with the brand.

3. Constantly Striving to Know Customers Better

Today’s consumers are much more demanding if compared to what they used to be a while ago. 72% of them now expect a customer service representative to know their contact details, product information and service history as soon as they get in touch with support.
Knowing your customer is an essential key to business success. Without this knowledge, you just won’t have the information needed to make the right decisions about pricing, marketing and almost any other aspect of running your business. As market landscape is evolving, and social media and many other resources allow companies to connect with their customers on a personal level, true customer care implies going all out to know customer expectations and tend to their needs.

4. Living In Customers’ Shoes

Stepping into customers’ shoes is all about being able to see a situation from another’s perspective, understand how a customer feels at each particular stage of their journey and provide tailored solutions based on the situation. Closely related to the notion of empathy, this skill enables employees to communicate better with customers and address the emotional side of customer interactions.
There is a brilliant quote by Marsha Collier that reads: Customer service can’t always deliver solutions, but it can always deliver empathy. Companies that lead the pack recognize the importance of emotional connection and train their staff to listen to customers’ verbal and non-verbal communication to come up with tailored solutions right on the spot.

5. Willing to Go an Extra Mile

Majority of companies offer staff training to make sure everyone knows basic procedures to follow in standard situations. While having clear policies and procedures is important to make sure everyone is one the same page about applying them, it’s also critical to encourage and empower employees to take decisions on their own.
This might include breaking the rules and flexibly using employee creativity for rewarding customer experiences. Companies that empower their staff to go above and beyond for great customer satisfaction know its worth. They do not tie their employees with scripted scenarios and encourage staff to use their unique personality to serve their customers the best way possible.

6. Rewarding Customer Loyalty

Companies focused merely on attracting new customers could be in trouble. Regular customers admit they feel frustrated and left out as they observe businesses shouting out heavy discounts and juicy offers only to attract new customers. Buying growth through discounts and promotions while not caring much about longtime relationship and rewarding customer loyalty can do more harm, actually. According to a research carried out by The Grass Roots Group, about 49% of consumers even consider switching loyalties if a provider’s special offers are only available to new customers. Those businesses that survive and prosper, build their strategy based on fostering customer loyalty and do so with great reward.

7. Taking Care of Internal Customers

It goes without saying that customers are your most important assets, and deserve to have the best service and experience you are able to provide. However, what sometimes goes unnoticed is that the same applies to the people inside your organization, often referred to as its ‘internal’ customers. And that stands for a reason. In fact, company’s employees are an equally important resource. The way they approach customers clearly reflects the way they themselves are treated. Companies that treat their staff like gold, make them feel valuable and important, enjoy better employee performance and higher customer satisfaction rates.

8. Acknowledging the Importance of Customer Service Roles

We often hear that these days customer service is no longer just a department within an organization, but rather an attitude behind the entire company culture and strategy. Companies that realize how important customer service is for their business, adopt the “everyone does customer service” approach. They reinforce excellent performance by stressing the significance of jobs that involve interaction with customers.

9. Treating Leaving Customers Right

When a customer decides to stop doing business with you, whatever the reasons behind the decision, it’s better to leave the door open. There’s still a huge probability (20% to 40%) of successfully selling to those who left at some point if you manage to cope with it professionally and positively. Companies that truly care about their customers find ways to softly ask for feedback, express regret and stay in touch.

10. Keeping Customers Informed

Whether it’s good news or bad, your customers deserve timely, open and honest communication. It is critical to keep them informed about your company innovations and events to justify their trust and gain more credibility.
Truth be known, there are too many follow-up communications like auto-replies, post-sale surveys and special offers, largely left unopened and unread. Yet it’s absolutely imperative to proactively inform your customers about product recalls involving safety issues or product defects, as well as changes in pricing and other significant terms. Those businesses who really care do their best to reach out to their customers with relevant information and pass it via all the communication channels available – to make sure the important message got through.

воскресенье, 25 декабря 2016 г.

10 Principles of Customer Strategy

It’s no longer enough to target your chosen customers. To stay ahead, you need to create distinctive value and experiences for them.



