5 Ways to Lead Customer Experience - Even If It's Not In Your Job Description
Jeannie Walters, CCXP, CSP
Customer Experience Speaker, Trainer, Podcast Host, and CEO
Who should be responsible for customer experience?
It’s easy to toss around phrases like “Customer experience is everyone’s job!” But as I’ve said before, saying it’s everyone’s job is actually permission for it to be nobody’s job.
And yet, it really IS up to everyone in an organization to own and deliver great customer experiences.?The dirty little secret is that even if there is NO leadership, no investment, and no strategy around customer experience in your organization…you are still delivering a customer experience. Yet that experience is:
What makes a great customer experience?
Great customer experiences are built on many things, but here are?three of the big things:
Yet organizations rarely organize themselves around these ideas.
Instead, customer experience is tossed around as an ill-defined concept. Employees are encouraged to be “customer-obsessed” or remember how the customer signs their paycheck. But really, those are just ideas that can be interpreted differently from one well-meaning employee to the next. After a few months, leaders shrug and ask why people talk so much about customer experience when they haven’t seen the results.
It’s all about being intentional.
And that’s why?CX Change Agents?are sometimes the real leaders in the organization. They not only talk about CX, they lead by example. They show up, make waves, and get results. And THAT’S when leaders really pay attention.
So if you’re trying to get others in your organization to get it and begging for buy-in from those at the top of the org chart, this is for you.
5 Ways to Lead Customer Experience Efforts, Regardless of Your Title?
1. Use the right language
One of my personal pet peeves is hearing “customer experience” described as a buzzword or jargon. But I get it.
Customer experience is seen as something to add on to the business, not part of the business. Instead,?it?should be seen as a way to win at business. It’s a winning strategy – if it’s intentional.
Intentionality is missing from many customer experience strategies. For example, how intentional is it to say “we love customers” and provide no resources, goals, or even a vision of what that means? That language feels pretty hypocritical when it’s paired with procedures and processes that treat customers like they aren’t to be trusted.
To be a CX change agent, lead with language. Instead of saying “we love customers” as a standalone statement, tie that with tangible goals, measurements, and outcomes.
Use our?CX Success Statement ?to help.
You might be thinking, but I don’t lead any department! Start where you can. If your boss asks about customers, ask harder questions about goals. Get specific. Discuss how you want to tie actions to outcomes. Explain how improving this part of the customer experience will improve how they feel, which will help us achieve higher survey results and, more importantly, higher retention.
2. Be the customer at the meeting.
As an experiment, I once tracked how often the customer was considered in a series of meetings for 5 days. In five days worth of meetings, the customer was explicitly considered only four times. Four times!
These meetings were about everything from internal processes to customer-facing technology. I get it. Everyone is busy and working hard. It’s not a lack of effort.
As a CX change agent, I encourage you to advocate for the customer in every meeting you have.
领英推荐
Ask:
This act alone will enlighten others and create an awareness of the customer in important decisions.
3. Contact customers.
It’s really this simple. If you are in a role where you don’t have contact with customers, reach out to those who do. And if you are in sales, customer success, or other customer-facing roles, reach out on your own.
Find out what they wish worked differently. Ask about their last interaction. Ask about their experiences with others in your industry.
You might have a ton of feedback data available to you.?But there’s nothing quite like talking directly to customers.
In most organizations, the higher you climb in the org chart, the further away the customer gets. As a result, many executives have not spoken to a customer in months or even years – some have never done it!
Use this opportunity to keep the real voice of the customer with you.
4. Connect the everyday efforts to the external experience.
Inside many organizations, there are internal processes and communications that simply aren’t working well. Shipping is waiting on product. Product is waiting on design. Everyone is waiting on supply chain management. And billing is not willing to move forward until everyone plays nice!
Internal communications have a direct impact on the customer experience.?Yet it’s easy to forget.
CX change agents don’t forget that. They connect the dots proactively and intentionally.
It’s time to get a little direct. “I really appreciate all you do in supply chain management. I’ve promised the customer I’d get back to them by tomorrow with some information. Even if you don’t have an update, will you let me know that? This customer deserves it.”
Help your?team work cross-functionally?on behalf of the customer.
5. Innovate on behalf of the customer.
You might see things that you know aren’t working.?It’s time to get excited about what could work!
If you don’t know how to make it better, do a little research.?Benchmark how others in and outside of your industry have solved similar issues. Look to customer reviews, product feedback, or other accessible communications.
One CX change agent I worked with did this in a really clever way. After identifying a broken part of the experience, she brought it up in a positive way any chance she could. She would bring in new research, examples, customer quotes, or public reviews to each meeting with the cross-functional team.
They eventually agreed to bring in customers for a working session to design a better experience. The customers were appreciative, and other leaders noticed her positive, intentional leadership.
The customers won with an improved experience. This CX change agent won with a promoted role.?And the organization won with happier, more loyal customers.
I know it can be frustrating for CX change agents out there. You may not have the right title. You may not have the right resources. But you have the right intentions.
Intentional, proactive leaders are who really make changes in this world. It’s time for you to lead.
This article,?5 Ways to Lead Customer Experience – Even If It’s Not In Your Job Description , originally appeared?on?ExperienceInvestigators.com .
Business Analyst - Process Improvement - Power Platform
2 年Start with the internal customer experience and external will come. And consult your front line employees who know your customers and are already providing the intentional experience upgrades and service that you don't have a formal plan in place for before you make one! Don't tell your internal nor external customers what they want or need...ask!! #beentherehatedthat
Assisting organizations to provide a world class customer experience to their customers.
2 年Great insights.
Customer Experience Lead at City of Charles Sturt
2 年Great tips. We need to be working towards CX being everyone's job for those working "in the business" and a dedicated CX team working "on the business" to improve CX.
Customer experience by design | Delivering customer retention, genuine loyalty & revenue growth with business leaders and CX practitioners | Customer Experience Management Consultant | Can’t pass a beach without paddling
2 年Five great tips Jeannie. But let's work on getting CX in everyone's objectives. I have just judged at the iCXA and it is clear that making CX everyone's responsibility - with the resources and so on - is the best way to succeed in CX and use it a lever on business performance.