When you think about companies that provide an incredible customer experience, it’s no coincidence they are the exact same companies that have amazing cultures.
Think Southwest Airlines, Ritz Carlton, Zappos, and Nordstrom, who all provide great customer service and great workplace cultures since culture is the ultimate driver of a sustainably exceptional customer experience.
“Customer experience” is a hot subject these days, but many organizations continue to put their front line employees in the middle of a horrible customer experience, and their employees are sick of being in that position. It’s not good enough to have a great product or service — you need a truly exceptional customer experience.
We all have our customer service nightmares, at a restaurant or hotel, filing a warranty claim, or my favorite, dealing with phone customer service systems. I may be overly sensitive to this insanity, but here’s a recent example:
Sure, I was frustrated, and the employees caught in the middle of this terrible customer experience were just as frustrated. They were unfortunately handicapped by policies, processes, and technology that speak volumes about the broader culture at PNC.
I am not ready to nominate them for the Customer Service Hall of Shame due to the consistently positive experience I had previously in visits across many branches, but, this one experience does highlight problems and opportunities I am sure many customers and employees have previously identified.
A great product or service is just table stakes these days. The complete customer experience is the ultimate driver of customer loyalty and growth. A whopping 93 percent of senior executives say customer experience is one of their top three priorities, and 70 percent of organizations are currently managing initiatives to provide a more consistent customer experience.
The answer is not jumping to customer feedback, process mapping, and training.
Forrester research released a report titled Market Overview – Where to get Help with Culture Transformation. I read the report with great anticipation. I expected to see some of the pioneers in the culture transformation space like Human Synergistics, Senn Delaney, Denison, the Barrett Values Centre and others. I was very surprised to see only one contributor to CultureU covered (Root Inc.). I reviewed all 14 companies featured to see if I had been living under a rock the last 20 years and missed their leadership in the culture transformation space.
Forrester concluded these companies fell into two groups:
Simon Sinek said “customers will never love a company until the employees love it first.”
Your complete customer experience is a direct reflection of your culture. If you are truly serious about improving customer experience, your improvement approach should include the following basics as part of a broader strategy:
Your customer experience commitment must be clearly connected to your purpose or mission.
The Southwest Airlines purpose is a great example: To connect people to what’s important in their lives though friendly, reliable, and low-cost air travel.
Have you clarified your purpose or mission and clearly defined the unique customer experience you promise to deliver?
Some organizations are ready for a full customer experience mapping effort, but most are not. Results are required in some form for any new cultural attribute to form.
Select an area or scope where substantial progress can be made, ideally in less than six months. Initial efforts to focus on new clients, converting new clients to repeat clients, and reducing customer complaints are good examples.
Define the focus and 1-3 specific behaviors (often related to collaboration, communication, attention to detail, etc.) that will be reinforced as part of the improvement focus.
Improvement ideas are lurking everywhere. Utilize basic feedback and prioritization efforts to foster ownership as you engage your organization in the process.
These initial priorities should be integrated in broader strategies and plans to support your vision in a high quality and, in some cases, unique and memorable way. The key is to not only focus on the tactics of improvement actions but in a way that continuously reinforces the very specific behaviors you identified in your focused vision.
Regular habits to review progress, refine action plans, and communicate status across the organization must be in place.
It’s a learning process to improve customer experience and a workplace culture. Utilize feedback from employees and customers to continuously refine and expand on your improvement approach as you remain focused on the measures.
Track your key measure or measures in a visible way so status is clear. I worked with an award-winning health spa that was a great example.
They initially focused improvement on converting new clients to a second visit. They tracked a simple counter for the number of clients that returned for a second visit each month. A board was posted that included the counter as well as a star for each individual returning visit for each technician (since most returning visits were to the same technician and not to a new technician each time).
They recognized individuals as well as celebrating overall progress on this metric that more than doubled in one year.
The employees in this last spa example were proud of their individual and collective progress as opposed to the frustration experienced by the PNC employees that were stuck on the front lines of a bad customer experience. Your customer experience improvement approach might include deeper process mapping, training, or other improvements but don’t overlook these critical fundamentals.
Do you agree that sustainable customer experience improvement is all about culture change? What approaches have you used? Please comment below and I’ll respond to every point of view.
This post originally appeared on CultureUniversity.com.