There’s no question that great customer experience delights customers, creates loyalty, and attracts prospects. Management has put you in charge of creating a customer experience that differentiates your organization! Where do you start?
Although customer-centric strategies might be thought of as “common sense” they can actually be quite complex. In this session we’ll discuss the importance of establishing a CX strategy and explore the core elements your strategy should include.
Selling the Value of a Customer Experience Strategy
1. Selling the Value of a Customer
Experience Strategy
Mark Gavin
Vice President – Strategic Consulting
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
Avtex Customer Conference 2012 The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
2. Agenda
• Customer Experience Basics
• Selling the Value
• Getting Started
• Customer Story – CPP North America
• Wrap Up – Q&A
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
3. Customer Experience Basics
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
4. Customer Experience Basics
What it is… What it isn’t…
• CX = customer’s perception • New slogan and fresh
of your coat of paint
company, products, service • An approach to satisfy all
s (branding, marketing, pre-sales to customer personas
fulfillment, delivery, support)
• One-off Project
• Excellent CX creates
competitive differentiation • Easy to implement and
manage
• Customer Experience is
Profitable!
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
5. Customer Experience Basics
“Ecosystem” - understand the elements that influence experience
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
6. Selling the Value of Customer
Experience Programs
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
7. Treat CX as a Business Discipline
1). Build a strong business case.
2). Demonstrate how CX is profitable!
Make it easy for CFO to compare
– Good CX increases
CX w/competing projects loyalty Revenue (Outside In – pg 30-31)
• Retained revenue via lower customer churn
• Incremental purchases from current customers
• New sales resulting from word of mouth
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
8. Does Good CX Really Payoff?
Let me count the ways…
1) Retained Revenue 2) Incremental Purchases
???
3) Word-of-Mouth Revenue
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
9. Treat CX as a Business Discipline
Customer experience is profitable!
– Good CX increases loyalty Revenue (Outside In – pg 30-31)
• Retained revenue via lower customer churn
• Incremental purchases from current customers
• New sales resulting from word of mouth
– Customer experience drives cost savings
• CX assessment identifies inefficiencies within the
customer journey
• Identify the problem Fix Measure the result
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
10. Customer Experience Strategy
– Getting Started
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
11. CX Strategy Fundamentals
Do your homework
1). Understand your CX ecosystem! (…Breakout Session #2!)
2). Great customer experiences don’t happen by accident
(Source: Outside In)
3). Your CX strategy must support your corporate strategy
(Source: Outside In)
4). Your CX strategy must align with your brand
(Source: Outside In)
5). Your CX strategy must be specific, clear & memorable
(Source: Outside In)
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
12. Customer Story – CPP North
America
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
13. CPP North America
Introduction
• Jeannine Peterson – SVP, Consumer Experience
• CPP Group – UK HQ;16 locations world-wide
• 200+ Business Partners; B-B-C business model
• CPPNA partners primarily with major financial
institutions to sell life assistance products
• Identity Theft Protection
• Purchase Protection
• Concierge line
• Primary consumer channel is telemarketing
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
14. CPP North America
What We Know About Our Customer Experience…
• CPP has core competency in go-to-market
strategies and telemarketing channels
• Constantly in pursuit of superior consumer
experience
• Consistently adhere to telemarketing sales rules
and regulations and offer is truly compelling
• Consumers very interested in life assistance
products and service
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
15. CPP North America
Where We Want To Go…
• Desire to take consumer experience to next-level
• CPP Group has core belief and aspiration to put customers at
the heart of all we do - across all countries and regions
• We know we have some opportunities from a technology
perspective and the customer journey and touch points need
to be more seamless.
• We are also in transition from an innovation perspective and
we are reinventing our products and place in the market
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
16. CPP North America
Where We Want To Go…
• Need to manage the experience holistically, integrating all
points
• Belief that to set ourselves apart and create a new and lasting
source of competitive advantage, we must manage the
customer experience
– how customers experience brand at every interaction and
in every channel
• Objective to serve customers intelligently and profitably.
