Business Standard

Customers seek more attention from brands

Brands that tailor experience­s to local needs and reduce friction in the purchase cycle win loyalty and trust: KPMG

- URVI MALVANIA

When a customer complained that a product on Amazon was wrongly classified as vegetarian, the e-commerce giant refunded the money and pulled the product off the website.

Apparel brand, Zara, found customers wanted the convenienc­e of shopping from home but were hesitant to commit. So it set up a facility whereby customers can check the availabili­ty of a style at a store near them and try it on before they buy.

Indian retail giant DMart has collection centres where buyers can pick up their online orders.

Initiative­s such as these are transformi­ng customer experience­s and expectatio­ns across India. A KMPG report titled Customer experience-The new operationa­l excellence reveals that brands with maximum focus on personalis­ation are rated better by consumers when it comes to customer experience. ‘Integrity’ and ‘meeting expectatio­ns’ are also key considerat­ions in evaluating experience­s with brands, the report adds.

Expectatio­ns from a brand are shifting from mere price considerat­ions to the need for building more meaningful relationsh­ips and Indian customers feel a sense of loyalty to a brand that engenders their trust. It is important that brands look at the experience­s that customers have when engaging with a product or a service and also how their expectatio­ns are managed, not just discounts and prices according to the global survey.

The study was conducted across 14 countries with more than 50,000 respondent­s. In India, the study included 2,508 respondent­s rating 108 brands across nine sectors. The customer experience excellence (CEE) report has used empirical data to measure customer experience across six pillars— personalis­ation, integrity, time and effort, expectatio­ns, resolution and, empathy. The overall CEE score is measured via the weighted average of the brand score of each pillar.

Personalis­ation is the pillar with the highest impact on loyalty and advocacy. Brands that are front runners in this pillar stay ahead of competitio­n by acknowledg­ing the unique character of their customers. The best performers here aretravel and hospitalit­y companies along with non-grocery retailers.

From the era of mass products and services, Indian customers today are increasing­ly expecting products and services that are tailored for them and are willing to pay a higher price for the same. “India is continuing its indulgence with experience­s which customers can live, share and feel connected with. Brands need to find a way to bring experience­s to life and fulfil their customer promise at each interactio­n,” says Aditya Rath, partner customer & channel, Management Consulting, KPMG in India.

The report defines personalis­ation as the act of a brand using individual attention to drive an emotional connection with its consumers. It is closely followed by integrity which is defined as being trustworth­y and engenderin­g trust.

According to the survey, Taj Hotels Resorts and Palaces is one of the top performers on the ‘personalis­ation’ and ‘integrity’ pillars. The non-grocery retail sector, too, scores high on both the pillars, with brands such as Tanishq, Flipkart and Indian Oil being ranked higher than others. The ‘personalis­ation’ pillar also cuts across local and global brands in India. However, global brands have fared better in sectors like entertainm­ent and leisure and logistics, and Indian brands in travel and hotels, telecom and restaurant and fast food.

There are nuances to customer experience that the survey highlights. For instance Netflix, a global brand, has fared well on the CEE metric but has not been high up on personalis­ation as it offers a global content library to its Indian subscriber­s. Around three-quarters of the content is English while Hindi content is primarily Bollywood and regional content is negligible. In contrast, Amazon Prime Video, another internatio­nal streaming service, has fared better on the ‘personalis­ation’ pillar by ensuring a healthier mix of English content (less than 65 per cent), Hindi content (25 per cent) and regional content (10 per cent) at lower rates. Hotstar, an Indian player in the streaming market has also capitalise­d on the sentiments of the Indian market.

The survey revealed that brands offering customers an omnichanne­l experience rank higher on the experience scale. Customers demand easy transition­s between physical and online stores, and expect an integrated experience. Brands that bring down the walls between their channels are best able to empower customers and are more likely to win their lifelong loyalty, the report says.

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