The premise of this manifesto is all about being intentional
about the experiences your customers are having.
How many products and services do you have? How many
channels (Web, Social, Mobile, Call Center, Direct Mail, etc.) are you focused
on? Do they all have a unified design and experience?
Mission +
Design = Intentional experiences
We are clear about our mission. Are we clear about our
design?
If not, we aren’t ready to be the digital executive of the
future. If we aren’t ready to be a digital executive, we aren’t ready for the
future. If we aren’t ready for the future, will we have a relevant job 5 to 10
years from now? Tough questions I know but worth considering.
So here are a couple more of intriguing questions:
- How do we ensure that our customers
are having an amazing experience?
- Why make customers cope with the
ordinary?
- Why aren’t customers more
engaged with both your mission and revenue opportunities?
Our focus and day to day work should be about creating “customer
experiences” in this new age of consumerism. What is going on in the rest of
the world isn’t lost on your customers. They are judging you based on those
experiences. We can bury our head in the sand. That will only get us left
behind. Your credibility as an executive is at stake.
Consumers expect more from businesses more than ever before.
So our products and services have a level of expectation that our business may
not be aware of. How does the experience your customers are having compare
to USAA for example? Do you know?
Here is the harsh reality. Customers not only expect better
experiences, they believe they are absolutely entitled to them. Will we
be intentional in delivering on those expectations? Are we ready to get left
behind with stagnant growth if we don’t deliver those customer experiences? We
may not be ready for that but it may already be happening. I encourage you to think
about it. It is a good question to ponder.
There is a unique opportunity to create amazing and positive
experiences at our stores, on the web, at your call center (if you have one),
on smart phones and in our direct mail pieces. Are all of those unified? Is the
experience amazing?
That amazing or ordinary (or perhaps even bad) experience
will be how your business is measured in terms of satisfaction or even our revenue
success. Do you know how your customers feel about the experience they are
having with your company? If not, why not? Are you being intentional about that
experience they just had at your store? Is it consistent with the experience
they want on your web site?
As an executive, you have an amazing opportunity to lead the
charge regardless of your role. If you do, you will be a hero.
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