The Executive s CXM Strategy Guide



Similar documents
The New Global Customer Experience Management Mandate

THE 7 STEPS TO A SUCCESSFUL CRM IMPLEMENTATION DEPLOYING CRM IN THE NEW ERA OF CONNECTED CUSTOMERS

Top 10 tips when selecting a web content management system.

Leverage Insights. Ignite Brand Engagement.

Three Benefits You Gain by Managing the Customer Journey

How To Create A Social Media Management System

The Connected RetAil Experience. Empowering Employees, Reinventing Customer Interactions

Five Key Outcomes of Social CRM

A Strategic Approach to Customer Engagement Optimization. A Verint Systems White Paper

Welcome to the World of Multimodal Customer Service

Creating Great Service Experiences How Modern Customer Service Works. Copyright 2014 Oracle Corporation. All Rights Reserved.

Banking On A Customer-Centric Approach To Data

Customer Experience Strategy and Implementation

The Power of Personalizing the Customer Experience

Powering Performance with Customer Intelligence. Are you ready to make Customer Intelligence your performance advantage to outpace the competition?

ez Marketing Automation

How To Listen To Social Media

Engage your customers

[ know me ] A Strategic Approach to Customer Engagement Optimization

How to Choose the Best Web Content Management System for Customer Experience Management:

Omni-Channel Customer Service Demands the Intelligent Contact Center

Best Practices Brochure. Best Practices for Optimizing Social CRM Maximizing the Value of Customer Relationships. Customer Care

Why Kampyle? Kampyle is dialing back the clock to an era when the customer was king and businesses were driven by understanding his needs.

CRM. Best Practice Webinar. Next generation CRM for enhanced customer journeys: from leads to loyalty

How To Meet Customer Expectations On Mobile

Elevate Customer Experience and Engagement in the New Digital World

REAL ESTATE FIRMS INVESTMENT FIRMS INSURANCE FIRMS CUSTOM DIGITAL MARKETING SOLUTIONS FOR ALL

The Modern Traveler: A Look at Customer Engagement in the Travel Industry

HOW CLOSE ARE YOU TO YOUR CUSTOMERS?

IBM Global Business Services Microsoft Dynamics CRM solutions from IBM

Multichannel marketing: creating a competitive advantage in today s complex marketing landscape For marketing and customer intelligence executives

and Analytic s i n Consu m e r P r oducts

Creating the customer experience

SUSTAINING COMPETITIVE DIFFERENTIATION

Improving customer relationships

ACHIEVE DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION WITH SALES AND SERVICE SOLUTIONS

The following is intended to outline our general product direction. It is intended for information purposes only, and may not be incorporated into

Marketing Automation 2.0 Closing the Marketing and Sales Gap with a Next-Generation Collaborative Platform

Razorfish Customer Experience Innovation Series: Disrupt Yourself

Customer Journey Mapping:

Improve customer experience with your call center

Delivering Great Customer Experience. Řízení zákaznické zkušenosti aneb boj o zákazníka nejen na sociálních sítích

CA Service Desk On-Demand

4How Marketing Leaders Can Take Control of Data for Better

Financial Services. Market Insights, Drivers & Best Practices

The Buyer 2.0 Content Strategy Checklist

Introduction. ¹The rise of the digital bank, McKinsey & Company, (July 2014)

Best Practices for Relationship Marketing

Ensighten Activate USE CASES. Ensighten Pulse. Ensighten One

LEVERAGE BIG DATA ANALYTICS TO IMPROVE CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE

Online & Offline Correlation Conclusions I - Emerging Markets

Driving Airline Revenues and Profitability by Delivering Great Customer Experiences

NAVIGATING NAVIGATIN MOBILE MARKETING A DEALER S GUIDE TO WINNING SMARTPHONE SHOPPERS

Applying Social Media Measurement to the Sales Funnel

ANALYTICS. Acxiom Marketing Maturity Model CheckPoint. Are you where you want to be? Or do you need to advance your analytics capabilities?

