The State of Customer Experience 2018 report has listed five effective habits of successful CX professionals. The habits are compiled below:
Habit #1 – Define goals and drive the right ownership: Rather than focusing solely on CX metrics, successful practitioners are able to talk in the language of the wider business and define outcomes that make sense to all employees. Fifty-seven per cent of leaders in the report agree strongly that stakeholders across the business are strongly invested in the goals of their programmes, compared to just 25 per cent of laggards.
Habit #2 – Think innovation and action: The most successful CX practitioners understand that programmes must drive innovation and real action, both of which must be tangible and communicated across the business. Fifty-one per cent of leaders strongly agree that their programmes drive measurable innovation or change within their organisation, compared to just 16 per cent of laggards.
Habit #3 – Listening to more voices collectively: While an increasing number of companies surveyed are actively capturing both the Voice of the Customer and the Voice of the Employee in their programmes, questions still linger over whether the feedback gathered is integrated and therefore useful in its combined form. Only 31 per cent of organisations strongly agree that their programmes combine multiple sources of insight. Leaders are those that work to drive integration between customer and employee voices – as well as those of partners, suppliers and other stakeholders, and other forms of data such as operational and financial.
Habit #4 – A focus on customer-centricity: Respondents to the report stress the importance of driving a customer-centric culture across their organisation for CX to be successful. This means that employee engagement needs to be high across all levels of the organisation, from the front line to board level. Again, this relies on a strong communication strategy, which is something 57 per cent of leaders already have in place, while only 35 per cent of laggards say the same.
Habit #5 – Continuously re-think: The report shows that the most experienced CX practitioners are not necessarily those who run the most successful programmes. It is easy for CX programmes to go stale and get into bad habits, meaning constant innovation, re-evaluation and adjustment is critical. 67 per cent of leaders in the report agree strongly that their programme has driven significant investment in change, compared to 27 per cent of laggards, supporting the view that continually asking, ‘what’s next?’ is a key step in delivering long-term CX success.
The comprehensive study was commission by Confirmit in association with Engage Business Media. The resulting report, the State of Customer Experience report analyses the factors that define leaders and laggards in CX across different industries, and across B2B and B2C markets. The results show that leaders share common attributes which are critical in driving CX success, increased investment and customer-centricity.
Claire Sporton, SVP of CX Innovation at Confirmit, explains: “Unlike other studies, our report defines a CX Leader in terms of specific business outcomes, rather than those organisations that simply achieve the best CX metrics. Our experience shows that the proof of any programme is the value it delivers across an organization and as such the most successful programmes are seeing significant increase in investment.
“The report makes for fascinating reading, particularly when compared to our findings from last year. We’re seeing a clear maturity curve in terms of the sophistication of responses, which is reflected in the fact that nearly 60 per cent of respondents have more than four years’ experience in CX. While this is great, there are also some red flags for us to consider, particularly around how companies are investing in actually driving change based on their CX programmes.”