A customer is any person or group that receives services from an individual or organization . If you run a company, it is the person who buys your t-shirts, pizzas or software.
Most organizations have the same problem: they are desperate to win the loyalty and attention of their customers, but they don't know how to do it. Bribing with discounts doesn't work anymore, innovation alone doesn't work because there's always another company doing something more innovative. So many companies waste fortunes and years chasing something that doesn't work, and often fail.
Yet some organizations are doing it right. So what is their secret? The secret is right in front of them, but it is also right in front of you. The secret is your people! The problem is that most organizations treat their people as if this is not true...
Growing an organization works the same way. Success comes from quality products, excellent customer service... and employees who care personally about delivering an exceptional experience for the customer every time. When an organization creates a world-class EX, the likelihood of a superior CX increases exponentially. When EX is poor, there is a high probability that the customer will see the effects of this.
Your people are the soil and nourishment from which your Customer Experience grows. You need a team of engaged people who feel respected and appreciated.
Despite this, many organizations are doing much more cursory Employee Experience (EX) work than Customer Experience (CX). Why doesn't this work? Because CX is the result of doing. For decades, companies have treated customer satisfaction as something they could easily achieve through procedures, processes, benefits and pricing. This is not the right way. It's like deciding to lose twenty pounds by ignoring diet and exercise and only taking weight loss pills. Even if you get results, they will not be sustainable.
A winning CX is the direct result of the attitudes and behaviors of your people. The last time you experienced a customer service trauma, did you ask yourself: "What kind of experience are we providing to the employee(s) involved?" Probably not. Was the crisis a direct result of an employee breaking a promise, failing to identify or solve a problem, or failing to provide a little extra service? Probably not. Despite this, most organizations' awareness of employee experience is very poor in terms of understanding its role and relationship to customer experience.
Consider the financial and other costs in implementing a CX management program where employees don't feel engaged. Some organizations spend a fortune on the security networks and software they install to ensure that their employees do not harm customer relationships and customers. Why? Because employees don't care about customers. Employees have a poor experience and so are not motivated to deliver more than that to the customer. We call this the "Equivalent Experience Code".
Employees deliver a Customer Experience that is equal to their own experience within the organization.
Disengaged employees mean disengaged or lost customers. Disengaged employees make minimal effort to engage with the customer. Customers respond in kind. In contrast, employees who are engaged and trust their employers will provide excellent CX by their own choice. You will no longer need to rely solely on shift files or the company's Code of Conduct Guidelines to ensure that employees don't damage your brand. A great Employee CX equals a great, loyalty-building, profit-generating Customer CX.