William Band

The Four Steps to Customer-Centricity

comments 2 comments  |  4115 reads

Every day I talk with executives that want their companies to become more “customer-centric.” The idea that an organization should be responsive to the needs of its customers if it wants to survive is not a difficult one to accept. The real problem is figuring out how to implement specific actions that will transform good intentions into concrete results.

If your company aspires to greater customer-centricity, you need a plan. There are four steps.

1- Evaluate. The first phase is to define and understand the scope of the desired change; establish the context that creates the need to change; establish the “as is” baseline condition; and outline a change plan. It is very important at this stage to define and understand the external pressures that are causing the need for change – the burning platform - and secure agreement of key stakeholders that the need to become more customer-centric is critical to achieving the business goals set for the company. Answer the questions: “What needs to change to create deeper engagement with our customers?” “What business benefits will we achieve?” “What are the consequences of we don’t change?”

2- Design. The second phase comprises the steps necessary to develop a vision of what the enterprise will be like after the change is successfully completed. Then, determine the gaps in businesses capabilities that need to be closed between your “as is” and “to be.” Finally, define your strategy for change. Will you start with pilot projects, or work quickly through-out the entire organization? Will you work with existing structures, or create new ones?

3- Activate. During the third phase, you need to focus on gaining some quick successes, support and reinforce commitment, and align organizational systems. Implement training that will build the new job skills necessary to support new ways of working. Align reward and recognition systems to support the employee behaviors necessary to deliver a differentiated customer experience.

4- Measure. Finally, you will need a measurement strategy to tell if the transition to greater customer-centricity is on track. Establish operational measures to track the effectiveness and efficiency of customer-facing business processes. More important, establish customer “listening posts” to gauge perceptions of and attitudes towards your brand and business. For example, conduct customer surveys, do content analysis of consumer postings on social networking sites, and have senior executives sit in on customer service calls.

If your metrics for customer preference, satisfaction, and loyalty are not improving, declarations of being “customer-driven” are mere empty rhetoric.


William Band

Bill Band is a vice president and principal analyst at Forrester Research. He is a leading expert on CRM topics, having helped organizations define customer-driven strategies to achieve distinction in the marketplace for his entire career. Click here to download free related research from Forrester (free site registration required).
2.25
Average: 2.3 (4 votes)
 

2 comments »

Alan J. Zell

Alan J. Zell

Gettig to a customer-centric process

Bill, If one were, before looking to take steps to build a customer centric policy or program, there is a "pre-step" that I believe most businesses do not take. That is, that they begin by looking at themselves as customers, themselves being everyone if the firm. It is not look at if they were their business's customers as this comes later, but as customers of other businesses. What is it that is so aggravating that other businesses' do is the key. Then, each person has to ask themself, if they were in charge of these other businesses, what would they do to lessen the aggravation?

With this long list of UGH's, as the company goes through the four step process you suggest, they, hopefully, will not do to their customers what they didn't like being done to them. That would be, truly, being customer centric.

Alan
Alan J. Zell, Ambassador of Selling, Attitudes for Selling
azell@aol.com www.sellingselling.com
Winner of the Murray Award for Marketing Excellence
Member, PNW Sales & Marketing Group
Member, Institute of Management Consultants
Member, Linkedin.com

Daryl Choy

Daryl Choy

What Matters Most

Although failing to plan is planning to fail, it is more important that every person in the firm understands why s/he needs to be customer-centric. However, knowing is only the first step, doing is what matters most. If there is no alignment from top to bottom, any customer-centric initiative is doomed to fail.

Daryl Choy
Make Little Things Count
wisdomboom.blogspot.com

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

MarketPlace

Global Customer Experience Management (CEM) Certification Program

[May 30-31, Frankfurt; July 25-26, Hong Kong] An internationally recognized program with proven track record of success - being run for 34 times in 13 cities with attendees from 50 countries, the program is developed based on the U.S. patent-pending Branded CEM Method which aims to drive customer loyalty and brand differentiation with quantifiable business results. Limited offer: USD300 early bird discount.

Register today for Confirmit’s Mobile Research Roadshow!

Join us on May 29th in New York City. Stuart Ryder, SVP, Mobile Research Lead for Ipsos IOTX & Roxana Strohmenger, a leading Forrester analyst, will be in attendance to share best practices and new trends in mobile market research.

Register today for Confirmit’s San Francisco VoC Roadshow!

[June 12, Sir Francis Drake Hotel] Gregson Siu, Vice President, Ariba Business Operations, Ariba and Bob Thompson, CustomerThink, will be in attendance to share best practices, new trends and latest research to help you develop your customer experience program.

Social Networking and sCRM International Congress in Colombia

[June 25-26, Bogota] Thirteen international thought leaders will present, from different perspectives, the trends, the uses, and the magic - as well as the reality - of Social Networking and how it impacts the way customers are doing/will do business.

Driving ROI With VoC

Walker has identified multiple ways to measure ROI – there is not a one-size-fits-all solution. This paper will address each and conclude with some recommendations to help B-to-B practitioners evaluate which ROI approach will work best for their particular business need.

Featured Links

Salesforce CRM

The leader in customer relationship management and cloud computing.

Strategic Roadmap for Digital Marketing

Free e-book (no reg required). 15 articles by digital marketing thought leaders.

Get your event or resource listed in the MarketPlace, reaching 200,000 business leaders monthly.
For more information, contact CustomerThink advertising sales.