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CX Simplicity

Simple B2B Customer Experience Guidance

Category: Organizational Engagement

Top 10 Reasons to Become the Least Competent Person in Your Company

cxsimplicityFebruary 5, 2016Leave a Reply
  1. Your work load will instantly decrease. Work that you used to have to do will suddenly be assigned to your peers and you can safely fly under the radar.
  2. To demonstrate to co-workers your company’s inability to hold people accountable. You’re taking one for the team, really. People need to know that one is capable of skirting all responsibility for performance metrics.
  3. To test how unwilling your company is to fire someone. You don’t know truly how far you can go until you test every last boundary by slacking on all possible fronts. How many times can you show up late and leave early? How many deadlines can you miss? It’s likely more than you think.
  4. To hone your ability to make excuses. Part of the boundary testing noted above involves being able to think fast with excuses for your poor performance. This skill can be applied to all facets of life from skipping a dreaded social gathering to getting out of a speeding ticket. Why not use work as a time to practice?
  5. To endlessly frustrate that overachiever that you can’t stand. There’s nothing an overachiever hates more than a blatant underachiever. This person will despise you and it will be oh so satisfying.
  6. So you can take vacation without anyone noticing you’re gone. Want to take time off to binge watch Netflix shows in your underwear? Problem solved! Because you’ve already offloaded all responsibility, taking a long vacation is as easy as ever.
  7. People stop trusting you. And therefore, stop asking you for your opinions on crucial matters. You’ll no longer need to sit in on strategy sessions, vendor proposals, and every other dreaded 2 hour meeting.
  8. You realize the power you have to take others down with you. If we are the average of the 5 people that we spend the most time with, you can single-handedly bring down the entire team. Just how much is up to you.
  9. Your social media presence will be more robust than ever. With extra free time, you will take to social media for entertainment. Step up your Insta game by documenting all of your culinary creations, Snap your trips to the breakroom, and Tweet about that annoying co-worker that won’t stop asking you for your TPS report.
  10. When you finally do get fired, you’ll already know how to do nothing. The transition into unemployment won’t carry the emotional burden that you’d expect because you’ve already come to terms with being worthless. At this point, you’re totally OK with bringing nothing to the table.

 

Overwhelmed by CX Data

Overwhelmed by CX Data

cxsimplicityFebruary 3, 2016Leave a Reply

It seems that the longer your customer experience program has been in place, the easier it is to become completely engulfed in data. At first, you might only have one survey or listening post in place and you get a manageable amount of feedback. Then you add another, and another, and another. And then you want to incorporate your operational metrics to learn what is driving each fluctuation in survey scores at various touch-points. And then you want to build a model to predict how changes in operational metrics will impact survey scores. And so on. 

If you have really sophisticated data management tools and a talented team to manage them, then you’re all set! But if you’re dealing with disparate systems and a lack of dedicated resources, then you have to come up with creative ways to get actionable data points from your customer feedback.

What do you present to your audience? What metrics make the most sense? What do you take action on? Here are some ideas for regaining focus and control over your customer experience program in the face of a demanding audience with varying needs and requests.

Check out some stack rankings. This is always an easy place to start for quick action. You can slice and dice stack rankings many ways: by person, team, geographical area, etc. And right away you can see what group/individual is not measuring up to the expected customer experience. You might not make too many friends with this approach, but no one likes to be dead last. A ranking can be a quick motivator for improvement. Be sure the quantities are high enough in each grouping to provide valid results.

Take a step back. Look at a high level view of your customer journey. Are there any known pain points or bottlenecks causing frustration with your customers?  Check out satisfaction or effort scores related to these areas and see if you can dig deeper. Do you have any KPI’s in place for the touch-point that is causing problems? If so, is it the right KPI? Make sure both your survey data and your operational data are providing you with something that you can act on.

Start at the beginning of the customer lifecycle. If you don’t have a known pain point to investigate at the moment, segment out the feedback that pertains to touchpoints early in the customer lifecycle. First impressions are important to customers. Analyze these data points and see how they correlate to purchase behavior and early lifecycle churn. If you are able to identify that customers are more likely to leave you after a certain circumstance during the onboarding experience, then you’ve found a great place to focus your efforts.

Read recent comments. Get back in touch with what is most important to your customers based on their verbatim comments. It is really as simple as that. You will likely find something you want to explore in more detail. And don’t hesitate to pick up the phone to get more information from your top customers about what is currently most important to them. You’ll prove your value by improving things that are meaningful to them.

List out the different audience groups and the things they care about. This is a great internal step to make sure your customer experience program is dispersing relevant information throughout the organization. Pick someone from each different type of audience to which you are distributing results and discuss their top priorities for the month/quarter/year. You can then tailor the CX reporting to their needs. Priorities often evolve so it is important to check back in to make sure the information you are providing is still relevant.

Show results for what you want to fix. This isn’t to say that you should ignore results that are critical to improving the customer experience and driving success in your organization, but there are opportunities to prioritized based on your opinions about what is important. You are the expert that is studying how customers interact with your business. People are relying on you to have an understanding of what is important to customers. And therefore, you are in a great position to present analysis on exactly that. Be their advocate!

