You are not alone if you look at your customer experience and see a mountain to climb. But have courage, things may not be as bleak as you think.
Companies with the highest-rated CX can likely attribute this to a combination of knowing and managing expectations, wow factor and consideration of the end to end experience.
To have a customer experience your rivals will envy, you need to contemplate your customers’ expectations. Consider the following:
Many organisations will spend large amounts of money on keeping up with competitors rather than concentrating on leaping ahead of them.
Organisations should be compartmentalising resources to focus on the WOW.
Amazon Prime Now illustrates this point really well.
While most of its competitors were still struggling to keep up with achieving next day delivery, Amazon introduced the 1 hour delivery service to central London. Achieving this wasn’t too complicated either. Amazon offered its most popular products out of central locations using take-away delivery inspired logistics to get packages to their recipients.
This seems simple but has fundamentally changed online shopping and made it vastly more convenient than popping down to the high street. Customers probably weren’t expecting that. Now that’s a wow!
Any high street store or supermarket in London could have used existing infrastructure to bring items to you in less than an hour if they had thought of it first. But they probably didn’t because they were too focused on just keeping up with the minimum expectation and not trying to skip ahead.
In order to be get ahead your organisation will need to take some loss leading risks initially.
Doing something simple early in a customer’s journey may make a big difference later down the line.
Some of the best examples of this are subscription or renewal-based products such as software as a service, insurance or food and drink delivery services.
Customers don’t see new business, cancellations or renewals as three different things. They just see their overall experience with you. So why don’t businesses think about the end to end?
I’ll give you an example of my own. I’m a coffee lover and hate spending money on large coffee chains. I have a proper coffee machine at home. Every morning I make my own flat white.
I have tried many subscription coffee services in the past and never stuck with one, commonly because I am lured in by introductory offers but then get trapped in a rigid delivery offering.
I finally found one which stuck and it dawned on me that was due to the perfect combination of a number of factors:
In short, they have considered how to make the entire experience work for me – the customer. And for that they have been rewarded with my loyalty.
Staying ahead of your competitors and avoiding being blown from the market doesn’t have to be money intensive or slow if you follow these simple rules: