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Preparing Tomorrow’s CX Workforce

A look back—and ahead—at trends driving customer experiences of the future.
Smiling female customer representative wearing headphones working in office

2018 was marked by a historically tight labor market that had employers scrambling to find enough qualified workers to maintain growth. While it’s difficult to predict how much longer this trend will continue, other questions emerge: Which industries are likely to remain understaffed? How has the labor shortage impacted existing jobs and future positions? What does this mean for customers? A look back at hiring and retention practices yields some clues.

Empty seats

Back in September, the U.S. national unemployment rate fell to 3.7 percent—the lowest rate since 1969. Low unemployment rates created an incredibly hot labor market, with many people seeking better, higher-paying roles. In July, the national quit rate reached a 17-year high.

Low unemployment and a high turnover rate are generally considered positive economic indicators, but they can also have a negative effect on customer service, customer satisfaction, and ultimately, economic growth. Consider customer support and service, where low-wage skilled workers are in high demand.

Employment of customer service representatives is projected to grow 10 percent from 2014 to 2024, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Much of this growth is driven by an expansion of what it means to provide customer support to meet higher customer expectations.

More representatives are being called upon to solve complex problems, be both creative and analytical thinkers, and support a number of different communication channels. Simple tasks are increasingly being automated, leaving humans for the harder issues. But given that traditional contact center jobs are highly micromanaged with few opportunities for growth, attracting talented candidates is already challenging. What’s more, new hires typically have less experience and less job-specific training, which makes it even more difficult to deliver strong service.

A labor shortage at emergency contact centers, for example, has significant consequences. In Little Rock, AR, the 911 communications center struggles to keep up with the call volume. In 2018, 66 percent of 911 calls were answered in 10 seconds or less, which is far below the 90 percent standard set by the National Emergency Number Association (NENA), reports USA Today. Retaining operators has been difficult. The emergency center hired 21 more operators, but the same number soon quit.

“In any environment where you have increasing competition for workers, a worker is going to have more choices,” Christopher Carver, operations director of 911 centers for NENA, told USA Today. “People want to work in places they like. 911 centers can be challenging places to work.” Additionally, many 911 centers are underfunded and lack the proper resources for effective training.

Other industries face similar obstacles. Job openings in the construction industry are at an 18-year high, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. A continuing lack of skilled labor, though, could make development projects more expensive and time-consuming, weakening the economy. “Workforce shortages that make construction projects more costly and slower to build run the risk of undermining broader economic growth,” according to a report from the Associated General Contractors of America.

Retail is also feeling the pinch. In a survey, 29 percent of human resources and compensation professionals, representing a total of 2 million retail employees, told consulting firm Korn Ferry that they’ve seen an increase in employee turnover since the beginning of 2018, especially among part-time hourly store employees (an 81 percent turnover rate compared to 76 percent in 2017). “While high consumer confidence and a strong economy mean year-over-year sales are predicted to grow, low unemployment means there just won’t be enough workers to fill retail positions,” said Craig Rowley, Korn Ferry senior partner of retail and consumer, in a statement.

Even though retailers began hiring seasonal workers earlier this year—some as early as the summer—in addition to raising pay and offering perks like profit-sharing and paid time off, many struggled to find enough people to staff their stores and warehouses.

Understaffed stores and frequent job switching erode the quality of customer service. And if customer service deteriorates enough, so will customer satisfaction, warns the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI). “This often causes consumers to hold on to their wallets more tightly, slowing down the pace of economic growth—something we saw in the late 90s, early 2000s, and as recently as 2016,” wrote Forrest V. Morgenson III, director of research at ACSI, in a Retail Dive column. “Given the current data, that looks likely to happen again…an economic slowdown for retailers during their most profitable months of the year could be disastrous.”

Taking action for long-term labor success

Employers are deploying a wide range of strategies to combat the labor shortage. The most obvious approach is to increase wages. In January 2018, Walmart announced it was increasing its entry-level wage from $9 to $11. A few months later, Amazon raised its minimum wage to $15 an hour; Target raised its minimum wage to $12 in 2018 with plans to increase it to $15 by 2020. Walmart also unveiled a new scheduling system that’s designed to make employees’ schedules more predictable and flexible. Other retailers have offered signing bonuses, employee discounts, and more.