 

Getting Difficult Employees On Board

Getting Difficult Employees On Board

cxsimplicityFebruary 1, 2016Leave a Reply

We all know the type. We’ll call him Bob for the sake of this post (for the record, I happen to love the Bobs I work with. This is in no way a knock on the Bobs of the world).

Bob likes to do things the way they have always been done. Why? Because it’s comfortable, familiar, and doesn’t require much extra effort. Bob doesn’t really care if its not the most efficient way or what kind of experience it generates for the customer. Bob would prefer to go about his day the way he sees fit and not rock the boat. Bob also manages front-line employees. Bob’s employees are a busy bunch, reacting to customer needs all day long.

Because Bob’s team is one built on a process of reaction, there’s not much time to brainstorm and implement process improvement initiatives. Bob’s employees may be thinking, “This would really be a lot easier if we just did Y instead of X.” But they don’t have the time, knowledge of process or avenue of implementation to drive change. Instead they find an unreliable, shaky work-around that would make any senior level manager go “We really do that?! Are you kidding me?” They have to. Their environment makes them. Bob is driven by his metrics (frequent culprits: call handle time, service level, fulfillment time, etc.) which in turn drives front-line employee behavior.  Ultimately, Bob’s situation is the perfect storm of change resistance: bad metrics, lack of time (or interest), and lack of access to a process that makes change easy for Bob. Side note: front-line employees are a generally a severely underutilized resource for input in strategic decision making, but more on that in another post that has yet to be written.

Based on your evaluation of the customer experience, you’ve found somethings that you want Bob and his team to do differently. But as I described above, Bob is a challenging person to work with and is skeptical of you and your CX change initiatives. Here are some things to think about when trying to get Bob on board…

Start with the positive. 

Bob and his team hear from cranky customers all day long. They’re working as quickly as they can to put out fires one after another. Guess what they don’t want to hear about from you? Exactly, more things that they are doing wrong. You can dictate what they should be fixing all day long, but it’s not going to get you very far. Start with gathering some positive feedback on the team. Look at their metrics. What are they doing right? What customer experience wins have they had recently? Share them with everyone. Let people know when someone on Bob’s team went above and beyond for a customer. You need to develop a positive rapport with Bob and his team. Let them know that you’re on their side. Consistency is key here as well. The more you consistently share positive feedback, the more engaged the team will become. And the more consistent you are, the more you establish yourself as a trusted and reliable partner to this team. One way to do this, is to send out positive customer survey comments to the entire team at set intervals, especially ones that call out the efforts of an individual employee. It feels great to be recognized like that. If you don’t have a survey program implemented, try listening to customer calls and highlighting a specific positive experience. Or if you don’t have access to customer calls, seek Bob’s help in choosing a win to share with everyone on regular basis. He will probably be happy to help share the success of his team members.

Pave the way for change.

Once you’ve established a positive vibe, think about how your organization manages change and process improvement (you may need to be the one that creates a better framework, but regardless, its important that you know how you can accomplish change in your company). You may have a particular problem with this team that you are dying to fix, but try to come up with the top few problems that would make a big impact to the customer experience. Next, I recommend hosting an informal focus group, or just some individual discussions with Bob and his team members to identify the biggest problems they see with customers. Most likely, something they mention will align with something on your list from your customer feedback. Choose that thing! They will be most eager to fix something that they came up with as a top priority. Next, to really get them fully engaged and confident that they can implement this change, you should map out the process for making that happen. It doesn’t have to be fancy, but outline the steps that all involved parties will need to take to reach the goal. You’ll need to prove to Bob that things CAN be fixed and that it will make his job easier and get him and his team more of the positive feedback. The solution will become more tangible in Bob’s eyes and this map will also be your accountability guideline throughout the process.

Hold their hand.

Before you can tell them what to change and have them run with it, you’ll need to guide them through it, especially if the change process is brand new. Be Bob’s accountability buddy. Hold weekly progress meetings. Dates dates dates. Make sure there are dates assigned to each step, dates that were agreed upon by you and Bob. Be the one to proactively engage the participation of other functional areas when necessary. In my experience, being a CX manager is a lot more than reporting on customer experience metrics. You have to be a champion of change.

Measure and celebrate.

The last piece is very important for driving your customer experience program forward and keeping people engaged. This. Is. Huge. You have to have visible, positive results that can be shared and celebrated. If something is implemented and then forgotten, you aren’t building up your following. People aren’t going to drink your customer experience kool-aid if you don’t prove and celebrate success. Shout it loud and proud and let Bob and his team join in. Hopefully the success of this accomplishment will inspire the adoption of future changes and get you and Bob in the same corner.

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CX Simplicity provides simple guidance for B2B customer experience programs. The inspiration for CX Simplicity came from a desire to make things easier for a CX program manager or anyone looking to set customer experience initiatives in motion. Search below for the answers to all of your customer experience questions.

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