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Don't sweat if you're not up to speed on customer experience management. Seems like even big companies are a bit clueless about CX.
Here's the deal with CX.
Every time you deal with a brand, that's CX. The CX manager must plan out these interactions. They're thinking about two things. First, solve the customer's immediate needs. Second, leave a good enough impression, so that the customer thinks about buying again, or sticking around.
Getting CX right means thinking customer-first, especially in product development. You have to understand and predict what customers want by putting yourself in their shoes. That's when you start to get what's really useful for them in their daily life.
As CX is an integral part of any software development and product processes, we figured we might as well cover that too. Enjoy!
A never-ending chat between your brand and customers. It starts with their first click and keeps going. Even after they stop being a customer, sometimes.
The whole experience must be cool, not just the onboarding. That includes the ads customers see. Or how they talk to your team. The way your website or app works. Even your emails. All these things shape how they feel about your brand.
Every twist and turn a customer takes with a company is part of their CX journey. From first hearing about the brand to becoming a die-hard fan. It all counts.
But in this journey, there's a bunch of smaller parts. They've got names and acronyms. It can get a bit confusing. Here's a quick guide to keep things straight:
CX isn't just about talking to people. Sure, a customer service call is CX. But so is reading an ad or using an app. All these things are part of CX.
Ever seen a new app feature and thought, "Why'd they add that?" Some brands focus too much on what their product can do. They don't think enough about what customers actually need. Sometimes, an app does something super helpful before you even know you need it.
CX is super important. It affects how much money you make and your company's future.
Here's the deal:
Alright, let's set something straight.
Talking about customer experience and customer service, they're not the same. CX is the big game plan. Customer service is just a piece of that plan.
Customer service is like your emergency crew. It's on-the-spot. It jumps in when problems pop up. It tries to fix stuff. Sure, it's a key part of dealing with customers. But it's not the only way they interact with your brand.
CX is everything. It's every single time a customer bumps into your brand. From the first ad they spot to the help they get after buying. CX is about being ahead of the game. Making sure every single interaction is a good one, even before any problems show up.
We might think our experiences are special. But in the customer journey, we're pretty much the same. It's a bit of a letdown. But for someone in CX management, it's a relief. Everyone follows the same five steps.
Here are the stages and what CX managers should do in each:
Building a customer experience strategy? It's pretty straightforward. Here's what you do:
Make sure everything matches up, no matter where the customer interacts with your brand. But "understand your customer" can be pretty vague. What does it really mean? How do you do it?
Start with building a customer profile. It's not just for CX. Marketers and product people do it too. You create an "ideal customer profile" or ICP.
An ICP includes stuff like:
ICPs can have different info for different teams.
Think of an ICP as your customer's resume. An empathy map, then, is their personal story. The customer profile shows you who your customer is. The empathy map lets you walk in their shoes. You get what they say, think, do, and feel.
For a CX manager, using an empathy map helps line up your team's talk. Everyone from sales to support can offer a smooth, consistent experience.
A customer's journey starts with a casual interest and ends with them recommending your product. It includes ads, Instagram stories, blog posts, newsletters, website visits, and calls with customer service. A customer journey map is like a visual guide. It shows all the steps and interactions in this process.
An empathy map shows what customers might be thinking at different times. A customer journey map tracks the path customers take with your business.
Let's talk about a mobile phone store. Here's their customer journey map:
There are many ways to make a customer journey map. When you're ready, look into the details of making one.
Your customers are the best ones to tell you if you're doing things right.
Make sure your customers can talk to you. Set up different ways for them to share what they think and feel. Just hearing them out isn't enough. You've got to act on it.
Change your services, products, or even how you post on social media. This shows your customers you're listening and you care about their opinions. Doing this not only makes your bond with them stronger. It also makes your brand pop as one that truly values its customers.
No matter where your customers find you, the experience should be the same. Scrolling on social media, reading a blog, walking into your store, or calling you up. They should always get the same feeling, the same message, and top-notch service.
Every time a customer interacts with your brand, it should feel like catching up with a good old friend. Easy and comfortable.