Increasing wages and creating more flexible scheduling are just some of the steps businesses have taken to attack the problem. Companies also need to take the long view in building a workforce for the future, says Brad Bell, an associate professor of human resource studies and director of human capital development at the School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University.

“Whenever we see labor markets get tight like this, companies use a number of short-term solutions like higher wages to compete for very limited labor and talent supply,” Bell says. “But it’s not just about the amount—it’s also the quality of the labor supply that matters. And companies are taking a harder look at what skills their employees will need in the near future.”

The shortage of immediate hires makes it even more apparent that businesses need workers who can adapt to technological changes in the workplace. According to Gartner, 70 percent of employees have not mastered the skills they need for their jobs today, and 80 percent lack the skills needed for both their current role and their future career. The research firm also notes that more jobs are being redesigned for closer human-machine collaboration to boost productivity and improve the customer experience.

Future-proofing the company

Leaders are addressing some of these challenges with an increased focus on human capabilities. Recognizing that emerging technologies like artificial intelligence and machine learning need humans as guides and to fill in the gaps, companies are investing in education and training to help employees enhance their problem-solving skills, cognitive abilities, and even social intelligence. Toyota, AT&T, and General Electric are just some of the major corporations that are offering their employees opportunities to upgrade their skills through partnerships with universities, online courses, and other resources.  

Employers are investing in their employees’ education for other reasons as well. “We’re seeing employers, especially those that are targeting millennials, offer tuition reimbursement and loan repayment programs,” Bell says. “Similarly, some companies that want to retain employees with high school-age kids are offering college coaching.”

Organizations are also upgrading their methods for matching the right talent with the right opportunities, Bell adds. Companies today have reams of data about job candidates and employees, which enable “greater precision” in how they recruit, train, and manage employees.

“From the moment a candidate submits a resume, automation and data analytics are influencing the decisions HR managers make and it’s only growing,” Bell says. It’s also becoming the norm for companies to predict what’s needed to upskill and cross-train employees at a highly individualized level while minimizing expenses.  

A strong economy and low unemployment rate bear clear advantages for employees who feel confident that they can find a better job. However, it also shines a light on the consequences of understaffed organizations. Jobs that were already difficult to fill have been exacerbated. Contact centers can’t support callers fast enough and construction projects take longer to complete, among many other consequences.

Forward-looking companies understand that a widening skills gap also indicates that they need to consider the quality and quantity of workers’ output if they’re to remain competitive. All of which is to say that helping employees be engaged and successful will be the true marker of a future-proof company. 

Live Chat Makes Its Mark in B2B

Close up of woman using mobile phone in city centre car park

In today’s omnichannel environment, a company’s customer service must be available whenever and wherever the customer wants. In the B2B space, where the transactions are costlier, the products are essential for operations, and service needs to be quickly available, the right channel is essential. According to the State of the Connected Customer report by Salesforce, around 80 percent of B2B consumers expect real-time interactions with companies.

But when it comes to innovative and digitally active companies, automotive service equipment manufacturers may not come to mind. Hunter Engineering, a leading manufacturer of alignment equipment, tire changes, and inspection units, is changing that.

Boasting a force of around 1,000 representatives, it has one of the largest automotive services and sales teams in the U.S. But it needed new tools and capabilities to best reach its valued customers. Hunter Engineering’s website redesign spurred its foray into live chat, to the benefit of both the company and its customers.

Why live chat now?

In 2017 Hunter Engineering made it a priority to reinvent its web presence to match the needs of customers who wanted personalization and on-the-go customer service while retaining the same standards of customer care it was known for.

Leading the digitalization effort, Hunter’s Marketing Development Manager Madeline Triplett knew the first issue to overcome was its traditional foundation. Workers in the field are experts in the space and highly technical, some with decades of experience. But that expertise didn’t translate online immediately. The company didn’t have a proper avenue for customers viewing the website to immediately access customer service. The company prided itself on first- or next-day service for its B2B customers, so it wanted a customer service update that stayed true to its customer-centric philosophy.

“We realized that a vast majority of our customers were going to Hunter.com before they picked up the phone to call a salesman or call a service rep,” says Triplett. “So digital assets quickly became important for us to meet the need of where people are going first and foremost to get their information.”

