Surprise … customers want their entire experience to be just right. All touchpoints have to be on point and all need to be memorable. When a business asks its customers “What did we do well today?” after they have completed their transactions, all of the answers should be a resounding, “Everything.”
Sounds unattainable? Only if your business is aiming for basic service. The businesses that have set sky-high targets for customer experience find nothing incredulous about the “everything was done well” survey response.
There is a major difference between the businesses that set sky-high customer experience targets intentionally and those that aim for threshold-level service. The former businesses have no time to waste on performative efforts, designed primarily for echoing fashionable narratives that espouse an undying commitment to exceeding customers’ expectations. They understand that today’s customers judge businesses on what they do, not on what they say that they are going to do. Performative businesses, on the other hand, miss this mark, since they’re too busy focusing on promoting their promises and not busy enough installing the infrastructure to sustain the promises.
Getting the entire customer experience right is a fundamental expectation of today’s customers. While yesterday’s customers were willing to overlook the one or two service failures that may have occurred along their transaction or interaction journeys, not so with the newly minted generation of customers, who are clear on their agency regarding accepting or rejecting poor service and who have demonstrated their willingness to cast a vote with their feet when necessary. They will not hesitate to pull the plug on their current patronage and plug into a superior service delivery brand, where words and action are wedded.
One of the fundamental aspects of setting sky-high targets is ensuring that the micro experiences which comprise the customer experience journey, are all superlative. Great at the start, poor in the middle and satisfactory at the end, or any other permutation that reflects irregularity, will no longer be tolerated by the new generation of discerning, empowered and value-obsessed customers.
For businesses that are unaccustomed to taking deep dives into defining what it takes to keep customers happy, this means dissecting each step of each typical transaction or interaction and treating these steps as micro experiences. This is really microscopic work that will test the resolve of a business to expend the effort that is necessary for getting the end-to-end customer experience right.
Let’s talk about the scale of this approach. Each micro experience will need to be regarded as both a unique and an integrated step in the overall experience sequence. Crucial to this process is going beyond having well-defined journey maps and micro experiences, into ensuring that every department across the business understands its role in supporting the chain of value.
Customers really appreciate having a superlative experience. The goal in this regard, is for a business to task itself with the responsibility to “guarantee” the outcome of every customer experience. Yes, while I know that many businesses consider this to be a risky act, we are surrounded by a few business precedents that attest to the fact that it is doable.
The businesses that accept the challenge to create these guarantees, tend to have an appetite for setting big, bold audacious goals and tend, as well, to have a propensity for disrupting themselves. In other words, these businesses live in the epicentre of change and to them, the enormity of what’s possible is not a call to anxiety, but a call to pursuing the next big challenge with an open disposition.
The question is, “What is holding back your business from being able to guarantee a superlative customer experience?”