From CX to CV - Because Customer Experience is the Wrong Focus
In the introduction to a Customer Experience Compendium (2017) the McKinsey & Company authors began by saying, “Across sectors and regions, business leaders are recognizing the competitive advantage of superior customer experience and the value that resides not only in what a company delivers for its customers, but in how it delivers products and services”. They were referring not to value for the customer but value the business might capture for itself.
The compendium speaks of the “new horizons” in customer experience. Among them, “a set of new emerging capabilities to capture the value from customer centric strategies, in particular design thinking and digital application”. And in a 2019 article, McKinsey & Company recommend using a “customer experience measurement system”, which “links business impact (increased revenue, cost savings) to all the elements that drive customer-satisfaction improvements”.
The emphasis on “value capture” for the business, rather than customer value creation is, in our view, a very old school way of thinking. Rent seeking, profit maximisation and maximum customer ‘wallet share’, by cross-selling, up-selling, dynamic pricing and other industrial-era tricks, all illustrate a standard industrial era mindset. It is the approach of those who obsess about performance, efficiency and cost control as the way to maximise profits, shareholder value and the market value of the business. It is an approach that ignores the wise advice of management guru Peter Drucker, the only purpose of a firm is to earn and keep a customer. And only by doing so is the business able to earn itself sustainable income streams and profits.
The idea of putting the new and emerging capabilities to use to “capture the value” reflects the typical way incumbent businesses have traditionally seen the opportunities new technologies offer . It leaves them exposed to the real potential of disruption by challengers who instead use new technologies, usually linked to new business models, to win customers by offering them additional value.
History shows technology innovation, combined with business model innovation, and driven by a focus on customer value creation, usually provides a winning formula. Not an obsession with performance, profitability and value capture. Of course, no firm should ignore performance, profitability and value capture. They must simply avoid seeing them as the primary goal. That should always be creation of more customer value, the results of a continuous iterative process driven by innovation and approached in a systemic way.
Two companies provide illustrations of bad and good approaches, Kodak Corporation and Fujifilm. Both faced disruption for the same reasons. Despite having been an early pioneer of the first digital camera Kodak gave up on the project to focus on its more profitable photographic film business. It was a decision that led to bankruptcy. The story of Fujifilm is told by its former CEO and Chairman in his book Innovate Out of a Crisis. His strategy was to embrace new technologies where the business could combine them with existing capabilities to create new sources of customer value, for existing and new customers and markets. It survived and thrived.
The Fujifilm example illustrates another key point, customer value creation must consider the whole value proposition. Customer experience is only a part, and rguably not the most important part. It is only how the firm delivers value. It cannot be more important than what value the business offers in the form of products and service. As Andy Wilkins, CEO of BE Advisory has pointed out many times, if the whole proposition is not considered, the customer experience could be little more than “lipstick on a pig” – an expression used to convey the idea that making superficial or cosmetic changes is futile.
Fred Reichheld, a partner at Bain (the consulting firm that created the customer experience measurement tool they call the Net Promotor Score System) lends support to our argument, that the focus needs to be on the whole value proposition, not only customer experience. In a recent article, following the publication of Bain’s UK Consumer Study which found only 10% of UK brands excel at customer experience, Reichheld says, “too many companies confuse the goal of enriching customer lives with the tool to help achieve it”, adding “the goal is to increase the number of customer lives you enrich on a sustainable basis. After all, the ultimate objective, the purpose of any great organization, is to improve people’s lives”. But you don’t do that by focusing the use of new technologies on new ways to grow the value you capture from customers. You do it by focusing on ways to deliver ever more customer value.
Another major problem with the customer experience measurement tools is that they use a limited number of criteria to allow businesses to benchmark themselves. This is a problem because, as the UK Consumer Study found. Why? Because, each of the brands in the top 10% has their own recipe for success. In other words, it is not their benchmark score that is important. It is the uniquely valuable approach that earns them their score.
Each business needs its own valuable formula for customer value creation, to what value it offers (the product and / or service), and how it offers it (the customer experience). But there is ample evidence, some provided by McKinsey & Company surveys, that most directors and executives are unable to articulate what value is created by the firm they govern and manage, for whom it is creating value, or how it creates it.
The number of directors and executives that can answer these fundamentally important strategic questions is probably in the low single digits, in percentage terms. This suggests most customer experience initiatives can be no more than futile efforts. So, we suggest their focus needs to shift from customer experience (CX) to customer Value (CV), to consider customer value as a whole. And the focus should also be on customer value creation, not customer value capture.
To achieve the shift directors and executives must reframe their thinking, establish new priorities and adopt new management tools and methods. They need to be able to design a Value Scheme, based on a clear understanding of the customer value proposition. It means understanding the opportunities to put new technologies to use in the creation of innovative ways to create new customer value, often linked to business model innovations. It means viewing the business, including its internal and external stakeholders, as a customer value creation system. And it requires businesses to transforming many competitive and transactional relationships into partnerships focused on the co-creation of new sources of customer value.
