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Focus on Keeping Up with Your Customers, Not Your Competitors

2016-04-29 09:04:43

Mark BonchekGene Cornfield

April 28, 2016

Every company these days seems to be either contemplating or pursuing digital

transformation. Most cite the need to keep up with disruptive and

well-established competitors. But perhaps this focus is too narrow. We believe

the greatest challenge to companies today is not keeping up with their

competitors, but with their own customers.

One reason is that individuals are transforming to digital faster than

organizations. Think for a moment about people as tiny enterprises. They ve

redesigned their core processes in the area of procurement (online shopping),

talent acquisition (marketplaces), collaboration (social networking), market

research (peer reviews), finance (mobile payments) and travel (room and ride

sharing). Have you reinvented your core processes to the same degree?

Customers expectations are also more liquid and no longer based on industry

boundaries. Customers whether consumers or business buyers don t compare

your customer service to that of your competitors, but to the best customer

service they receive from anywhere. The same is true for their expectations of

your web site, mobile app, loyalty program, branding, and even social

responsibility.

So how can you keep up with your customers? You have to start thinking like

them.

Customers don t think in or; they think in and. You have to transcend

trade-offs.

The adage used to be that you could pick any two combinations of cheap, good,

or fast. But today s customer doesn t want to make tradeoffs. They want it

cheap, good, and fast. As leaders, we are accustomed to thinking of business

being about making tough decisions between competing objectives. But we need to

think more like our customers. Instead of focusing on how to make tradeoffs, we

need to focus on how to transcend them.

Some of the tradeoffs that are most suited to digital transcendence are:

Big and small: Combine the speed, agility and creativity of being small with

the scope, scale and influence associated with being big.

Complex and simple: Manage the systems and processes to run a global business

while creating simple and elegant experiences for customers.

Global and personal: Achieve universal consistency and reach around the world

while delivering relevant, tailored interactions to every customer.

Customers want to be empowered, not controlled. You have to act with empathy.

Business used to be about getting customers to do what you wanted them to do.

But customers don t accept this any more. They don t like to be told what to

do. They want relationships based on reciprocity, transparency and

authenticity. If you want to keep up with your customer, you can t be focused

on getting them to do what you want, but instead on helping them do what they

want.

This evolution from control to empowerment means a change in the basic building

blocks of customer engagement.

Funnels used to be linear processes that moved customers from one stage to the

next. There was no going back until a sale was either won or lost. Now these

funnels have become Escherian journeys, fluid, customer-led and

multi-dimensional. It s not about capturing and converting towards a

transaction, but connecting and collaborating around a shared purpose.

Channels used to be pipes connecting you with your customer, carrying carefully

crafted messages to passive audiences. Now they are experiences connecting

customers to their own desires, and communities connecting customers to each

other. It s not about promoting the features and benefits of your product, but

building empathy and understanding of each customer s intent and helping them

achieve it as part of an ongoing relationship.

Customers don t think in straight lines. You need to be non-linear.

To keep up with your customer, you have to let go of linear thinking. Customers

today expect you to be where they are, deliver what they want, when they want

it, and how they want it. If they re browsing your website on their laptop,

they will expect that when they next come to your site from their mobile device

or tablet, or talk to a sales person in your store, branch or call center, you

will pick up right where they left off. Business has become like that old game

of Twister. You have to be flexible if you are going to win.

This requires rethinking and redesigning core disciplines:

Strategy has to go beyond analyzing markets, making plans, and forecasting the

future. Strategy also has to build capabilities, transform culture and

architect for constant change.

Campaigns have to be more than one-way communications for one-time responses.

They need to initiate and expedite personalized journeys as part of ongoing

conversations.

Personalization needs to go deeper than looking simply at what someone buys. It

needs to be based on the subconscious motivations of why someone buys, revealed

through real-time analysis of a wide variety of data sources.

Social can t be treated merely as a channel for distributing messages. Done

right, it s a context for building genuine relationships that demonstrate how

much they really matter.

Loyalty needs to be more than accumulating points for rewards. To be genuine

and enduring, loyalty needs to be reciprocal. If you want their loyalty, you

have to be loyal in return.

Operations need to go beyond the efficiency of the company to the efficiency of

the customer. How can you optimize to help customers get more for their time

and effort, not just their money?

It s a significant shift in mindset and practice to reorient from keeping up

with competitors to keeping up with customers.

We suggest getting started by assessing where you are.

How does your transformation compare to your customers? In what areas are they

moving faster or slower than you are?

Who is setting your customers expectations? It s probably coming from outside

your industry.

What kind of relationship do you want to have with your customer? Are you

trying to get them to do what you want? Or figuring out how to help them do

what they want?

Next, look at where to focus your attention.

Which tradeoffs do you need to transcend? We mentioned a few above. Others

include speed and scale, consistent and nimble, high-tech and high-touch.

Where is linear thinking getting in the way? Review the disciplines outlined

above and see which ones will have the most impact on your customer experience.

Creating sustainable advantage is more elusive than ever. The new game is

designing customer-driven journeys across touch points to help them achieve

their intent, and to create more multidimensional relationships. To win this

game, stop thinking about just keeping up with your competitors, and start

thinking about keeping up with your customers.

Mark Bonchek is the Founder and CEO (Chief Epiphany Officer) of Shift Thinking.

He works with leaders and organizations to update their thinking for a digital

age. Sign up for the Shift newsletter and follow Mark on Twitter at

@MarkBonchek.

Gene Cornfield is Managing Director at Accenture Interactive, where he helps

global organizations transform their customer experiences, organizations, and

business outcomes.