In a webinar with Comm100, who partnered with Hunter to implement live chat, Triplett said the website redesign started with installing best practices like mobile optimized content and contact forms. While leads increased, productivity remained flat. Hunter Engineering saw live chat as the next logical step toward better personalization and quick service, allowing B2B customers to seamlessly connect with live associates while visiting the manufacturer’s website. The goal was to provide the same personalized touch a customer would get with an associate on the phone.

Hunter’s experience follows a trend in the B2B sector. According to Salesforce, 65 percent of B2B buyers may switch brands if the relationship does not feel personalized enough. 

How live chat wins

Hunter Engineering’s live chat tool is configured to ask people to log in and identify their Zip Code. This way associates can learn who and where their customers are and deal with them more personally, including connecting them to their local sales rep if needed.

Following its implementation in 2018, live chat has already reshaped how customers and associates interact with Hunter Engineering. Triplett says the team focused on two areas that made it a successful digital redesign:

1. Hard questions, easy transfer. Hunter Engineering provides two layers of defense with its chat that are essential to the success of its interactions. First, it deploys expert customer service associates to take live questions. Chat associates can manage conversations themselves or pass them along to another associate if needed. Second, technical experts are on hand for more challenging issues. The concerned customer is handed off to this team seamlessly to ensure none of the progress is lost.

To keep a smooth interaction, a transcript is immediately emailed to an associate or technical expert when one portion of the chat is finished. The conversation history gives the associate or expert the necessary information to handle the request without having to ask the customer to repeat themselves. The recording ensures the customer loses nothing in translation while the associate can feel like they were on board from the start. This saves time, prevents friction, and ensures a more seamless conversation.  

The configuration also allows associates to drop in and out of each other’s conversations for a handoff or joint effort. The transcript helps encourage a support system where associates can join each other when in need and know exactly where to take over. 

2. Reduced sales cycle time. The introduction of live chat technology has also noticeably shortened Hunter Engineering’s typical sales cycle. Being a producer of extremely technical and essential car service devices, its products are a capital expenditure for B2B customers. These high costs create an environment that leads to more scrutiny during the buying process and extra time due to thorough research.

Yet compared to leads from contact forms or paid advertising, Hunter Engineering saw that the sales cycle for live chat was significantly shorter. The average sales cycle normally took a few months, Triplett said during the Comm100 webinar. Since live chat was introduced, several leads closed in days or weeks. Furthermore, more than 60 percent of Hunter’s live chat interactions involved sales leads.

This is credited to the immediacy and intimacy/personalization of the chat platform, which eliminates the wait time usually associated with a contact queue. As a result, potential buyers get the answers they want quickly and efficiently. This has helped the live chat team become as valued as traditional sales lead avenues.  

An unexpected win

Hunter Engineering’s live chat feature also came to the rescue when it expanded to television brand awareness and advertising. During the webinar, Triplett announced that in 2018 the company partnered with the Velocity channel to produce a Hunter-themed episode on its show Motorhead Garage. After the episode aired, there were no tangible metrics to measure its success, apart from some word-of-mouth comments. Measuring website activity and live chat transcripts, however, she found that that live chat traffic shot up by 70 percent while the episode aired.

The example revealed that live chat platforms can open a new door for personalization and communication. Live chats during a TV show or real-time events can show that there are actual people behind the company.

“The way Hunter does [live chat] is very personal,” says Triplett. “There is never a doubt that you are talking to us.” There are no intrusive messages such as, “You’ve been transferred” that could make customers feel as if they are being tossed around needlessly without a person behind the interaction.

Don’t rush with technology ahead of customer experience

For all the new digital features that Hunter Engineering has introduced to its website, the company is walking before it runs. Despite the hype surrounding automated chatbot technology, the company is currently in the education phase of its chatbot journey. The company prides itself on hand-to-hand service, and as such, Triplett says the company wants to be sure that when the company does implement chatbots, the transition is as seamless as possible.

The Past And FUTURE of CX MEET

When Hunter Engineering was founded in 1946, the automobile was constantly being reinvented, and buyers rapidly moved on to the next best thing. The same now goes for the channels customers use. Adapting to channels that customers expect and providing personalization is a necessity. Hunter’s transition to live chat is a case of a traditional company intertwining its decades of experience with the future of customer service. 

Fintech’s Next Obstacle: Mastering the Customer Experience

Online banking businessman using smartphone with credit card Fintech and Blockchain concept

Financial technology (fintech) companies are on a tear. In 2017, fintech firms raised $16.6 billion in financing—an amount considerably higher than the $3.8 billion raised just four years prior. 