Illustration by Lars Leetaru



After losing the fourth major deal in a row to a rival, the CEO of a technology solutions company turned to his team leaders to ask what was going wrong. The sales team doesn’t have the right relationships, marketing reported. Our products lack key features, sales replied. The offerings are too expensive, finance explained. None of these answers seemed right. The products were made in the countries where manufacturing was cheapest, had high ratings from analysts, and included new features that people raved about. So the CEO finally called the client and bluntly asked: “Why did you give this deal to our competitor?”
The response: “Your products are great, but your competitor gives me what I’m looking for.” As they talked, the CEO realized that closing this deal — and other deals — didn’t come down only to product price, quality, features, or sales capabilities. The competitor spoke the language of the customer. Its salespeople knew how to anticipate the customer’s needs, work closely with its leaders, and come up with solutions to problems that hadn’t even been voiced yet. The CEO now saw that his company lacked a key ingredient necessary for serving its clients: a deliberate, well-designed, and perceptive customer strategy.
This real-life scenario is all too familiar. The conventional approach to gaining customers, which was based on picking a segment of purchasers to target and developing products for that segment, is no longer sufficient. A customer strategy goes further: It is the articulation of the distinctive value and experience your company will deliver to a chosen set of customers over three to five years, along with the offerings, channels, operating model, and capabilities you will need. In 2016 a team of researchers and advisors from the customer strategy practice at Strategy&, PwC’s strategy consulting group, conducted a global survey of 161 executives. And the findings indicated that having a customer strategy was high in importance. More than 80 percent of the respondents said their investment in customer strategy during the next three to five years would be equal to or greater than the amount invested this year.
In developing a successful customer strategy, you must provide answers to questions such as these: Who are our customers? Which of their needs can we address? Given our company’s overall value proposition and strategy, what customer experience should we create? What capabilities do we need in order to deliver that experience? How should we organize ourselves accordingly, and what aspects of our culture can help us?
A well-designed customer strategy will coordinate many different functions, skills, and practices. For example, it should encompass data analytics; go-to-market and channel choices; and the delivery of products, services, and experiences.Ten principles are at the heart of any effective customer strategy. These principles are universally applicable, regardless of what industry a company operates in, whether it focuses on a business or consumer clientele, where it does business, or what products and services it offers. Based on long-standing practice and observation — along with our survey and interviews with key players in eight industries — these principles show how companies can position themselves for customer success.