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
17. CPP North America
Progress To Date:
• Commissioned Avtex to define Consumer Experience Strategic
Roadmap
• Developed Consumer Experience Metrics and Dashboard
• Convened Customer Advocacy Council
• Launched customer satisfaction survey and feedback loop and
gather net-promoter score
• Integration of technology touch points is a work in progress
• Product enhancements underway to capitalize on consumer
experience findings and analysis
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
18. CPP North America
Recommendations and Lessons Learned (…so far):
• Best place to start is to define the customer experience roadmap and
define strategy and milestones
– Avtex Consumer Experience Strategic Roadmap Offering is top flight way to start
• Ensure the process includes marketing, sales and services
• Define clear responsibilities and objectives
• Treat Consumer Experience as part of the company, not as a project
– Create a service culture
• Establish stakeholder management
• Do not underestimate change management requirements
• Keep the project simple and small, then roll it out
• Build a solid business case
• Define short term ROI objectives
– Understand how longer term value with be created and then track
• Keep customer retention and profit as central objectives
– CEM initiatives must be designed to encourage lifetime value and systems should be put
in place with improved customer insight and management in mind
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
19. Call to Action!
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
20. Call to Action
Putting this information to work…
• Does your organization have a CX vision & strategy?
• Learn More – Conference Call / Meeting
• Avtex can help!
1)Customer Experience Assessment Considerations
– CEO Macro level; End-to-End Journey
– iCEO Macro baseline; micro focus
– Hybrid
2)IT Assessment – “…do we have the IT foundation?”
3)Customized Approach
• Contact your Account Executive or mgavin@avtex.com
Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
22. Avtex Customer Conference 2012
The Intersection of Technology and Customer Experience
Hyatt Regency | Minneapolis |10.25.2012
Notes de l'éditeur
Welcome everyone to Avtex Customer Conference 2012. Thank you for taking time from your busy schedules to be with us today. I’m Mark Gavin, VP of Strategic Consulting at Avtex. For over 13 years I’ve teamed up with a number of talented employees to successfully design, implement and facilitate a variety of business and technical assessments. “Selling the Value of a Customer Experience Strategy” is the first of four customer focused sessions that will address the intersection of Technology and Customer Experience!
We have a full agenda today with a lot of information to cover. I’m especially excited about having Jeannine Peterson from CPP North America with us today to talk about their customer experience initiative.
Let’s begin by setting a foundation for what Customer Experience is, and maybe just important, what customer experience isn’t
It’s important to level-set on what customer experience is, and maybe just as importantly, what it isn’t.WHAT IT ISPerception is reality – this is significant because we really need to understand customer perception if we’re going to effectively manage the experience going forward. Their perception could change depending upon where they are in their journey with your organization.Technical advances, access to tons of online information, ability to quickly assimilate new product and service offerings has significantly reduced the barriers to entrywe need to constantly be on the lookout for points of differentiation.Customer experience is profitable – loyalty, retention, and referrals generate revenue; examination of the customer experience journey, corresponding touch points, and underlying processes will reveal cost savings opportunities. Outside In provides some great supporting facts and figures.WHAT IT ISN’TSlogan and paint – if cx initiatives are going to be successful in your organization then they must be treated as a business discipline. Success will be limited at best if your CX efforts are not tied into the overall company vision, don’t have executive support, and you can’t demonstrate a meaningful return on investment.You can’t satisfy everyone – some customer types, or personas, may not be profitable for your product or service offering…. so don’t spend resources catering to them! Focus your time and resources on those customers that are profitable. Begs the question… do you know your customers?Successful customer experiences result from a culture of CX dedication; make a commitment!Designing, implementing, and managing customer experience programs can be challenging… not to mention overwhelming if you haven’t gone through the experience in the past. Have a plan; create a strategy! Get support from all business units. Be incremental.
Before you can effectively move forward with any CX initiative it’s imperative that you understand the “ecosystem” in which your customer exists.A variety of ecosystem definitions exist but the core participants typically include:1). Customers – can be many customer types!2). Partners – inward facing and outward facing3). Employees – inward facing and outward facingDuring the CX Session track we will be exploring a couple topics that are receiving a lot of attention lately.
How many of you in attendance have had to sell an idea, project, or significant purchase to your CEO or CFO?Its not easy…Selling the value of a customer experience program can be especially challenging because the customer experience topic feels squishy. Its not as tangible as an equipment purchase for example.Because of this squishiness its critical that we start by building a viable business case.