Businesses that do not transform themselves to become platforms for customer value creation are certain to find themselves being disrupted by new competitors with new business models designed to do more than put lipstick on a pig. The unicorns - as Amazon, Google, Uber and their peers are called - developed new customer value based on technology and business model innovation. In the face of such competitors’ businesses that think it is enough to limit their efforts to improvements in customer experience, and to capture value from customers for themselves, are very likely to find their efforts futile.
BE Advisory offers a range of “From CX to CV” products and services, to help firms fully understand why they must shift their focus: a keynote presentation, a short board briefing, a 1-day Executive Workshop and a 3-day (or 6 x 1/2day) Transformation Course. Email for details: [email protected]
Thanks Paul, this article adds value to my costumer understanding in these VUCA times
Business Consultant
5 年Hi?Paul Barnett, CEO Strategic Management Forum,?thanks for sharing your interesting article on Customer Experience. Let me give you my viewpoints about it: 1. What is Customer Experience (CX)? CX is the product of an interaction between an organization and a customer over the duration of their relationship. This interaction is made up of three parts: the customer journey, the brand touch points the customer interacts with, and the environments the customer experiences (including digital environment) during their experience. (wikipedia) 2. What are the business's benefits of focusing on the Customer Experience (CX)? The benefits of delivering a great CX include: - increased customer loyalty - increased customer satisfaction - better word-of-mouth marketing, positive reviews, and recommendations 3. How to start the path for a business to offer a great CX? 3.1 To measure the status-quo of the Customer Experience currently offered by the business. Very likely to be evaluated between poor and bad (CX) 3.2 Estimate the CX currently offered by direct competitors. 3.3 Analyze the cause-and-effect relationship between Business Results and CX. 3.4 What if the business matches the level of CX offered by direct competitors? 3.5 What if the business exceeds the level of CX offered by direct competitors? What do you think?
CEO at Bill Bigler Associates - An Independent Research Boutique At the Intersection of Competitive Strategy, Innovation, Operations/Execution and Shareholder/Owner Value Creation and Growth
5 年Paul a very good article thanks. I have been writing on the difference between customer value and customer satisfaction for years as well. Customer satisfaction is a more generalized notion that includes customer experience. But sometimes a customer experience initiative is needed as a daily reminder of the unique customer value that is being offered and delivered. I written in my blog on my work at Flower Country USA in around 1995. This venture set out to offer a premium version of the retail cut flower experience. In 1995 there were 17,000 mom and pop retail flower stores in the US and FCUSA would be positioned at price points not to compete with them. One of the initiatives was the ISSE or In Store Shopping Experience. We set our objective to knock customers' socks off when the walked through the front door. And to save space here we did just that. But this ISSE along with the delivery vans painted in flowers with the FCUSA as rolling advertising to the way the free standing stores were designed were all to reinforce the value of the gorgeous upscale flower designs sold at premium price points. So my point is to emphasize your point: customer value is first but the battle for the customer's mind involves the frequent customer
B2B Marketing Consultant | Helping organizations connect the dots from technology to business | Brand and Business Marketing | Messaging and Content Expert | Founder @ FocusFew Consulting
5 年Great article, Paul. Experience is important, but also very subjective and relative. There are instances of customers “putting up” with a very utilitarian experience that gives them more value (e.g. monetary, peace of mind, scale, reliability). Overemphasis on experience can even detract from the focus on value. In fact, it is best for experience to be one step behind value. So, first ideate and build great value, and then figure out the best way to deliver it. Lipstick on a pig is exactly what you get if you switch the order! ??
Start UP & SME Provocateur | Digital transformation | Digital Strategist | Business Advisory | Digital Marketing | Start Ups | Business Planning | Market Analysis | Business Consultant
5 年There is a lot of truth to this article. I keep hearing the word" customer experience" or that customers are looking for "better customer experiences" and that we are in an era defined by "customer experience".? I'm generally confused by what all this means to be honest.? In some cases, the customer experience is just perfect for me but the quality of the product or the pricing could be improved.? There is a lot to be said for the old Ronseal advert, " It does exactly as it says on the tin".? If customers believe they are getting good "value" then by default the customer experience will be included as part of that "value"? but this doesn't happen the other way around. It doesn't matter how good the "experience" you have if you totally believe you are getting ripped off because either the price is too high or the quality of the product is bad.? In 2014 a businessman was charged £75 for 3 bottles of water in a hotel in Knightsbridge.? Now I'm sure the hotel and the staff were at the top of their game but this was plain greedy and stupid. https://metro.co.uk/2014/07/28/h2-oh-thats-a-big-bill-man-charged-75-for-three-bottles-of-water-at-london-hotel-4812699/ Unfortunately, I can see this article and message falling on deaf ears because a lot of people are obsessed about customer experience and not customer value because it's harder to define.