How Does Your Organisation Talk Customer Experience? And What Does This Tell You?

For those who have a certain kind of listening to language, language in its speaking says much. Take the English for example. You ask the typical English person “How are you today?” What is the typical response? “Not bad!”  Take the typical French person and the question becomes “How’s it going?” And the typical response from a French person is “It’s going well.”  Notice the difference between the English “My name is X” and the French “I call myself X”. As I said, if you have the listening then language speaks richly – of a culture.

I have been listening to the speaking that occurs in relation to Customer Experience.  I hear people talking about:

– mapping the Customer Experience;

– improving the Customer Experience;

– managing the Customer Experience;

– delivering a multi-channel Customer Experience;

– providing an omni-channel Customer Experience;

– driving the Customer Experience;

– gluing up the Customer Experience;

– consistency of the Customer Experience across touchpoints / channels;

– coming up with a Customer Experience strategy;

– business case for Customer Experience ….

To date, I have not heard a single Top say anything like:

– I get what Customer Experience is about and am passionate about putting Customer Experience at the heart of this organisation;

– Wow, Customer Experience opens up a world of possibility on what we can do to simplify-enrich the lives of our customers;

– As a senior leadership team we are committed to competing on the basis of the Customer Experience.

What does this tell you?

It tells me that Customer Experience is viewed-treated as an operational matter. It tells me that Customer Experience is viewed as technique to power and continue the longevity of business as usual. It tells me that the folks at the Top do not get the full power of Customer Experience: a radically different way to show up and do business, to compete for new customers, and keep existing customers.

Steve Jobs was committed to putting a dent in the universe.  Tony Hsieh was committed to Zappos being the word for the very best customer service in the world.  Jeff Bezos is committed to building the Earth’s most customer centric company. Just about everyone else I have come across is open to / would like improve the Customer Experience if someone else (usually lower down the hierarchy) can come up with a compelling business case.  Is it any surprise that almost all talk so much and make so little impact when it comes to the Customer Experience?

Consider this. What Customer Experience lacks is not a toolbox of methods-techniques-tools. What Customer Experience lacks is not certified customer experience professionals. What Customer Experience lacks is not technology nor the consultants to implement the technology. What Customer Experience lacks is not a bunch of folks doing lean to the organisation and ‘improving’ business processes. What Customer Experience lacks is leaders and leadership. 

Yet I am optimistic. Why? Because, it only takes one Steve Jobs to make a dent in the universe. It only takes one Tony Hsieh to show us all what Customer Service authentically-radically is. It only takes one Jeff Bezos to transform retailing and show us what the digital Customer Experience can be / should be.  It occurs to me that those who will walk the same path, are likely to be working in smaller companies. And as such it is simply a matter of time when they make themselves visible on the radar of big business.  Then extinction time! For my part, I welcome and embrace the phenomena described as “creative destruction” by Schumpeter.

 

Author: Maz Iqbal

Experienced management consultant living/working in Switzerland.

4 thoughts on “How Does Your Organisation Talk Customer Experience? And What Does This Tell You?”

  1. Totally agree with your vision ! customer experience it’s not about data and theories but more about human relationship and state of mind !

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    1. Hello Kamel,
      I thank you for making the time to show up and share your perspective. Yes, it is about taking a stand, exercising courage, stepping into the unknown, learning by doing. It is about action.

      All the best
      maz

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    1. Hello James,

      Agreed. I doubt that there was a compelling business case for Jeff Bezos to put all at risk to start Amazon. I doubt that there was a compelling business case for Tony Hsieh to put all at risk into a failing business (rapidly running out of cash): Zappos. I doubt that there was a compelling business case for Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak to go in the personal computer business. Of for Mark Zuckerberg to give up his education and focus on that which became Facebook……

      There is never a compelling, proven, business case for stepping into the world of the unknown. Which is why courage and passion are the ticket to the future – whether it works out or not. It just requires enough people to bet on a new feature and one or more of those betting on the future will create the future.

      All the best
      maz

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