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Just What Is Customer Experience Management,
Anyway?
06/03/15
by Leigh Duncan
January 10, 2006 A growing number of books and articles are actively
promoting the concept of Customer Experience Management (CEM). Popular
leaders include Bernd Schmitt, author of Customer Experience Management
and Experiential Marketing. Joseph Pine and James Gilmore, co-authors
of The Experience Economy have also gained a great deal of exposure.
You may have read Managing the Customer Experience by Shaun Smith
or Customers.com
by Patricia Seybold. You may also have seen articles about and by
Harvard Professor Gerald Zaltman, author of How Customers Think.
There are also a growing number of agencies and consultancies claiming
expertise in CEM¡ªall with varying degrees of involvement and expertise
in the arena.
While there's a clear reason to become
a staunch supporter of CEM, there's a great deal of confusion over
what it really is. As more individuals get on board the CEM bandwagon
and build services, confusion seems to be increasing. It's time
to demystify the hype.
Defining CEM
While no individual really "owns"
the term "Customer Experience Management," it is often
attributed to Bernd Schmitt, who in 2003 defined CEM as "the
process of strategically managing a customer's entire experience
with a product or company." Building further on Schmitt's definition:
"The term 'Customer Experience Management' represents the discipline,
methodology and/or process used to comprehensively manage a customer's
cross-channel exposure, interaction and transaction with a company,
product, brand or service."
When we look at the nature of Customer
Experience Management, there are essentially five key areas that
CEM practitioners or "Experience Architects" examine.
While these are broken down by consultants in slightly different
ways, based on individual methodologies, they can be described,
at a high level, as follows:
1. The Customer. CEM analysis focuses
on developing a multidimensional understanding of customers. This
understanding includes cultural, sociological, behavioral and demographic
analysis, and culminates in a detailed ability to articulate the
needs, wants, desires, expectations, conditions, context, and intentions
of various customer groups. This understanding informs audience
segmentation and guides the prioritization of key segments. Customer
analysis is proactively benchmarked against a company's capability
to meet customer needs¡ªboth in a present and a future state capacity.
Customer understanding therefore serves
as the primary driver in shaping the business approach, aligning
strategy and investment.
2. The Environment. Examining the "landscape
for brand discovery" is an essential tenet of CEM. This landscape
is composed largely of market conditions, competitive factors, channel
use (and channel/cross-channel dynamics), the process for purchasing
(steps to buying), the "real" purchasing environment (store,
phone, Web, etc.), and the service environment.
Leveraging this knowledge against customer
analysis, CEM strategists work with companies to create integrated
plans which "order the paths" that customers commonly
follow in the purchasing process. These multi-path strategies work
to ensure that customers have an intuitive, pleasing experience
at every step in the journey to brand discovery.
As a part of Environmental Analysis,
strategists also focus on applying experience innovation to customer
environments to remove barriers that confuse, inhibit, discourage
or de-motivate customers, and create a more engaging, efficient,
pleasing, personable or memorable environment within which to interact.
3. The Brand. From a tactical perspective,
this analysis involves the development of visual identity, assets,
taglines, communications, logos, and other brand assets that help
shape perception and define the brand in the marketplace. From a
strategic perspective, however, this analysis focuses on innovation
and differentiation.
This includes the consistent and iterative
evaluation, planning, and refinement of product or service features,
functionality, pricing, options, attributes, benefits, and positioning
of the company, service, or product.
4. The Platform. A company's operational
infrastructure is the platform on which customer experience is delivered.
As a result, operational efficiency has a direct impact on customer
experience. As companies move from an "inside-out" focus
(on internal operational constraints such as production, capacity,
etc.) to an "outside-in" focus (on customer-centric delivery),
operational analysis is essential. This includes comprehensive evaluation
and improvement of people, process, policies, technology, and systems
that facilitate, track, and measure customer interaction and transaction.
CEM Platform analysis may include workforce
evaluation, fulfillment and logistics analysis, process improvement,
technological analysis, policy reviews, and a myriad other tasks.
The goals of platform analysis include streamlining operations,
increasing time to market, removing barriers to customer satisfaction,
lowering costs, and improving the overall customer experience by
creating operational excellence.
5. The Interface. This area of CEM
analysis focuses on the interaction between consumers and the brand,
from a human-to-technology, human-to-human, and human-to-environment
perspective. Simply defined, this area focuses on refining and optimizing
the customer interaction within any channel to produce desired and
pleasing outcomes.
At a tangible level, CEM Interface
analysis may center on improving the usability of electronic applications
or products (e.g., a Web site or a TiVo interface, or the buttons
and information flow on a cell phone). However, it also concentrates
on optimizing the interfaces within other channels, such as brick-and-mortar
outlets.
CEM strategists focus on how customers
interact within and across channels, often examining the end-to-end
shopping and service-delivery process. This may include task-based
analysis of various interactions and transactions, such as a customer's
discovery, browse, shop, purchase, and post-sale experience.
CEM practitioners focus on improving
the quality and efficacy of customer dialog. This may include conducting
analysis of the call center or voice-response systems, as well as
optimizing the approaches of sales or other customer-facing staff.
It's relatively easy to find individuals
who can work within one or two of the areas above. What separates
CEM practitioners from the pack is an adamant dedication to examining
all five functional areas with companies to develop truly cohesive
strategies and plans that result in tangibly improved customer experiences
and better business outcomes.
It's easy to confuse CEM with CRM,
Usability and "Experiential Marketing"¡ªbut we'll talk
more in future articles about how it all fits together.
Note: Resources for this article
include materials produced by Bernd Schmitt, Joseph Pine/James Gilmore,
and other authors referenced in the initial paragraphs of this book.
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