B2B MARKETING 6 STEPS TO BETTER 6 STEPS TO B2B MARKETING SUCCESS. Phone: (+1)

Modern Customer Care In a Multi-Channel World

Copyright Infor Global Solutions

How to Create a Content Strategy to Drive Each Stage of the Sales Funnel

The Evolving Customer Experience Management Landscape:

White Paper. Cross-channel Marketing: Go Mobile. Go Social.

Beyond CRM: a new era for Customer Engagement SAP hybris - Customer Engagement & Commerce

Powering the Cross-Channel Customer Experience with Oracle s Complete Commerce

The Importance of Data Quality for Intelligent Data Analytics:

CREATING THE RIGHT CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE

Patient Relationship Management

Agenda Overview for Marketing Management, 2015

Five steps to improving the customer service experience

Work Smarter, Not Harder: Leveraging IT Analytics to Simplify Operations and Improve the Customer Experience

Solving the Challenge of Lead Management Automation

Customer Activation. Marketing with a Measurable Purpose

Digital Enterprise. White Paper. Multi-Channel Strategies that Deliver Results with the Right Marketing Attribution Model

Data Management Emerging Trends. Sourabh Mukherjee Data Management Practice Head, India Accenture

What the Financial & Insurance Industries Can Learn from Retailers

Business Intelligence and Big Data Analytics: Speeding the Cycle from Insights to Action Four Steps to More Profitable Customer Engagement

BEST PRACTICES FOR SOCIAL CUSTOMER SERVICE. ebook

Sitecore Experience PlatformTM. Know every customer. Shape every experience.

Three powerful analytics use cases for Customer Link. How linked data powers smarter analytics and better predictive models

Using a Multichannel Strategy to Deliver an Exceptional Customer Experience

Is your business as customer-centric as you think? Customer Experience

Transcription:

The Executive s CXM Strategy Guide Cut through the CXM noise Customer Experience Management (CXM) is a strategy and practice for delivering online and offline customer experiences to acquire and retain customers, and turn those customers into satisfied, loyal brand advocates. As an executive, you own this strategy. Despite what vendors promise, they cannot deliver your CXM strategy for you. With all the noise around CXM, determining what should be in your forward looking strategy - and what should be out - can be a highly unproductive debate. SDL advocates fresh thinking for creating and optimizing your Customer Experience Management strategy. This Strategy Guide seeks to cut through the noise and concentrate on opportunities to elevate your organization s approach to CXM by focusing on strategy, measurement and governance across three pillars of Customer Experience Management: Insights, Orchestration and Contextual Experiences. Each section includes an Executive Checklist to ensure your current and go-forward strategy addresses core requirements for success. Strategy, Measurement and Governance In mature organizations that excel in customer experience, three key disciplines their executive leaders focus on include Strategy, Measurement and Governance. Strategy The set of practices required to define a clear vision of the type of experience the company seeks to deliver, linking that vision to the company s brand and applying it to guide the activities and resources of the organization. Measurement The set of practices required to measure customer experience quality on an ongoing basis across the entire enterprise and the use of that data to drive continuous improvement. Governance The set of practices required to monitor and manage customer experience quality in a proactive way as part of the overall corporate governance system. (Forrester Consulting, August 2012) Analytics Social Documentation ecommerce Language Campaigns Web Customer Experience Management