1. Master the art of the possible. Because technological breakthroughs are now common in nearly every industry, customers expect big changes to be a regular occurrence. The most successful companies continually experiment with innovations that make life better for customers. Customers appreciate companies that can do this effectively, time after time. That doesn’t mean asking your customers what they will find indispensable in the future; they can’t tell you. Consumers also don’t know what they want from new innovations, and they don’t always anticipate what will happen when they adopt them. They often know what they want only after they see it.
No one, for example, asked for ride-sharing apps before Uber appeared, followedby Lyft, Sidecar, BlaBlaCar, Haxi, and other similar services. Digital and mobile devices are now endemic to customer experience, and new kinds of apps (for example, for mobile payments) emerge regularly. No one knew these apps were indispensable until they were, suddenly, everywhere.
Therefore, when launching innovative products and services, develop your own informed judgment about technology. Carefully consider which new technologies will appeal to your customers at just the right time, in just the right way, so that customers become more loyal. This is particularly important for digital and mobile technologies, which continue to fundamentally alter the ways people interact with businesses and the types of products and services they favor.
There is a hefty risk management component to this principle. While you try to anticipate emerging technologies, others are doing the same. No one will get everything right; your ability to outpace your competitors depends on your cultivating better judgment, and then placing bet after bet, refining your acumen all the time. Not only do you have to decide what technologies will be most valued, but you have to know how far ahead of your customers to be, and you have to learn from every foray.
In our customer strategy survey, 40 percent of the respondents said that one of their top five priorities was mastering the art of the possible, particularly in digital and mobile technologies. Of these, 67 percent reported that they conducted regular assessments of digital and mobile technologies they might adopt or improve, but only 28 percent truly analyzed the financial impact of being early or late with their own innovations or those developed by others. The ability to analyze what you should bring to market and when will give you an edge, because better judgment relies on informed experimentation: trying new things at a reasonable scale, and paying enough attention to the results to be able to learn from each new launch.
Consider how Nest Labs, a maker of smart home devices owned by Alphabet, Google’s parent company, continually gains competitive advantage through its adroit use of technology. Nest takes ordinary home fixtures and makes them smart, beautiful, and energy efficient. For years, the marketing research at established companies found that consumers wouldn’t pay more than US$200 for a thermostat. But Nest developed a stylish, self-learning, and intuitive thermostat that could be controlled using a smartphone. After carving out a market by targeting the subsegment of highly educated, energy-conscious customers willing to pay the $249 list price, Nest began building an ecosystem of Internet-connected devices, including smoke detectors and security cameras. The company is now the leader in the smart thermostat market, which is expected to grow over the next several years and generate revenues of more than $1.3 billion by 2019, according to Sandler Research.
2. Know your customers at a granular level. Leading companies are moving beyond traditional quantitative segmenting. They’re developing much more sophisticated customer analysis that draws from a variety of sources, including customer behavior and psychographic data gathered online and offline, real-time information collected from sensors and other tracking mechanisms, and geographic and mapping data. Business leaders understand how critical this shift is. The executives we surveyed rated “segment and know your customers” as the second most important principle of developing a great customer strategy. (The first, “Link your company’s customer strategy to its overall identity,” is included as principle number three below.)
Many companies claim to have mastered this principle. Among the companies we surveyed that said customer insight was a top priority, 73 percent said their business had the capability in hand. Still, even at these organizations, there’s plenty of room for improvement. For example, only 46 percent said they regularly translate their customer knowledge into business platforms, actionable expansion plans, or new business models.
To raise your own customer analytics ability, start by thoroughly defining your market and customers. Deepen your knowledge by applying techniques such as mapping the customer journey. Seek out data from a variety of sources at the most granular level: for example, activity tracked by the Internet of Things, real-time interactions with your own Web and e-commerce sites, social media, and online communities such as customer advocacy councils. Use all of these, and more, to embed the voice of the customer in your decision making.
3. Link your company’s customer strategy to its overall identity. Every successful company has a strong value proposition that distinguishes it from rivals. It consistently offers something for its customers that no competitor can match. To deliver on this promise, it must develop and deploy a group of interrelated, distinctive capabilities. All of these must work together across the full portfolio of products and services. This combination of value proposition, capabilities, and offerings, when they all fit together in a coherent way, gives the company its identity. The company’s customer experience can be thought of as the visible edge of that identity: the way in which people interact with the company and learn to appreciate it.
It is more challenging than it may seem to develop a strong identity. Many businesses don’t truly know what they stand for, especially when they face so many outside influences and threats. Companies often find themselves playing defense, calibrating their value proposition against what rivals offer, instead of basing it on what they can do distinctively well.
Linking your customer strategy to your company’s value proposition goes beyond lining up the right processes from marketing, sales, and data analytics. It means aligning the emotional elements of your customer strategy, and all customer touch points including pricing, with the strongest capabilities your company has.
Apple has mastered this type of appeal. It offers customers a sense of superiority, grounded in an intuitive and productive experience and beautifully designed devices. Everything Apple does reinforces these attributes. It sticks to premium pricing and high margins, creating an association with status on which the company has refused to compromise — even when its sales slowed in fiscal year 2016. Its stores are spacious, open, and sophisticated, its website is sleek, its customer service is knowledgeable and savvy, and it doesn’t waste its customers’ time. Apple’s cultish fan base is a testimony to the emotional connection it builds by consistently delivering on its value proposition.
This principle requires a commitment from every part of the organization. If your company has many different groups that aren’t tightly connected or that can’t even agree on what they represent, you will need to bring them together around a common identity.
4. Target customers with whom you have the “right to win.” When your company has a strong identity, you don’t need to compete in every marketplace — only in the categories where you are reasonably confident of succeeding. Your value proposition will be consistent enough to appeal to a group of customers whom you can serve profitably. This is where you have the right to win — that is, a reasonable expectation that you can compete effectively against rivals.
If you try to grow your business where you don’t have the right to win, you risk investing time and resources on indifferent customers. You can and should branch out to other customers and markets. But those new customers and markets should be reachable with the same capabilities that gave you an edge with your base.
The Trader Joe’s grocery chain has a right-to-win customer strategy that provides a clear example of this principle. From the start, instead of trying to reach a mass market, the company built a devoted following by providing budget-friendly products for health- and diet-conscious shoppers. It caters exclusively to these consumers, working consistently to source and offer a tightly edited range of private-label, hard-to-find epicurean items. With $11.3 billion in sales and 457 stores in the U.S., Trader Joe’s sells more than twice what Whole Foods, its next biggest competitor, sells per square foot, and consistently tops the rankings for customer satisfaction.
5. Treat your customers as assets that will grow in value. Not every company cultivates long-term customer relationships in a constructive way. Leading companies do. They continually create better reasons for their customers to identify with the company and its products and services.
Building great customer relationships is a long-term game. It goes against many common practices, such as tracking the short-term return on customer acquisition investments. It even goes beyond quantifying the lifetime cost of a customer relationship, at either the individual or segment level, though that’s an important first step.
You can build on this quantitative understanding by analyzing your customers’ paths to purchase. This analysis gives you the insight you need to expand and tailor your customer relationships, investing in meeting the evolving needs of your customers. The results of this analysis, particularly when customer data is included, can affect every aspect of your customer relationships, including the emotional attributes of your brand and the consistency of your pricing.
