Forbes: 5 Must-Have Components of a Modern Customer Experience

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AICEX: ci piace che il punto 3 esprima un concetto di Risk Management.

Blake Morgan , CONTRIBUTOR
Opinions expressed by Forbes Contributors are their own.

Companies coming out of the sharing economy are first to execute well on customer experience innovation. They simply move much faster than anyone else. These companies are moving the fastest to leverage tools such as mobile to bring amazing customer experiences. For example it was just announced you can hail an Uber through Facebook messenger. This is an example of the future of customer experience—channel agnostic interactions. That means regardless of channel the customer can get in touch with the company. Today this is not the case at any large company. There are agents hired specifically for one channel. In customer service today there are walls at every turn–there are walls for agents and walls for customers. There is no fluidity. Fluidity in customer experience puts you light years ahead of your competitors. It is the number one, no-brainer way to flood your gates with customers (in a good way).

There are a handful of tools and practices that will be of huge help as you shape the best possible customer experience you can.

Here are five of my must-have modern customer experience components.

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Customer Experience Non-Trends for 2016

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AICEX: Il Post più originale che abbiamo letto quest’anno … va bene siamo solo a Gennaio : )

SOURCE : http://customerthink.com/customer-experience-non-trends-for-2016/

It’s the beginning of a new year, which means it’s time for pundits and prognosticators to pull out their crystal balls and make predictions about the twelve months to come.

Bruce Temkin, for example, has published his 11 Customer Experience Trends for 2016 (why 11? Presumably because it’s one better than ten). He has identified such things as Journey Designing, Empathy Training, and Predictive Analytics as areas to watch, and declared that 2016 will be The Year of Emotion.

Who am I to disagree?

But in my view, such trend articles miss the bigger picture, which is that the important facts of the Customer Experience profession will be pretty much the same in 2016 as they were in 2015 and earlier years. These are the non-trends, the things that don’t change, and most of them are more important than the trends.

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CX Technology e CX Management

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AICEX: La Tecnologia è “solo” uno strumento per le attività di Customer Experience Management. E come tutti gli strumenti lo si deve utilizzare al meglio.

You’re a customer, so you’re a perfect judge of logic when it comes to the ways companies are trying to get ahead with customers. First of all, let’s face it: when you buy something you want it to be easy to get, function flawlessly, and allow you to move forward in your life or business. That encapsulates what customer experience management is all about: companies that can make it easier and nicer to get what you need in life/business are the companies you’ll say good things about and come back to. If you agree that this is your outlook on being a customer, then we’ve got a good foundation for properly defining the role of technology in customer experience management (CEM).

CRM – Customer Relationship Management

As a customer you hope you don’t have to repeat your story every time you interact with a company. Just like in personal relationships, you expect to be valuable enough to the other party that they remember what you did together before, so that they might anticipate what would be appropriate going forward.

CEM Lessons:

  • CRM as a technology is a tool to nurture relationships that anticipate what a customer would appreciate, in the right way, at the right time. (Not a self-serving tool to push unwanted stuff with contrived urgency, essentially eroding rather than nurturing the customer relationship.)
  • Use Marketing Automation and Sales Intelligence tools to prompt proactive outreach to customers in ways they’ll view as valuable to them at the right time in the right way.
  • Use a Customer Data Warehouse to integrate all the sources of information about a customer and to create a real-time single view of the customer that’s accessible to back-office as well as front-line professionals who play a role in managing the customer relationship.
  • Use all these tools to involve other functional areas across the company in gaining an accurate picture of customers’ needs, so that they can make sure their processes, policies, and handoffs help strengthen customer relationships.

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19 Segnali che i Clienti non ti vogliono bene

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 AICEX: Utile post per capire quanto possiamo contare sui nostri Clienti.

 Have you ever wondered, where did all the customers go?Gosh, let’s hope not! But stick with me here. Do you constantly scratch your head about lost customers, wondering where they went and why? Is acquiring new customers becoming a challenge?I thought I’d have a little fun – along with a lot of seriousness – and list some signs that you might watch for ahead of time to figure out when customers (existing or prospective) just aren’t that into you (any more). And when, perhaps, it’s just not a good fit.