The financial landscape is so competitive that even disruptive technologies are at risk of being disrupted themselves, notes Chris Condon, SVP of Americas Business Development at TTEC. “The barriers to entry in terms of establishing a consumer financial relationship are much lower than just a few years ago,” Condon says. “In fact, even relatively new technologies, like peer-to-peer payment systems, are facing pressure.”

However, piling on more functionality and features isn’t enough to win. Companies also need a strong customer experience strategy to prove that they understand their customers’ challenges and expectations. Here are seven customer experience trends that are shaping the financial services landscape.

1. Integrated (customer-centric) digital financial experiences 

Like other industries, financial services is enamored with the latest technologies, including artificial intelligence (AI), augmented reality (AR), and blockchain. But whereas businesses have largely taken a siloed approach to each new technology, customers expect seamless experiences across channels and devices. 

Banks have an opportunity to combine the latest technologies in new, customer-centric ways to provide better services. Some firms, such as USAA, are already taking this approach. “It will be less about a website or a mobile app as a destination and more about being where our members are and integrating with the technology around them, such as IoT and virtual assistants,” Melissa Ehresman, USAA’s AVP of bank digital experiences, told the tech blog Tearsheet. Expect more financial firms to look for opportunities to deliver individualized services at scale.

2. Tech firms continue to court banks with added features, functionalities  

Facebook found itself in the news recently following a report from the Wall Street Journal that the social media giant is urging banks to offer information, such as checking account balances and credit card transactions, on its messaging platform, Messenger.

While Facebook clarified that the financial data would be used for customer service, such as to communicate with the bank through a chatbot, and not for advertising, it’s an example of how eager tech firms are to collaborate with banks. 

For Facebook, the ability to let users communicate with their banks (and extend the amount of time they spend on Facebook) carries obvious benefits. It’s not clear though how many banks have jumped at the offer. Facebook’s discussions with financial firms follow its admission that information about 87 million users was improperly obtained by another organization. But this brings up the next trend. 

3. A race for banking relationships

Financial startups Venmo (now owned by PayPal) and Acorns recently unveiled separate debit cards with compelling features. The Venmo debit card lets owners split purchases with friends and can be enabled/disabled from the Venmo app. Acorns’ debit card automatically rounds up the amount of a purchase and deposits the extra cents in an investment account.

The debit cards are the result of partnerships that Venmo and Acorns have struck with banks, giving the digital-first firms a foothold in physical branches. 

Banks must think critically about the partnerships they form, but they can’t take too long as non-banking firms gain more access to banking relationships. Amazon is already making small-business loans and competing against prepaid card issuers, reports American Banker. And Walmart reportedly selected Capital One as its new primary credit card partner to gain broader banking capabilities. This is another reminder that banks can’t take their customers for granted and should be looking for opportunities to create more value before their competitors do. 

4. Digging deeper into financial services AI

Although AI is already deeply embedded in financial services, there are still opportunities for organizations to use AI to gain a competitive advantage. For instance, the majority of AI initiatives at banks are focused on conversational interfaces and virtual assistants, followed by process optimization and fraud detection, according to a study by Medici Research. “While a relatively fewer number of banks are looking at AI in compliance and trading functions,” according to the report, “there is no shortage of opportunities to be explored in these spaces.”

5. Voice-enabled banking virtual assistants

Today, voice-enabled virtual assistants like Alexa and Google Home are mostly used for basic tasks, such as checking the weather or answering simple questions. However, consumers are beginning to use their virtual assistants services, such as banking. 
More than one out of  five (21 percent) of people who own a voice-activated virtual assistant are using it to shop, pay bills, bank online, or send money, according to a recent survey conducted by Mastercard and Mercator.

What’s more, a survey by Bain & Co. found that respondents ranked Amazon and PayPal nearly as high as banks in levels of customer trust. And more than 25 percent said they would consider using “voice-controlled assistants for their everyday banking.” Given that Amazon dominates the voice-enabled speaker market, it’s crucial that banks develop a presence in this market with superior customer experiences. As virtual assistants usher in new banking habits and ways to interact, banks should focus on developing Alexa skills based on the functionalities customers want.

