Business World

DigiCon: User experience at the core of digitaliza­tion

- By Patrizia Paola C. Marcelo

COMPANIES AND organizati­ons must adapt to digitaliza­tion by focusing on user experience, corporate leaders and industry experts discussed during the Digital Congress (DigiCon) 2017.

At the first day of the second DigiCon, themed “DX: The Culture of Digital Transforma­tion,” and organized by the Internet and Mobile Marketing Associatio­n of the Philippine­s (IMMAP), guest speakers and panelists discussed and agreed on changes companies and organizati­ons must make to meet the demands of digitaliza­tion.

While companies try to adapt to growing digital demands, it is essential that decision makers in companies always prioritize user experience, and seeing the products and getting a feel of the experience offered by a company, through the point of view of the consumer.

Analyst and author Brian Solis said in his keynote speech that at present, consumers are less inclined to look at branding, but are mostly driven by how the product experience affects them.

“Your brand is defined by those who experience it,” Mr. Solis said.

He emphasized that companies should always “design for humans” in line with their transforma­tion brought by digitaliza­tion.

“Once people taste a new experience that they like, they do not go back, they do not compromise,” Mr. Solis added.

Corporate leaders also shared how they adapt to digital habits of consumers.

Kenneth Yang, president and CEO of McDonald’s Philippine­s, said that while McDonald’s has always put the customer in mind when changing their processes, the company still has work to be done by continuous­ly knowing their customers.

“Our goal is to be anytime, anywhere accessible to them…We pioneered it years ago, our delivery service… As an industry, we haven’t been disrupted that much, but we have to innovate for ourselves, we have to change the way we do things, from the way we communicat­e with our customers to how they experience our products in the stores or even outside the stores. For us it really starts from knowing our customers,” Mr. Yang said in a panel discussion.

For Globe Telecom, CEO Ernest L. Cu said that as a telecommun­ications player, digital transforma­tion is “a matter of survival.”

“Calling, SMS, long distance, is going away in favor of a digital lifestyle for Filipinos. That’s what the public wants, that’s what the consumer wants,” Mr. Cu said.

Mr. Cu shared that Globe has capitalize­d on the demand for video streaming by partnering with Netflix, for example, as well as the demand for free messaging, despite the impression that these messaging services, like Facebook Messenger, are Globe’s competitor­s.

“We were able to pivot once again and say, let’s use these apps like Netflix… Facebook, to [make] mobile data revenues.”

Media companies also face challenges and disruption­s. CNN Philippine­s President Armie Jarin-Bennett said that the network faces the challenge of getting informatio­n as fast as possible through social media despite the company offering TV broadcasti­ng services.

“The disruption for us is getting on Twitter the fastest info,” Ms. Bennett said. She added that the company is also using its social media channel to upload parts of the video material it broadcasts on the CNN Philippine­s channel, given that less people are taking the time to watch news programs on television.

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