Is it an Agile thing?

Is it an Agile thing?

I woke up the other day to find that my computer had restarted itself overnight.?I knew it was coming, and frankly, it was my own fault; the desktop warning and request that I either pick a time or it’ll happen of its own accord “outside of active hours,” as if a self-employed consultant has such things.?Nevertheless, I’ve been assimilated and do expect to fall prey to how The Borg chooses to run my electronic life.

Then again, if such a restart is so vital that it will happen when the computer wants, it seems a bit incongruous to even give me the option to wait at all.?As a side note, when my Air Force computer wants to restart, it simply does...I’ve been in the middle of building lesson plans—and for that matter, in the middle of a class in front of a room of cadets—and it’s simply restarted itself.?I know I have my own IT department to blame for that, though.?At home, it’s all the OS.

I’ve searched in vain for a way to simply turn this “feature” off altogether:?Make it so that it never restarts ‘on its own,’ no matter what it wants to do.?(And for the techies, yes, I’ve tried to adjust active hours—you’re limited in what you can do, i.e., you can’t make all 24 of them ‘active’...and don’t get me started on gpedit.msc—it doesn’t work either.)?This is a very straightforward case of a brand choosing explicitly not to address what its Customers want.?And if there’s any doubt to that in your mind, peruse the online forums of people trying to turn this off...people are livid.

They know that people want this fixed, but they choose not to.?Why??Why do brands not address the glaring issues with their products and offerings that are clearly highlighted by use-cases in the real world and brought to their attention by their own Customers on a constant basis??Software and technology companies are incessantly updating their products, adding bells-and-whistles.?I’ve written before about how some of these whiz-bang organizations are regularly adding creative neat features, while not addressing straightforward fundamental capabilities that are really the difference between using their products or looking for another brand that will actually deliver on the must-haves.

Do you remember how long it took for Apple to offer copy/paste on their iO/S??(Spoiler, it was two years)?Now, of course, to their credit, you can actually copy and paste between devices, which is slick.?(Then again, that may just be an incentive to buy more of them!)?But why did that first, obvious technology take so long to implement??Every new update to their iOS, theoretically could have included this upgrade.?It’s not as though they needed new hardware, an updated iPhone version itself, to make it happen.

So what don’t brands seem to listen??Why does it sometimes take them so long to respond to the markets??They’re always doing things, but just never seem to be doing what we want.

I wrote last year a series of articles about the application of Agile principles to CX.?There’s a tremendous synergy between the Agile approach to software development and the continuous improvement that is the hallmark of a wise and responsive Customer Experience operation:?Listen to what your Customers want (and what they’re upset about, and where you’re falling short), and take action on what you learn.?It’s a dynamic, constantly moving forward, exciting and robust way to approach your development efforts.?Surely Apple and Windows (as well as Google, Yahoo!, and everybody else) are leveraging some form of Agile management and prioritization when it comes to their development endeavors.

But I wonder to whom they’re listening.

Consider your brand.?You come up with The Next Big Thing.?But is your product or service even functioning yet the way your Customers want??Is this newest flashy function or feature really what they want??Or do they just want to be able to use what you offer in a way that they want?

Agile and CX should both be centered on what your Customers are telling you, and not just on what’s there on your roadmap and backlog.?After all, in both circumstances, those should be determined by your Customers in the first place.

?

(Originally Published?20220616)

– LtCol Nicholas Zeisler, CCXP, LSSBB, CSM

– Fractional Cheif Customer Officer/Principal,?Zeisler Consulting

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Nicholas ?? Zeisler的更多文章

  • What's your networking purpose?

    What's your networking purpose?

    Independent consultants have it sort of tough. Don’t cry for us; the liberties we enjoy make it pretty awesome as well.

    4 条评论
  • Figure it out

    Figure it out

    I wrote a while back about a pet-peeve of mine when I grocery shop: Not enough small carts. Now, that’s clearly a small…

    1 条评论
  • Okay, maybe AI will NOT kill CX

    Okay, maybe AI will NOT kill CX

    I wrote the other day about what I thought was a conclusion drawn about the impact of automation and AI and all that…

    3 条评论
  • AI Will Kill CX!

    AI Will Kill CX!

    One Big Question I hear a lot these days is about AI and automation. “How will AI impact CX?” How the heck should I…

    7 条评论
  • What's your word worth?

    What's your word worth?

    I recently had a particularly silly experience with the US Postal Service.* I mailed an envelope (containing nothing…

    3 条评论
  • I'm a greedy networker

    I'm a greedy networker

    I’m a selfish networker. But hear me out; I don’t mean it the way you probably think I do.

    3 条评论
  • Operationalize

    Operationalize

    I used to say that I don’t know anything about Marketing. Then I started spending a lot of time with marketers.

    3 条评论
  • Shu Ha Ri for CX?

    Shu Ha Ri for CX?

    Having spent a lot of time in education—corporately doing plenty of L&D work, having had lots of clients delivering…

    1 条评论
  • No, I don't want to log in

    No, I don't want to log in

    I recently had a ridiculous interaction with one of our household service providers. I had a general question about one…

    5 条评论
  • Getting CX Right: Copper Mountain Resort

    Getting CX Right: Copper Mountain Resort

    I posted about this way back when it happened, but I’m enjoying working from the mountains these past couple weeks, so…

    5 条评论

社区洞察