6. Emotional intelligence matters

It can be tempting to automate and digitize as many banking interactions as possible, but research shows this is the wrong approach. 

For routine transactions, consumers prefer digital channels, but they give higher Net Promoter Scores to companies that allow customers to speak with a representative to resolve a problem, reports Bain & Co. In fact, 83 percent of consumers prefer dealing with a person versus a digital channel to resolve customer services issues, according to an Accenture study.

Emotional intelligence, in other words, plays an important role in the customer experience. Banks can earn greater loyalty by making routine interactions convenient and frictionless, and providing a high-touch service experience during stressful situations. 

7.  Brand trust and transparency
A survey by Label Insight on transparency ROI revealed that 78 percent of consumers are more likely to trust brands that they consider transparent. What makes a brand transparent can be a matter of opinion, but as the aforementioned Bain & Co. survey shows, perceptions are important. As more competitors like Amazon enter the financial services space with strong reputations and an established customer base, even large banks will have to reexamine their own brand equity. 

The competition for customer loyalty in financial services won’t be decided on technology alone. Customers are looking for options, control, and transparency in their banking relationships. The question is whether a conventional bank, a new financial services player, or a combination of both will find the right balance of technology and the human touch. 

How to Be a Customer Support Hero in an IoT World

If you believe the hype about the Internet of Things (IoT), we are entering a world that’s seamlessly connected. From smart homes and wearables to connected cars and smart cities, the IoT enables innumerable ways for devices to share data and handle tasks on our behalf. 

But what happens when the system breaks? Who’s responsible for providing customer care when multiple devices automatically “talk” to one another but are vulnerable to equipment failures, cyberattacks, and connectivity issues? 

There’s no easy answer. That’s why human support is integral to an IoT world. People rise above the technology to connect the many service points across different devices with context.

The fragmented IoT landscape
In two years, 20.4 billion IoT devices such as smart TVs, fridges, and security cameras will be deployed, up from 11.2 billion connected devices in 2018, according to Gartner. For context, the human population is expected to reach 7.8 billion by 2020. 

Companies flooding the market with connected devices create a highly fragmented IoT ecosystem. This fragmentation has become one of the challenges in providing customer care for IoT devices and applications.

For example, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Zigbee, and 5G are just some of the common wireless networking technologies that are available for IoT-based solutions. Each of these wireless protocols has different characteristics that were designed for specific applications. As a result, consumers may have dozens of connected devices that operate across various communication networks with multiple data inputs.

Consider this scenario: An IoT-enabled printer is connected to Amazon’s Alexa, which lets you know when it’s time to order more toner. However, something goes wrong. The toner arrives in a battered box, the container is leaking, and it’s the wrong type of toner. 

Who’s responsible for the problem? Is it the company that manufactured the printer, the toner company, Amazon, or the shipping company? Who will understand all the pieces and provide customer care? You would most likely have to contact several customer service centers to rectify the issue, which makes for a poor experience on all fronts. 

Problems like this are only going to become more common and more complicated. There are already tens of thousands of different ways for smart devices to connect and interact with one another in a home or business on a constant basis. That creates myriad, unpredictable service points that represent a very complex headache for companies. 

Trouble-shooting IoT issues requires the ability to extract data from connected devices, analyze the various types of data input, identify patterns and insights, and develop standardized protocols and applications. 

The process becomes even more complex when factoring in differences in equipment OEMs and operating systems. Finally, cybersecurity is another issue, since each connected device is a potential weak spot for fraudsters to exploit. 

Support in an IoT world
Artificial intelligence-as-a-service and platform-as-a-service technologies address some of these challenges, but companies can’t automate their way out of the problem. Humans are needed to provide intuitive support that’s available around the clock.

For instance, Best Buy offers a Geek Squad 24/7 tech support plan. Depending on the plan, subscribers receive features such as unlimited access to online, phone, and in-store service, as well as assistance with device installations, tune-ups, and repairs. The services include assistance setting up a smart doorbell, router placement tips, and other types of smart device support. 

Expect to see more white-glove support services like this, where in addition to setting up IoT devices, trained specialists handle a wide range of customer support issues. Returning to the toner example, customers who pay for IoT support could have an associate connect the dots for them. 

For instance, if suppliers, sellers, and other partners agree to a standardized record management system like blockchain, the associate can review quality checkpoints on the toner’s journey to the customer to identify and resolve the problem. The associate could then give the customer options, such as to reorder the toner or receive a refund. 

