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Organisati­ons must aim for creating customer experience­s that stay on

Brands should seize opportunit­y to make micro-moments count

- BY SATISH DAVE Satish Dave is Director Customer Experience at Kantar

There are many things that organisati­ons need to do to drive true customer-centricity and delightful customer experience (CX). And brands need to take both an outside-in and inside-out perspectiv­e.

What brands need to do within their organisati­on in terms of culture, CX vision and strategy, CX governance, CX strategy, KPIs and systems to collect and act on customer feedback is a topic for another day. For now, I would like to focus on the five key pillars we have identified that provide a balanced approach to driving customer centricity. This is based on Kantar’s collective experience of more than 30 years in the CX space globally.

The first step for any brand is to ensure the entire organisati­on is aligned – critically the marketing and CX functions. Customer experience is influenced largely by the brand promise – stated and unstated – that each brand creates.

This brand promise can come from marketing campaigns, staff, third-parties, digital and social media, history and reputation of the brand, etc. Brand promises result in customer expectatio­ns, and not meeting customer expectatio­ns can result in lower CX. For example, if a brand promises a certain timeline for a transactio­n (24 hours) and meets this in 36 hours, it is likely to result in lower CX than if a brand promised 48 hours and delivers in 36 hours.

The word “emotion” gets used a lot in CX... and that is true.

People remember the good and the bad experience­s, and often these memories are linked to a strong emotion. But it is difficult to demonstrat­e emotion.

In this context the role of staff and, in recent times, chatbots is critical. Customers are expecting employees to be empathetic – putting themselves in customer’s shoes, not follow a written script, listen carefully and importantl­y genuinely help customers resolve their issues or queries.

Customers – both new generation and the old — are now used to a variety of tech enablers. They now possess huge power in that they can lead brand conversati­ons as opposed to brands dictating which channels to use across the customer journey.

Brands should also give customers the power and flexibilit­y to choose touchpoint­s depending on their context and need.

This is best summed up in one of my favourite quotes by Maya Angelou, “I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”

It is hard work to make brands truly customer-centric – a few brands have worked out the recipe for this. Let’s end with another quote by Angelou: “We delight in the beauty of the butterfly, but rarely admit the changes it has gone through to achieve that beauty.”

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