Selling the value of a customer experience program is becoming easier. Recent publications like the Outside In, continue to provide real-world proof that customer experience excellence is paying off. With that said, you’re not Fedex, Bank of America, or US Cellular. You need to build a your own case for CX.Would we ever pitch a new product launch without quantifying the financial impact; what is the cost? What is the expected ROI? Is it a complimentary product offering or do we risk cannibalism; etc..? NO! Customer experience initiatives must be treated the same way!Build a sound business case with predefined objectives and time frames.ProfitableLoyalty incremental purchases from current customers; retained revenue via lower churn; new sales resulting from word of mouthDepending on the industry this loyalty metric can result in billions of dollars!Speak the “Financial” language - we need to present our CX initiatives using investment terminology familiar to our CEO/CFO
We need to treat CX as a business discipline.Building a strong business case in terms that a CFO can interpret is critical. Speak the “Financial” language - we need to present our CX initiatives using investment terminology familiar to our CEO/CFODemonstrate how CX is ProfitableLoyalty incremental purchases from current customers; retained revenue via lower churn; new sales resulting from word of mouthDepending on the industry this loyalty metric can result in billions of dollars!
Selling the value of a customer experience program is becoming easier. Recent publications like the Outside In, continue to provide real-world proof that customer experience excellence is paying off. With that said, you’re not Fedex, Bank of America, or US Cellular. You need to build a your own case for CX.Would we ever pitch a new product launch without quantifying the financial impact; what is the cost? What is the expected ROI? Is it a complimentary product offering or do we risk cannibalism; etc..? NO! Customer experience initiatives must be treated the same way!Build a sound business case with predefined objectives and time frames.ProfitableLoyalty incremental purchases from current customers; retained revenue via lower churn; new sales resulting from word of mouthDepending on the industry this loyalty metric can result in billions of dollars!Speak the “Financial” language - we need to present our CX initiatives using investment terminology familiar to our CEO/CFO
The importance of strategy within
I’m not here to talk about the importance of strategy. I trust that everyone here understands the role that strategy plays in the world around us. We see strategies unfold right before our eyes every day. Professional sports teams, presidential debates, When sound strategies are not applied we seeStrategies allow us manage, analyze, measure, and then respond/modify to meet the changes within the ecosystem.By systematically analyzing and measuring we’re able to respond quicker to strategies that aren’t always obvious unlike these classic product snafus..Strategy, or lack thereof, shapes the perception of our employees, partners, and ultimately our customers.
I’m not here to talk about the importance of strategy. I trust that everyone here understands the role that strategy plays in the world around us. We see strategies unfold right before our eyes every day. Professional sports teams, presidential debates, energy independenceWhen sound strategies are not applied we seeStrategies allow us manage, analyze, measure, and then respond/modify to meet the changes within the ecosystem.By systematically analyzing and measuring we’re able to respond quicker to strategies that aren’t always obvious unlike these classic product snafus..Strategy, or lack thereof, shapes the perception of our employees, partners, and ultimately our customers.
I’m not here to talk about the importance of strategy. I trust that everyone here understands the role that strategy plays in the world around us. We see strategies unfold right before our eyes every day. Professional sports teams, presidential debates, energy independenceWhen sound strategies are not applied we seeStrategies allow us manage, analyze, measure, and then respond/modify to meet the changes within the ecosystem.By systematically analyzing and measuring we’re able to respond quicker to strategies that aren’t always obvious unlike these classic product snafus..Strategy, or lack thereof, shapes the perception of our employees, partners, and ultimately our customers.
1). If you don’t have a detailed understanding of your CX ecosystem your chance for sustained customer experience success is slim. At best you can expect to make small CX improvements.2). Great customer experience is well thought out and orchestrated among employees and partners.3). If your CX strategy is not aligned with the corporate strategy you’re likely going to confuse employees, partners, and customers!4). Your organization may have brand messaging that has a direct impact on customer experience. Be sure you’re aware of the specifics!5). Don’t leave your CX strategy up for interpretation! Make sure it’s tangible. Squishy isn’t good.
Keep in mind you’re trying to create differentiation! Your CX strategy shouldn’t emulate another organization’s customer experience.
Now… since many of you in the room are technologists we should point out that although technology is instrumental
How many of you have platform or channel responsibility?How many of your organizations have distributed platform or channel ownership? Distributed ownership can create challenges for CX programs if they’re not properly managed.When creating your CX strategy there are three “rules of thumb” to keep in mind.This last “rule of thumb” provides a nice segue into a real-life example of an Avtex customer that is currently in the process of formulating their customer experience vision and strategy.