Few companies treat customers as assets more effectively than Salesforce.com. The company disrupted the low end of the customer relationship management market by positioning its “Success. Not Software” advertising campaign against competitor Siebel’s higher-priced, more complex on-premise software applications. Salesforce.com created a platform that customers license on a subscription basis rather than buy. This powerful model, known as software-as-a-service (SaaS), allows customers to use software without a large up-front purchase, and Salesforce.com can regularly add features based on customers’ feedback. The company also offered training and certification programs that made customers a critical part of the branding and sales engine. Through this customer partnership, and by exploiting SaaS to meet clients’ needs as computer prices dropped, Salesforce.com redefined the software market.
To treat your customers as assets, you need clear accountability in your organization. When anyone who buys from you has a problem or complaint, there must be a way of resolving it and someone responsible for doing so. You also need a culture that motivates relationship building and joint problem solving — a partnership with the customer as opposed to transactional selling.
6. Leverage your ecosystem. Your company exists in a broad network of relationships that form an ecosystem. These relationships are not just with customers, but also with suppliers, distributors, retailers, industry associations, institutional partners, and government agencies. You can tap into this ecosystem to engage your customers in ways that go beyond what has been relevant to your business relationship in the past. A broad ecosystem can provide data your customers' interests, thereby opening up ideas for new product and service offerings and growth opportunities.
Using the ecosystem is different from managing a value chain. You develop partners that can help spur innovation and more venues for going to market. They might also help win new customers for you by endorsing your brand.
Developing brand ambassadors is crucial to this approach — including some who work directly for you, some who work for other companies in your ecosystem, and still others among your customers. These advocates promote your brand to attract and win over new consumers. To be sure, you can’t control them the way you control your direct advertising and communications. However, with the right talent, training, and cross-organizational oversight, you can manage the risks and engage your customers through a far-reaching community that becomes central to your ecosystem. Companies such as Lego, Harley-Davidson, and BMW, whose enthusiastic customers communicate regularly with one another, successfully use this principle.
7. Ensure a seamless omnichannel experience. We all know the importance of omnichannel experience — a consistent look and feel in all customer touch points, including brick-and-mortar, face-to-face, online, voice phone, and mobile. Successful companies develop these channels using customer expectations, brand positioning, customer value, and cost-to-serve. They analyze the full cost and full set of benefits of each channel. The result is a seamless experience for the customer across every point of contact, so that shopping with an app feels reasonably similar to a face-to-face transaction.
Maintaining consistency across channels will be even more important during the next three to five years, because customers expect it. They count on being able to hop between call centers, websites, mobile apps, retail stores, and sales calls, getting the same experience at each stop. This raises the bar for every part of the organization — from product development to supply chain management.
The apparel startup Bonobos adapted its omnichannel approach after looking closely at its customers’ expectations. Initially, Bonobos’s ambitions were limited. It was a Web store designed to make it easy for male shoppers to find pants that fit. By chance, when the company opened a fitting room in its New York office, company leaders realized that although they could broaden their reach by letting customers see, touch, and try on apparel, most of the walk-in customers were not buying on impulse. Rather, they would come in to try on the clothes, and then order them later. The “guideshop” concept was born. Now shoppers book an appointment to try on clothes with the help of a stylist, or guide. The guide places the order, and the item is sent to the customer’s home from a warehouse. This multichannel strategy meets customers’ needs and streamlines costs because Bonobos doesn’t need stores that carry full inventories. The company is using a large part of the $55 million it has raised to open new guideshops.
8. Excel at delivery. The physical delivery of products and services is critical to keeping your customers happy. Whether or not you compete directly with Amazon, you are affected by its delivery innovations. These include recruiting individuals to do on-demand delivery, experimenting with drones, and signing up the U.S. Postal Service to handle Sunday deliveries. Customers now expect something similar to Amazon’s effectiveness from every company.
This is a daunting challenge. Amazon’s continually improved supply chain is designed to give it an edge. By managing its own inventory and that of third parties, Amazon gets volume discounts with shippers. Through co-locating small, dedicated distribution centers within key suppliers, such as Procter & Gamble, it lowers warehousing costs. By shipping a growing number of items using the Amazon freight network, it saves on shipping costs.
But you can emulate some aspects of Amazon’s practices, even if you don’t deliver nearly as high a proportion of merchandise directly. You can tailor delivery options on the basis of margin, brand positioning, and customers’ value expectations — while staying in step with technological advances. Data and analytics are the keys to these efforts. The use of relevant metrics, including customer experience, cost, and productivity, can help ensure high-quality delivery without sacrificing profitability.
9. Reorganize around the customer. Your organization should be “fit for your customer”: that is to say, it should be designed to make it easy to deliver a great customer experience. If you have already gone through the first eight principles, you should have a clear idea of your chosen customers, your identity, and your capabilities — and why these give you a right to win. Now redesign the organization accordingly. This might involve changing decision rights, shifting roles and responsibilities, establishing new teams, and aligning incentives, norms, and practices, always with your preferred customer groups and value proposition in mind. In other words, you may need to take the formal mechanisms and hierarchical structures of the existing company — your organizational DNA — and wire them differently.
Resist the temptation to adopt elements of agile development from technology companies and apply them to customer strategy. These elements include rapid mobilization on new projects (“sprint and scrum”), multidisciplinary teams, greater and faster information sharing, rapid decision making, and continuous collaboration and problem solving. Agility of this sort gives you flexibility, but it can also lead you to distracting, unprofitable endeavors. Don’t try to be agile just for the sake of being agile. Clearly articulate how these methods will help you develop a powerful customer strategy.
You also need to attract and retain the right talent. This means not only people with technological skills, but also those who understand customer experience and the practices needed to deliver it.
Many companies have instituted a chief customer officer (CCO) role. But quite often the CCO isn’t able to create the kind of customer-centric organization we’re talking about, because responsibility and accountability for customer strategy remains highly fragmented among sales, marketing, service, and other functions embedded in business units and geographies. Make sure your CCO (if you have one) directly or indirectly oversees every part of the organization that touches the customer’s experience.
10. Match your culture with your customer strategy. A relevant culture is a bigger advantage than ever for customer-facing companies. In our survey and interviews, a majority of executives said that the biggest barriers to a successful customer strategy were finding the right talent and developing the right organizational culture. Yet among companies that ranked meeting customer expectations as one of their top priorities in our survey, just 51 percent said they used culture as an accelerant and a differentiator.
Keeping your culture vibrant takes diligence. You might feel that your embedded cultural inhibitors hold you back. Veteran managers may mistrust the social collaboration tools that younger and more digitally adept employees use freely. The rank and file may be skeptical about the cultural changes you are trying to implement.
Don’t try to fix these problems directly; instead, focus on the few critical behaviors that exist in your organization in which people are doing well for their customers. These might include mobilizing a cross-functional team to help a customer solve a particular problem quickly, saying no to a potential deal with a customer with whom you don’t have a right to win, or starting each meeting by explicitly asking how the topic under discussion is relevant to the customer strategy. Then help spread these behaviors through the rest of the company, in part by explaining why these behaviors matter.
You may also need to lead by following — becoming a visible master of these behaviors yourself — while cultivating advocates among employees. Keeping a culture moving forward is one of the hardest tasks companies take on, which is why many don’t evolve.