The Executive s CXM Strategy Guide 2 1 Insights Understand customer behavior and motivations Your customers are acutely aware of how central they are to your success. In this customer-driven era, gaining insights into their motivations to buy and engage post-sale is vital to the success of your CXM strategy. Chances are, investments you have previously made to understand customer behavior didn t produce the level of results hoped for likely because the data was historical in nature. To know what customers really think and what they really want, you must account for the data in every interaction. Gathering and analyzing this level of customer data to understand behaviors and motivations accelerates the actionable insights you need to maintain a competitive advantage. Strategy: Expand your scope Modernizing your strategy for customer insights starts with scope. If you are only looking at available data inside the enterprise, your teams have blinders on. To reduce the gap between what you know and what you don t, your insights strategy needs to encompass as much data from as many sources as possible - both inside and outside the company s firewall. Many companies, for example, conduct customer surveys to gather information. However, it is one thing to ask for and receive a response, and another to observe what is going on in the market and in areas your customers flock. For example, the data from hundreds of thousands of comments about your company and products in an online forum is going to be more revealing than responses to a carefully crafted survey. By considering new data sources in your strategy to gain customer insights, you can achieve deeper knowledge about your customers so your company can deliver better products and experiences and build your brand where it matters. Measurement: Prioritize prediction Measurements are more actionable when they are predictive. Looking at historical data can only help you understand the past and where your customers have been. When you expand the scope for gathering customer data and feedback, you can determine where your customers are going and establish predictive metrics to drive your business forward. This data will allow teams to deliver content, experiences, products and services with an eye on the future and customer feedback. To stay on top of trends, these metrics need to be built on new models for measurement and incorporate market feedback checkpoints that support a real-time pace. Governance: Promote discipline When your CXM strategy has insights into customer data and behavior as a central pillar, you create a foundation and commitment to measure ongoing quality and verify it with market feedback. When adding customer insight priorities to your current business environments, make it part of the governance process. Every department needs to have the discipline to gather, review and act on insight data, and they need to do it frequently so that issues can be escalated and addressed, and successes can be celebrated and replicated. This requires that every department is enabled with the right tools and technology to do this in real time and teams are incentivized accordingly.

The Executive s CXM Strategy Guide 3 1 Insights Executive checklist Strategy Our strategy is built on feedback from the environment in which our customers are operating Our customer insights strategy includes social and external data Our customer insights strategy includes data from internal repositories Measurement Our measurements are proven to be predictive of business outcomes Our measurements help us predict customer behavior Our pace for reporting is near-real time Governance Customer insights are part of our governance process Every department has the discipline to review and act on insight data Tools and technology are used by every department to predict business outcomes

The Executive s CXM Strategy Guide 4 2 Orchestration Align your organization Your customers interact with many faces of your company - from marketing, sales and support to finance. Your forward thinking CXM strategy needs to focus on delivering one face to the customer and one consistent experience. Orchestration therefore, is another foundational pillar for CXM success. In a siloed organization, your executive oversight is critical to drive the orchestration of information and communications so that your decisive customers receive engaging, compelling and consistent experiences at every touch point along the buying cycle. Aligning the organization by unifying content, people, processes and technology will enable you to orchestrate communication from your teams to customers across channels, markets and languages. Strategy: Shift your perspective To start, it is time to pivot on what you are orchestrating. Like in most companies, your teams are probably focused on what they are delivering to customers to move them through a buying cycle. Customers, however, don t care where they are in your sales funnel. They care about the experience they have with your product and brand. Shift the perspective away from orchestrating what each department is delivering and zero in on delivering and enhancing the experiences your customers receive. Measurement: Track experience metrics If you haven t yet shifted your perspective to focus on your customers experiences, your measures are likely skewed to focus on volume and efficiencies. Measuring experiences means balancing volume and efficiency measures with less traditional measures like churn and velocity, which are telling of the type of experience customers are receiving and the related business impact. Velocity, for example, is an interesting indicator of experiences, targeting and customer understanding. The faster customers opt in, convert or opt out provides important data on the delivered experience and appropriateness of the message and offer. If customers opt out quickly, be sure to make proactive changes and use insights to drive better targeting and understanding. By balancing the measurements, you can build a better strategy around customer experience, not solely around optimizing efficiencies. Your narrowing sales funnel will be a signal of better measures, better understanding of customers, better targeting and better experiences. Governance: Drive for consistency Your customer experience initiatives will start with the best intentions, but can fail quickly if you don t align the company on your message and strategy, and support that effort with the right investments in people, processes and technology. Successfully tackling the Orchestration pillar is dependent on every employee understanding what the message is, establishing your standards for the type of experience the company should create and having the tools and technology to empower teams to deliver.

