I am on Day 3 of the Next Generation Customer Experience Conference out in San Diego. As many of you know, Customers That Stick is a media partner for NextGen, so we’ve been talking about the conference for a few months now.
NextGen is a smaller conference, a few hundred people, and is for customer experience professionals and those companies looking to learn more about the ideas surrounding customer experience.
One of the more interesting aspects of NextGen has been the vibe that comes from being at the bleeding edge of a new discipline (or technically, disciplines).
As one speaker pointed out earlier in the conference, “most of the job titles in this room did not exist ten years ago.“
One need only to sample some of the excellent speakers to understand the dynamic.
New disciplines are inevitably built upon shifting sands. Job titles have widely different meanings across industries and firms. Respect and acceptance from the C-Suite is often grudging at best. And probably most importantly of all, you still have to re-explain to Aunt Sally what you do for a living every Thanksgiving. Your brother, the accountant, does not share this burden.
However, underlying the shifting sands of the emerging customer experience discipline is a solid layer of bedrock. When the telephone was invented, many of the jobs, like telephone repairman, that went with it were completely new. Not so with customer experience.
Taking care of customers has been around since the dawn of time; we’re just a lot more scientific about it now.
For instance, marketing research and the analytic techniques associated with it have been developed over many, many decades now — and are simply evolving along with the technology and the nature of consumers to be more holistic in approach and more mindful of the idea of a total customer experience.
Neuroscience, a field which has simply exploded in the last decade due to technological advances, has given us incredible insights into why customers do what they do. And as we suspected, they are a lot more irrational than anyone would like to admit.
And don’t forget behavioral economics, another burgeoning field of research that has greatly enhanced our understanding of how customers behave.
The excitement that one feels around customer experience thinking both here at NextGen and in general has a lot to do with the incredible technological advances that are fueling our understanding of customers, but those advances do not only offer answers, they create questions as well.
As you walk the halls talking to CX professionals from around the world, you hear many common themes. How do I prove ROI when nothing like this CX initiative has been done at our firm before? What weaknesses in the customer experience do I address first when I can’t quantify the specific return? How are our customers’ expectations being formed and how can we influence that process?
The customer experience disciplines are truly at an exciting place in their evolution. We do not have all the answers, but we have a lot more than we used to — and a lot better questions as well.
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I came back, I thought maybe you would mention me again……….
If you do customer service right and take care of the little things, it sure puts a lot of credit in the bank when something doesn’t go right. I think you are on to something…:).
I’m thinking this customer service idea might catch on. Maybe even in the insurance industry… 🙂
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