Customer-Oriented Leaders

The 10 principles we’ve laid out are familiar to many companies. But few companies consistently practice them with the level of finesse that’s called for.
What, then, should you as a C-level or senior executive do? First, check your current customer strategy and see to what extent all 10 principles are addressed. Rather than just focusing on one or two measures, such as annual sales, incremental sales, market share, or return on investment, establish a scorecard that captures several of these dimensions. Then conduct a qualitative assessment of what your company does well and poorly. As you adjust your practices, focus on a clear identity. If everything you do makes sense in a coherent way, you can build customer relationships that help your business thrive.

About the Survey

Our researchers emailed the 2016 PwC Strategy& Customer Strategy survey to more than 15,000 executives in a variety of industries in North America, South America, Europe, Asia, the Middle East, and Australia in April 2016.
Of the recipients, 161 completed the survey; 56 percent of the companies that responded were headquartered in North America. Industries in which the respondents sold their products or services included construction and real estate, energy, entertainment and media, financial services, healthcare, manufacturing, mining and agriculture, retail, technology, and transportation.
Annual revenues for responding companies ranged from US$100 million to more than $10 billion. Of the respondents, 17 percent were at the C-suite level, and 80 percent were at the level of president, senior or executive vice president, vice president, or director. Sixty-four percent were highly involved with their company’s customer strategy, and 26 percent were somewhat involved. Of the companies responding, 44 percent served primarily the B2B market, 14 percent served primarily the B2C market, and 43 percent served both.
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