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Finding the ROI of Customer Experience

CX Transformation: 4 Ways to Improve your CX Strategy

Over the past decade, and specifically in the past three years, companies have enthusiastically embraced the importance of customer experience (CX) as a strategy. Long gone are the days of questioning the value for business success. Now companies are all in. But despite significant investments in everything from voice of customer programs, analytics and social media, many companies see those investments not meeting the expectations that they were launched with.

In this article we look at four ways to improve your brand's customer experience transformation and drive better business results.

What is CX Transformation... and what is holding it back?

In our experiences across various industries, a common issue hindering the creation of effective customer experiences is that many companies continue to invest in disparate and siloed programs that are not cross functional. Each may be focused on its own improving customer experience initiatives without interoperability to those in other functions. Often the overall customer strategy is not clearly and consistently understood across the customer journey, nor deeply within support functions. In fact, support functions often do not see how their actions have any impact on customer experience, so they remain focused on cost and risk mitigation. In addition, it’s not always clear who owns the collective “customer experience” and customer relationship within an organization. Seldom does the full executive suite see it as their job.

To overcome this dynamic, the best companies are assigning a Chief Customer Experience officer who can cross the organizational boundaries to drive alignment and collaboration.  Organizations that have taken the plunge, such as the Cleveland Clinic with its Chief Patient Experience Officer, see their efforts gain traction and tangible results in customer satisfaction.

Culture also plays an enormous part in the success or failure of both initial and ongoing customer experience transformation. Spending on silver bullets won’t get it done. Companies must invest in the culture over the long term as part of a strategic approach to CX transformation.

Successful companies start with culture first, then products second, and many have undertaken cultural transformation as a priority, trumping other capital-based projects. These examples show that it’s possible and profitable to lead with culture.

4 ways to recognize CX transformation opportunities

Tactically, company leaders and employees must roll up their sleeves and get down in the dirt to fill in the operational gaps and dig out real ROI. We have identified four key success factors in transforming customer experience:

1. Follow the ABCs: Alignment, behavior, communication.

Customer experience is not the job of the front office, or of customer-facing customer service departments. An enterprise commitment requires alignment and advocacy from the C-suite across all business processes. Everything from Lean Six Sigma initiatives to technology and working capital investment decisions must be aligned to the mind set that a superior customer experience drives growth and profitability. This commitment from the senior management must be cascaded down through the organization. Incentives, rewards and recognition must all influence behaviors and actions at every level. Finally, without strong strategic and informal communications delivered continuously to reinforce the commitment, it is easy for a transformation to become the “flavor of the month.”

For large scale transformations this is a well-known requirement for success. Nearly every management guru has espoused this as a primary ingredient and it has proven over and over by companies such as Hubbell, GE, IBM and other large and small companies.

2. Think horizontal.

Customer engagement with a company doesn't occur in only one silo. Yet many companies take an inside-out approach to their operations, resulting in redundant or even conflicting customer experience initiatives in different areas of the business. Companies must have complete clarity on the full customer journey by individual, not by product or division.

To do this, we recommend leveraging a Lean Six Sigma (LSS) team. Most companies have ones in place already. Every capable LSS expert fully understands the need to document the customer’s experience across functions, as well as how to take into account the “off stage” support functions such as HR, accounting, and legal. Their expertise can be invaluable in moving quickly from siloed thinking to customer-journey thinking.

3. Invest in and practice with your people.

Deliberate Practice is the implementation of the concept that expert-level performance is primarily the result of expert-level practice. It’s no different for customer experience excellence as it is for becoming a violin virtuoso. Employees must know what they need to start doing and what they need to stop doing to be more customer-centric, then structurally practice it until it becomes second nature. This is not only at the individual level but also at the team and even enterprise level. Companies need to be sure that new skills and knowledge are applied correctly, down to the full orchestration of every touchpoint. Think rehearsal before opening night on Broadway, not traditional train and test.

Companies must make the investment in working with their employees along the way, leveraging that same Lean Six Sigma team to focus on processes and the human capital team to develop training curriculum. In this respect, social knowledge sharing across cross functional teams is critical. Most companies fail to make the investment in sharing information such as customer feedback, lessons learned, new processes and practices, and other areas that drive the new capabilities companies need from individuals and teams.

4. Continue ongoing governance.

Nearly every company uses steering committees for IT organizations and other large-scale initiatives. We see much less of this in customer experience initiatives, but it is a best practice to facilitate continuous improvement. To maintain momentum, we recommend that the CEO be the executive sponsor for the customer experience governance committee. For the most critical transformation initiatives it is the only way to clearly communicate the commitment is real and success is non-negotiable. In addition, the best leaders and best talent must be assigned to the initiative, not junior people without the expertise and experience to enable an enterprise vision of customer experience improvements. And relevant measures of success should be nearly real time to allow for immediate feedback on the impact of actions, initiatives and investments.

Conclusion: A strong customer experience transformation strategy is one of many building blocks to great CX

We hope you enjoyed this article looking at CX transformation best practices to create great customer experiences. Here are some additional resources related to data driven customer journey mapping, customer service optimization via automation, and customer centric digital transformation to further help your brand achieve customer success.

Understanding the Customer Journey Every Step of the Way: Using customer journey maps is a great way to better understand customer expectations and to identify new approaches for interacting with customers that can lead to sustained competitive advantage. In this strategy guide, learn five ways to utilize customer journey maps to power your CX transformation efforts.

5 Simple Ways to Optimize Voice of the Customer and Speech Analytics Data: In this guide, learn 5 ways to use speech analytics to augment employee experiences on the floor and customer experience over the phone. Today’s leading contact centers leverage speech analytics technology to enhance customer experience, train associates more effectively, and ensure quality assurance (QA) across all channels and at every contact point. Leverage speech analytics technology more effectively to better understand associate and customer conversations across the entire journey.

Top Customer Service AI and Automation Trends: Automation trends, such as robotic process automation (RPA), Artificial Intelligence (AI), and machine learning (ML) for both employee and customer interactions are changing the face of customer service. As the nature of work changes, learn how to accelerate digital transformation with automation to create great customer experiences.

Five Essential Steps to Customer-Centric Digital Transformation: Customer support and customer experience management is not the same as it once was. While moving from channel-centric to customer-centric operating and service models can feel like a mammoth undertaking, don't worry, our CX transformation experts are here to help. In this White Paper, we'll explain the five key steps to enable end-to-end digital and customer experience transformation that improves customer satisfaction, reduces cost, and increases revenue.

Contact Center of the Future - Digital Transformation Best Practices: To have happy customers, your company needs to provide personalized and timely customer support, across all digital channels. Whether speaking with a front line employee directly or utilizing automated self-service, to drive customer loyalty and increase customer lifetime value (CLV), it is important to utilize a holistic approach in which all channels are seamlessly connected. In this way, you will be better able to determine and respond to customer and employees pain points throughout all aspects of the customer journey. And a key aspect of transforming customer experience is digital transformation within your contact center. By activating digital technologies for customer insights, call deflection, personalization, and automation, CX leaders can achieve the contact center of the future, today.