The Executive s CXM Strategy Guide 5 2 Orchestration Executive checklist Strategy The company s brand is portrayed consistently by every piece of content and interaction across every silo or department Our strategy for orchestration prioritizes delivery of consistent experiences Departments are incentivized to work together Measurement Our CXM strategy measures customer experience, not only volume and efficiencies Hand-offs of customers from one department to the next introduce very low churn We measure customer experiences across departments Governance Every employee knows and understands our CXM strategy Our organization invests in people, process and technology to equip teams to deliver on the CXM strategy Our organization knows when we are off message and quickly corrects to enable departments to collaborate effectively

The Executive s CXM Strategy Guide 6 3 Contextual Experiences Make it relevant Customers have expanded the ways they engage with your company. If customer experience management is a priority for your company, it is your responsibility to provide compelling, personalized experiences that are right for every customer on every device and channel. If you do business globally, add language and culture to the list. It is what your customers have come to expect. When global, omni-channel delivery is a reality, you create an environment that supports great experiences with your brand and builds trust, loyalty, acquisition and retention at every turn. Strategy: Be where your customers are Your customers expect to interact with your brand on many channels and expect to find the information they want wherever they look. Your CXM strategy must consider where your customers are in their journey and what information they need in every situation as they bounce between channels and devices. Leveraging the data available from your investment in customer insights, you can predict what channels and information will drive loyalty, revenue and retention. Want an example? An upset passenger on a plane gets on the Wifi and Tweets his disgust with the in-flight service. Within minutes, someone from the airline responds via Twitter and a flight attendant comes to resolve the situation at 35,000 feet. This airline could do this because it paid attention to the channels its customers use, how they engage and mapped it to the type of experience they want to deliver as a company. Or imagine searching for a car dealership on your mobile phone and then receiving an invitation to test drive the latest vehicle model that has just arrived in the showroom. Enabling these contextual experiences with the right people, processes and technology is critical to a competitive CXM strategy. Measurement: Pay attention to engagement Content may be king, but the right information, in the right place, at the right time will drive engagement. Too many create content or outline what a good customer experience looks like and then hope for the best. To optimize the experience customers have with your company, every department must measure uptake and/or customer engagement to determine how content and communications are being utilized, how customers perceive their experiences and what drives sharing behaviors. Measuring engagement aspects across the organization will also provide data and feedback on different channels so they can be improved or removed. Governance: Eliminate poor performers It is the age of the customer and adaptability is crucial. Just because a particular initiative or communication channel worked last year doesn t mean it will perform the same way again. When every experience and every interaction around the world matters, you need policies and processes to force a refresh to the strategy based on uptake, engagement, and contribution to revenue. Knowing what channels and experiences are right for your customers and updating based on performance allows you to adjust investments accordingly and adapt for changing customer consumption preferences.

The Executive s CXM Strategy Guide 7 3 Contextual Experiences Executive checklist Strategy Our strategy includes every relevant communication channel Where and how we engage with customers is based on customer insights The people, process and technology investments we make support omni-channel delivery of content Measurement We measure engagement to decide on future content and communication investments Our investment in a customer experience management strategy contributes to revenue The experiences we deliver to customers surpass the competition Governance Low performing content and channels are revamped or eliminated We deliver localized end-to-end experiences in every country we do business in The experiences we deliver to customers surpass the competition

The Executive s CXM Strategy Guide 8 Conclusion It s time to cut through the CXM noise. Take a step back and focus your CXM efforts on the strategy, measurement and governance disciplines across three pillars of Customer Experience Management: Insights, Orchestration and Contextual Experiences. As you address the items in each checklist in this guide, you will be ensuring that your current and go-forward strategy addresses critical and core requirements for future success. Contact SDL at cxm@sdl.com to schedule a CXM Discovery Engagement 1 2 Gather insights to understand customer behaviors and motivations Align your organization across channels, markets, language and teams Want to put this guide into action? Read what CXM thought leaders have to say: www.insidecxm.com 3 Create relevant experiences for your customers, regardless of channel SDL (LSE: SDL) allows companies to optimize their customers experience across the entire buyer journey. Through its web content management, analytics, social intelligence, campaign management and translation services, SDL helps organizations leverage data-driven insights to understand what their customers want, orchestrate relevant content and communications, and deliver engaging and contextual experiences across languages, cultures, channels and devices. For more information, visit www.sdl.com SDL_wp_CXM_StrategyGuide_EN_A4 SDL has over 1,500 enterprise customers, over 400 partners and a global infrastructure of 70 offices in 38 countries. We also work with 72 of the top 100 global brands. Copyright 2014 SDL plc. All Rights Reserved. All company product or service names referenced herein are properties of their respective owners.