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Is the Customer Experience All It’s Cracked Up to Be?

Considering the number of times the term “the customer experience” is used in business circles every day, you would think it was a well-understood concept.

I’ve never understood the term. What is “the customer experience”? Don’t customers have many different types of experiences? Don’t different types of customers have — and need — different types of customer experiences?

The Irrational Inconsistencies of Chief Marketing Officers

In a survey from the CMO Council, senior marketers were asked, “What do you believe are the most important attributes and elements of the customer experience to your customer?”

The responses to the survey question are fraught with inconsistency:

  • If 75% of respondents believe that “fast response times to issues, needs, or complaints” is important to the (so-called) customer experience …
    … then how can only 23% believe that “fast, easy-to-use tools and service options” are important?
  • If 52% of respondents believe that “knowledgeable staff ready to assist whenever and wherever the customer needs” is important …
    … then how can only 37% believe that “a person to speak with, regardless of time and location” is important? What’s the difference between the two options?
  • If 55% believe that “consistency of experience across channels” is important …
    … then how can only 26% think that “readily available, multi-channel information” is important?

Here’s a question for the marketers who said “fast response times” is important:

How do you think that happens, if not with “knowledgeable staff,” “multiple channels of engagement,” “readily available multi-channel information,” and “multiple touchpoints that add value to the customer?”

What is the Customer Experience?

I’m still left wondering what exactly “the customer experience” is. My search for a good definition has not been fruitful.

One graphic I found (see above) implies that CX (that’s what the cool kids call customer experience) encompasses the product/service, marketing, customer service, point of sale, and call center. So what doesn’t it include?

Here’s a not particularly helpful definition:

Internal and subjective response? Huh?

One website I found had this to say:

“What does customer experience mean? Defining a great customer experience refers to the complete experience the customer has with your business.”

That doesn’t make any sense. I don’t think that statement is even grammatically correct.

CX Brilliance

There’s no denying that “the customer experience” is important to business execs, however.

Three-quarters of respondents to a Customer Management IQ survey rated customer experience a “high priority” within their organizations. A blog post on SAP’s website said that “a Bloomberg BusinessWeek survey revealed that delivering a great customer experience has become the new imperative.”

What we’re left with here is:

  1. The customer experience encompasses everything.
  2. Managing the customer experience is really important.

Brilliant. Simply brilliant.

CX Nonsense

If that’s not enough to convince you that this CX stuff is a bunch of nonsense, read this from a tech vendor’s blog:

“George Colony, Forrester Research CEO, visited the CMO of a very large bank to provide her with her company’s new Forrester CX Index score. Upon review, she remarked that her next biggest competitor, who spent one-fifth the amount as she did on customer experience, had a better score. George explained that it was likely because the way the two companies approached their customers was vastly different. The CMO asked for evidence and George obliged. After reviewing letters from the CEO to shareholders, he found their competitor used the word ‘customers’ much more often.”

There are three problems with this story:

  1. There’s no way the CMO of the first bank knows how much her competitor spends on “customer experience.” Remember the definition of CX? Oh right, there is no definition. Or it’s defined as everything under the sun. I really hope George asked her, “How do you know how much your competitor spends on CX?”
  2. A single CX “score” is nonsense. How can you boil the “total” customer experience down to a single score? Don’t different customers have different quality of experiences due to their different preferences and needs? Please don’t try to convince me that a single score covers a “very large bank,” with all its lines of business, and all its customer channels.
  3. CEO letters to stakeholders have nothing to do with CX. Oh, come on. CEO letters to stakeholders that mention the word “customer” are the proof points for why one bank has a better CX score than another?

The Problem With the Customer Experience

Here’s the problem, and some of you are not going to like hearing this: This whole “customer experience management” nonsense is a reflection of a desire to simplify the complex, and find a silver bullet — the one thing — that can be done to fix a problem and/or achieve success.

Just fix “the customer experience” and your business will have loyal customers who never complain and buy more and more without you even having to ask them to do so! Sadly, it’s not that easy.

Customer Experience Realities

The harsh reality is that you have to take a much more granular approach, and:

  1. Look at individual processes (and/or interactions);
  2. Figure out which processes are most important to your strategy and competitive differentiation (this is actually the hardest part);
  3. Measure your current process performance on specific metrics regarding speed, cost, and quality;
  4. Benchmark your process performance against competitors, peers, and leaders; and
  5. Do something (this doesn’t always happen).

What this means: Organizational attempts to create a “chief customer experience officer” are doomed to fail.

What purview would this individual have? What authority would s/he have to change existing processes and functions that are run and led by other executives? How much of a budget would/should this person have, and out of whose existing budget is this money coming from?

And more importantly: Why aren’t the executives currently managing the processes, functions, and department that produce “customer experiences” already improving “the customer experience”?

Ironically (or maybe not ironically), the same mentality that produced the “the customer experience” mentality–the expedient desire for a quick fix–is what produced the rise of a so-called senior executive position to deliver on that quick fix.

Fixing the Customer Experience

Note to CEOs: Are there parts of your firm’s “customer experience” that are broken? Here’s what you should do:

  1. Figure out which execs run the departments and/or processes that are involved in a particularly broken part of “the experience.”
  2. Get those executives in a room and tell them: “FIX IT. Get back to me in a week with your assessment of WHY this is broken.”
  3. The following week, pretend to listen when they bitch and moan about why things are the way they are, then tell them: “Come back in a week with a plan for how this is going to be fixed in the next 90 days, and with your existing budgets.”

In other words, this isn’t about implementing entirely new applications and systems (which may very well be part of the longer-term plan), but about finding the quick fixes — the changes to workflow, for example — that can make “the customer experience” a little better.

Little changes in the flow (i.e., customer experience) can go a long way to improving customers’ impressions and overall satisfaction. Especially if it’s a process (OK, experience) that they repeatedly engage in.

-rs