The Washington Post: Usa il Design Thinking per deliziare i Clienti

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AICEX: UX, DX, CX, Design, … tutta una stessa famiglia ..
For better than a decade, managers have been taught that focusing on the customer provides a sure path to success. Initiatives such as “voice of the customer” and tools such as “net promoter score” have helped us to better manage these all-important relationships. But what do you do when you hit a plateau, chasing ever smaller niches with ever expanding offerings that yield less and less?

Increasingly, companies that excel at serving customers are turning to unique approaches to find value propositions that continue to move the needle. Intuit, a leader in the development of personal and small-business software, is one such company. It is at the forefront of using design thinking to inspire innovation that delights customers.

Since Intuit’s inception, founder Scott Cook emphasized creating products that were easy for customers to use. Despite this, the company began to observe a narrowing gap between competitors’ product performance and their own offerings. Sensing an opportunity, former chief executive Steve Bennett pulled together a small team of several senior operating managers, their chief strategy officer, and Kaaren Hanson, Intuit’s design innovation head, to address the question of what was next. What lay beyond ease?

The team’s answer was delight, and they identified design thinking as an important strategy for getting there. Design thinking’s ability to uncover customers’ unarticulated needs and its processes for testing potential success with small inexpensive experiments provided the framework they needed. The team ultimately focused on three core design principles: “customer empathy,” “go broad before narrow” and “rapid experimentation.”

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/capitalbusiness/use-design-thinking-to-reach-customers/2014/05/02/6e7a99c0-d05c-11e3-937f-d3026234b51c_story.html?postshare=641439724804671

Perchè il Marketing sta approcciando male i Millennials

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AICEX: Un Post molto completo sul tema.

This article is part of our content series with Brandwatch, one of the most powerful social media monitoring and analytics tool used by pioneering brands and agencies all over the world, and a Global Supporting Sponsor of Social Media Week.

Millennials. As a marketer, it’s a term I see every single day. In fact, I started to get so sick of it, I made use of the Millennials-to-Snake-People Chrome plugin, which is about as hilarious as it sounds.

I often hear brands state that they are trying to target Millennials, as if that’s some grand strategy designed to reach a whole new group of consumers.

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Luxury: Il conflitto tra la democrazia del Digital e l’esclusività del Brand

AICEX: punto di vista interessante, molto interessante 🙂
March 17, 2016 | by Jeannie Walters

What’s the definition of luxury? That’s one of the questions brands are facing as the evolving digital landscape shifts yet again.

From a discussion among luxury brand managers and consultants, at this week’s South By Southwest Interactive Festival, the quick answer was “it depends” on how one brand might define luxury versus another. The long answer, of course, is much more nuanced. Those weighing in included Ambika Samarthya-Howard, group account director of Havas Luxe; Gregory Pouy, CEO, Lamercatique; Judy Bassaly, ex VP, trade marketing at Giorgio Armani, and Thomas Serrano, founder and president of Havas Luxe.

Digital access means customers want instant purchase options, immediate feedback and direct connections with the brands they support. Since luxury brands are built on a foundation of being exclusive, aloof and scarce, this type of direct access through digital channels creates conflict. The “new” customer wants to visit runway shows behind the scenes via Snapchat, purchase the latest handbag via a “buy now” Instagram button, and connect directly with designers with Twitter. So how are these brands, built on limiting distribution and connection, attracting the customers of tomorrow without losing the very cache that makes them luxury?

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Ignorate la Tecnologia e pensate alla Customer Experience

AICEX: già 30 anni fa negli ospedali la notte c’erano luci azzurre. Chissà perchè aerei e treni moderni non le hanno più.

Have you flown with Virgin America before? You should.

The check-in area is like a hotel lobby. They have music playing. There’s a beautiful rug. And the whole process is beautifully simple.

You get to the gate and the chairs are quirky and stylish. Your eyes wander over to the purple lighting that’s actually been proven to be calming, that’s why they chose it.

When you board, you see “joke of the day” and the calming purple lighting…again. The touch screens glisten from the back of every seat where you can order snacks whenever you want during the flight, and you can tell the flight attendants actually like being there.

What has Virgin America done? They’ve created a wow customer experience.

What I’ve learned from starting three tech companies

I probably shouldn’t be saying this, but I’m going to…

Technology isn’t the answer to building a great company. Creating a wow customer experience is.

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