Providing superior service
Another reason humans are needed to provide IoT support is that most customers simply want a human connection. In fact, the Accenture Global Consumer Pulse Research report found that when service issues arise, 73 percent of customers prefer human interaction to a digital channel.

And as IoT support issues grow more complex, this is an opportunity for companies to stand out by providing higher levels of quality engagement. 

For example, let’s say your car is designed to make an appointment with the dealer when it needs to be serviced. However, a database malfunction causes many cars to make appointments that aren’t necessary. A customer support outsourcer’s AI system could detect the anomaly and flag it so that IT can fix the issue. At the same time, the affected customers would receive text messages or emails informing them that there was a problem with the appointment, but it’s being fixed and associates are standing by in case they have questions. 

When something breaks, customers want to know that they’re being cared for. And instead of angering its customers, the car company becomes the hero by proactively handling a problem before it snowballs into a larger issue. 

Connecting the data dots
To support an IoT customer base, companies must provide reliable service 24/7. But the intersection of brands in an IoT world presents a significant challenge for companies trying to serve customers. Customer support is no longer about individual manufacturers, suppliers, retailers, and internet service providers offering their own products. It’s about delivering on customer expectations for an uninterrupted service experience across the connected environment, while adding value to drive loyalty. 

While there isn’t a simple way to accomplish this, start by identifying the key touchpoints along your product’s customer journey and where it intersects with other devices. Then determine what areas your support team is best suited to take on, and where you may need to scale through a partner.  

The onus will be on creating the best support teams, regardless of location or brand. Companies are already building remote workforces with central hubs in key cities and the IoT will only accelerate this trend. 

Also, as more care centers are distributed between IoT companies, collaboration will be essential. Technology will play a large role in facilitating this. Messaging apps and SaaS tools that allow for easy online collaboration will have a big part to play, not to mention tools for streamlining data across multiple platforms and permissions.

IoT adds many more layers to the customer’s experience with a brand—product complexity compounded by customer expectations and technology and network functions in an effort to work effortlessly. Disruptions are inevitable. When they happen, it’s important to have the right systems, tools, and teams in place to guide customers through this complex journey. 

This article originally appeared in the summer issue of TTEC‘s Customer Strategist journal.

Customer Transformation Defined in 5 Steps

I am proof that the work of the CCO is just one more ‘work stream’ added to the report going out. For example, I advocate a set of deliberate activities that evolve and mature leaders’ commitments and actions to embed critical new competencies and enable business transformation, but often I jump into this work with a plate full of projects. The work becomes too quickly attached to project plan movement rather than customer life improvement.

The CCO role hits a wall when the C-Suite isn’t united in understanding their roles and ongoing personal commitments in working with the CCO as a united team. Customer experience transformation and the work of this role also falter when too much work is layered on too soon and if the work isn’t broken into achievable segments. And often these roles are established without leaders agreeing to the tactics and energy necessary to achieve a customer-driven transformation.

To ensure greater success in their role, I encourage CCOs to move their work through the deliberate phases of my Customer Leadership Maturity Map. This work will be successful when CCOs take a stair-stepped approach to gaining leadership clarity and commitment to the framework and actions. As they embed new company competencies, over time, what the company stands for and its marketplace position will shift along with customer-driven growth. Starting with the lives of customers and employees will drive decision-making and elevate the brand in the marketplace.

Below is a summary of the milestones that define most clients’ transformation efforts in embedding the five competencies. For each phase of the maturity map, I’ve identified actions and behavior changes along the continuum of years one through five as the competencies are being embedded. After year five, it’s a matter of sharpening and improving these competencies for your organization. By their very nature, the five competencies are not a program, but rather a repeated cycle of one-company awareness, understanding, focus, and united action. We are finding that it takes about three years to have these become very comfortable inside the organization and up to five years until they are really embedded into the DNA of the business.

Commit: Gain leadership, clarity, and commitment to the five-competency framework or strategy. This work hinges on c-l-a-r-i-t-y. Executives need to understand with specifics the work that is ahead, both in terms of company action and their actions, decision-making, and behavior.