So, here they are: 19 signs customers aren’t that into you – ever or any more.

No public displays of affection (PDA). They’ve stopped writing reviews about how much they love doing business with you, and they don’t recommend you to their friends any more.

You’re not friends on social media. They no longer follow you (or never have) on Twitter, Facebook, or any other social media platform.

They talk about their exes. They start comparing you to companies they’ve previously done business with: Company X used to do this or that for me; Company Y doesn’t.

They talk to their exes. They start considering companies with which they’ve previously done business. Was it too painful? Is it worth going back there?

The conversation is one-sided. You send messages, have sales, offer discounts, advertise, and share on social media. There is no reciprocation; they don’t respond or interact.

You make all the plans. There’s no give and take. It feels like a forced relationship, like you’re willing your customers to do business with you.

They have a roving eye. Customers start looking at other options in the marketplace. Is there better service? Are there better products, offers, etc.?

They don’t introduce you to friends or family. Clearly you’re not worthy of being introduced into the inner circle.

Three’s a crowd. They always bring a friend along. When it’s time to renew their contracts, they go out to RFP instead of just giving you the business.

Fear of commitment. Either that’s an inherent fear in the customer, that they just don’t commit to a brand, or you’ve wronged them in some way to scare them away from committing.

They’re always critical of you. Those reviews that were once polite and raving have turned to hating everything you make and do. Now they’re just ranting to friends and on social media about how bad and how wrong things are.

They avoid you, partially or completely. They don’t buy your products or services any more, or you are now part of a consideration set – maybe they will, maybe they won’t.

They don’t care for your feelings. They publish negative reviews, rather than giving you the benefit of the doubt or telling you directly so that you can fix the problem.

They tell you about their ideal partner, but it doesn’t describe you. Oops!

They expect you to change, and vice versa. Well, as we know, this is never a good place to be in a relationship. And to expect that your customers will change their attitudes, behaviors, and feelings – or for them to think you’ll change how and why you do business – is likely out of the realm of possibilities. This is not a good fit.

Your values and beliefs are different. Customers buy from brands with which they align, whether that alignment is with the brand’s purpose, the corporate social responsibility policy, or something else. This customer was/is not a good fit.

There’s more pain than joy in the relationship. This sign makes me think about cell phone customers. Or airline customers. It’s hard to commit to a brand when the brand constantly disappoints, frustrates, or shows they don’t care about customers. Time to change your tune!

You keep arguing over the same issue. And neither one budges, so the relationship can’t move forward. The issue doesn’t get fixed. It’s just a blame game. End of relationship.

You’re not a priority. When the need arises, they think about going elsewhere first.

So, when you think about your lost customers – or, perhaps, disinterested customers, those on the way out the door – what do you see? They’ve stopped giving you feedback? They don’t spend as much any more? They no longer recommend you? They just don’t do business with you?

I’ve written about raving fans many times before. If you’re not sure if your customers are that into you, know that if you have raving fans, they…

  • want to see the brand succeed and grow.
  • are happy to provide feedback, good or bad, to ensure that happens.
  • are less price sensitive.
  • choose the brand over the competition.
  • can’t live without the brand, accept no substitutes.
  • are advocates; no, stronger. They are evangelists. They spread the word about your brand.
  • wear your brand, and want to show that they are part of something bigger than themselves. Tattoos, anyone? Have their own number?
  • openly recruit new members to the community.

Are you delivering the kind of customer experience that warrants committed, raving fans? If not, time to take a look inward.

You are not easily forgotten.
He doesn’t need to be reminded you’re great.
Men are never too busy to get what they want.
-Greg Behrendt, He’s Just Not That Into You

19 Signs Customers Are Just Not That Into You

SOURCE http://www.cx-journey.com/2014/05/19-signs-customers-are-just-not-that.html