This idea of giving a smooth, same experience everywhere is called an omnichannel approach. The aim is to make dealing with your brand as easy as a lazy Sunday morning. This way, customers don't get mixed up. They start to trust you more and it builds a real bond between them and your brand.
For anyone who loves automation, here's some news: you can't just set up a CX management strategy and forget about it. CX managers have to pick and track key performance indicators (KPIs). These show how well different stuff is doing. Like features, products, and customer experiences.
Now, if your customers are super happy and it's obvious, that's awesome. It means you're doing something really right. But, and here's the catch, you still need to keep an eye on those numbers because when you roll out new updates, support features, discounts, and other cool CX stuff, you need to know what's actually working. To build on that success, you have to measure it. That's where KPIs come in.
There are four big KPIs for measuring CX:
You've definitely seen those customer satisfaction (CSAT) surveys. They pop up after you buy something, cancel a subscription, or even after a meal at a restaurant. Just when you're ready to scoot off to the next thing, they ask: "How'd we do today?"
These surveys get customers to sum up how happy they are with a single number. This lets you figure out stuff like the average satisfaction score. Or how many people are super happy versus kinda meh. CSAT surveys usually cover the whole experience, but you can also use them for specific parts. Like checking if a certain feature or service hit the mark.
If you grab some details about who's answering, like their age or gender, it gets even better. Say, you find out your overall score is a 7, but women between 33 and 55 always rate it a 10. That's gold. You can use that info to sharpen your marketing, customer service, and sales strategies. Real feedback from real customers – that's what steers the ship.
CSAT data helps you figure out another metric called the Net Promoter Score (NPS). Here's how it works. Once you've got your CSAT responses, you label your customers. Those who rate their satisfaction between 1 and 6 are "detractors." They're not too happy. The ones who give a 9 or 10? They're your "promoters." They love what you're doing. Anyone who falls in the middle is a "passive" or "neutral."
Next, work out what percent of your survey folks are in each group. Then, do some simple math. Take the percent of promoters and subtract the percent of detractors. What you get is your Net Promoter Score. It's a quick way to see how many fans versus not-so-happy customers you have.
Imagine you own a bagel shop. There's this intern who swings by every morning. They grab bagels for their whole 10-person team. This intern is way more valuable to you than the folks who just pop in for their own bagel now and then because the intern's orders are bigger and they come in more often. That means they have a higher customer lifetime value (CLV, or customer LTV).
CLV is all about how much a customer is worth over their entire time with your business. To figure it out, take the average cost of what they usually buy. Multiply that by how many times they buy in a year. Then multiply that by how many years you think they'll keep coming back. That's their CLV.
The formula looks like this:
(C x O) x Y = CLV
CLV is just a ballpark figure. It's not super precise. So don't sweat the math too much.
The last CX metric to talk about is a bit of a headache: customer churn rate. It's all about how fast you're losing customers.
Here's how you calculate churn: Take the number of customers you lost in a certain time, like a fiscal quarter. Divide that by how many customers you had at the start of that quarter. Then, multiply by 100. That gives you your churn rate as a percentage for that time.
But here's the thing: churn rate doesn't really matter for everyday purchases. The bagel shop owner we talked about before probably wouldn't use churn rate to check their CX. It's more for businesses that have long-term clients. Losing a big, ongoing contract is a way bigger deal than losing a one-time customer.
Without it, doing CX well is pretty much a no-go.
Imagine trying to handle everything yourself. Collecting all the data for those metrics we talked about. Answering every customer call and email. Running the support chat. You'd be toast before you even really started on your CX strategy.
Automation helps you do stuff like:
The CX world is all over low and no-code tools right now, after all. They're using them for the usual stuff. Automation, giving recommendations, making predictions. In the future, they could work for every step of the customer journey. From when people first notice a brand, to when they think about buying, to actually buying, sticking around, and then telling others about it. Low and no code could make a big difference in all kinds of support tasks. The best part—just a few clicks and you're set.
The more you automate, the more time you've got for your customers. And the more you focus on your customers, the happier they'll be.
No-code is much like any other stuff you use to build something. It doesn’t really matter—it’s all about the customer in the end. If you’d like to tell us something about our own UX - head over to our communities and find us there—would love to hear it. The links are in the footer below.
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