Unite and Build::Unite leaders and their organizations in competency-building and first round or experience reliability improvement actions. In this phase two outcomes are important: Initiating the build of your five-competency engine, and taking actions that focus on and improve priority experiences. Think of this as your beta version of this work. First, initiating your five-competency engine means to begin the process of building your first ‘clunky’ version of each competency. Don’t get caught up in the trap that they must be perfect to get started.

Embed: At this stage, the competencies are now part of how you do work inside your company. By this stage your leadership team should be united in driving accountability by customer journey stage, rather than silo-by-silo. Because they have now been an active part of the first generation of the five competencies, there should be an appreciation of resources necessary to sustain the cycle they establish as part of the operation. Employee teams should have been trained throughout the company on the “Customer Experience Development- CXD” process for improvement. The five competencies should now be embedded as part of building products, establishing services and conducting annual planning.

Mature: You are now actively engaged inexperience innovation and differentiation. By this phase, you should have tackled the majority of the irregular and unreliable customer experiences plaguing the customer journey along key touchpoints. This opens up resources for identifying and improving touchpoints for experience differentiation and innovation. Use the embedded competencies at this point to commit to differentiating moments in the customer journey. Employees should be able to work top down and bottoms up, practicing the five competencies, to build these experiences.

Elevate: Company differentiation. Your company and people are differentiated in the marketplace by how you conduct yourself in business. By now, the five leadership competencies have been embedded into your business engine and are part of the way people work, are compensated, and rewarded. Annual planning begins with an understanding of the growth or loss of your customer asset and the inflection points along your journey where opportunity exists. Experience reliability is managed, and leaders care about the process metrics which impact customer asset growth with as much rigor as they care about outcome metrics such as sales goals. You hire and enable employees guided by your customer journey framework.

Planning for 4 Types of Customer Experience

You’ll never be able to write a line of code or a business process rule that requires an employee to deliver a great customer experience; the employee has to want to deliver it.

Sooner or later every company encounters a situation that simply wasn’t anticipated in advance. So when a customer’s experience involves this kind of unforeseen event, especially if it is of great significance or importance to the customer, you want your employees to be willing and able to deal with it, even if it might mean overriding a standard practice, or making a judgment call on their own authority.

One way to visualize the issue is to use a diagram that categorizes the kind of customer experience you’ll be delivering, based on how standardized the business process is for a situation, and how engaged the customer is in it. Based on high and low levels of both process standardization and customer engagement, we can identify four different types of customer experience that must be planned for:

The vast majority of customer experiences with any sizable business will be in the lower right quadrant, “Business as usual.” Here you have a lot of repetitiveness and a high potential for standardization, while the customer considers the transaction or experience to be routine. Buying one more item from an online retailer, for instance, or making a call to your credit card company to check your balance, are business-as-usual customer experiences. And many of these kinds of experiences can be entirely automated, which gives the company the ability to deliver a completely frictionless experience simply by hard-wiring the right customer-centric processes into its computer system. When iTunes reminds you that you already bought an item you’re about to purchase, it’s not because anyone made an on-the-spot decision about how to treat you, but because they anticipated the situation in advance and built appropriate rulesinto their computer system.

In the upper right quadrant, “Predictable customer lifecycle events,” the customer experience is highly significant in the customer’s mind, but it is still predictable, and the delivery of that experience can be standardized, even though customers themselves are likely to be highly interested or engaged in them, and would probably not think of them as routine. One example might be when a customer receives his very first bill from the mobile carrier he just signed up with. He’s likely to be quite interested in understanding why the bill is higher than he had expected, and in many cases he’ll call the carrier to discuss it. But, because all new customers receive a first invoice at some point, and it’s not uncommon for them to call in to inquire about it, the mobile company can prepare for this customer experience in advance. It will likely have a standardized way to deal with these kinds of inquiries.

In the lower left quadrant, “threats to cost efficiency” are many of the kinds of customer experiences that weren’t anticipated and planned for already, including unusual requests or out of the ordinary events, in which the customer isn’t terribly interested or engaged. Your company still has to pay attention to them, however, and manually address these issues one at a time, because they undermine your cost efficiency. An example might be, for instance, when a hotel company’s website can’t automatically consolidate a customer’s duplicate frequent guest accounts because of an overlooked discrepancy in the address field, or some other minor problem. For the most part this is nuisance friction, and you should be logging each such problem as it comes up, in order to continually improve your process standardization and automation capabilities.

It’s in the upper left quadrant, however, where a negative customer experience can be the most threatening to a company’s profitability and reputation. The customer experience in this quadrant is one in which the customer is highly engaged, but the company itself has not prepared in advance to address the issue, and there is no standardized process in place. This might be because the problem was hard to anticipate in advance, or because the company hasn’t been careful enough in mapping out all its customer journeys to begin with. Either way, these “surprises, trials, and tribulations” will test a firm’s corporate culture.

So the question for your company is, when a customer is wronged or ill-served in some way, how easily can the situation be remedied by rank-and-file employees who get involved in the customer’s interaction?

The vast majority of employees-and particularly those in customer service jobs-want to work for a company that can be trustedby its customers. But if you want to be able to handle the kinds of problems encountered in this upper left quadrant effectively, then your employees must be (1) actively engaged with your firm and its mission, and (2) enabled to make the decisions and take action on their own.

Excerpted from: Customer Experience: What, How and Why Now (2106) by Don Peppers

Employee Engagement = Alignment + Empowerment

Office workers relaxing at break

Temkin Group research shows that engaged employees are valuable assets-they try harder at work and are more committed to helping the company succeed than their less engaged counterparts. In fact, in our 2016 Employee Engagement Benchmark Study, we found that compared to disengaged employees, highly engaged employees are:

  • Four times more likely to do something good for the company that is unexpected of them
  • Four times more likely to recommend the company’s products and services to someone who might need them
  • Four times more likely to make a recommendation about an improvement that can be made at their company
  • Two and a half times more likely to stay late at work if something needs to be done after their normal workday ends

So what does it take for companies to reap these benefits? They must recognize that employee engagement is not just about the employee; it’s about connecting employees with the goals of the organization. This requires that employees are both aligned and empowered.

  • Aligned: Employees feel they are responsible for helping the company achieve its goals and are committed to delivering on its values.
  • Empowered: Employees feel they have the responsibility and the capability to make decisions that positively affect customers

Without alignment, employees don’t feel a real connection with the company or any responsibility for its success. Without empowerment, employees may want to help the company succeed, but don’t see a way to do that in the role they play.

So how can companies ensure high alignment and empowerment? They can start by focusing on strengthening three areas-all of which strongly correlate to the productive, committed employee behaviors described above.

1.Make sure employees understand the mission of the company. It’s impossible to align any group of people in the same direction if they don’t know where they’re headed. A company needs to ensure that its mission, values, and goals are easy to understand and remember so that employees can use them to guide the myriad decisions they make every day. This includes identifying specific employee behaviors so that employees understand explicitly what they can do to contribute to the company’s (and their own) success. A critical tactic to deploy-leaders at all levels must reinforce the company’s mission, goals, and values on a consistent and persistent basis, not only through what they communicate, but also through how they act.

2.Provide employees with the training and the tools they need to be successful. No company can expect its employees to magically know what they are supposed to do and how to do it. Employees need opportunities to develop and practice the knowledge and skills required to succeed. This happens through activities like formal training, on-the-job coaching, and peer reinforcement, to name a few. Companies also need to make sure they are making it easy for employees to take the right actions. If employees are constrained by things like out-of-date systems that require work-arounds or frustrating policies they have to enforce with customers, then neither employees nor customers will have a positive experience.

3.Ask for employees’ feedback and act upon their input. When a company makes its employees part of its improvement and decision-making processes, their commitment levels significantly increase. Employees are a fountain of valuable information, so companies should be applying the same rigor to employee feedback as they apply to customer feedback and voice of the customer programs. Employee listening programs can encompass activities beyond a formal engagement survey. Take advantage of employee councils, employee social network discussion boards, along with ad hoc employee feedback sessions, to capture input around specific initiatives or projects. But companies can’t stop with listening-they must close the loop with employees by sharing what was learned, what actions they are taking, and why other ideas won’t be moving forward.

Companies that come out ahead will be those that understand that raising employee engagement is not the charge of any single function, but rather a team effort involving senior executives, middle managers, Human Resources, Customer Experience, Marketing, Communications, IT, etc. These companies will take a look inside their four walls and ensure that there is an environment in place where the culture and operating processes are aligned with the goals of the company, and that this environment enables employees to deliver consistently great customer experiences.

The work involved is not easy, but it is worth it. Our research shows that organizations that are successful benefit from not only more engaged employees but better customer experience and financial results.