Introduction: Great expectations聽
Businesses have always had to manage high customer expectations, but the shift to digital channels has ramped up demands for speed, convenience and responsiveness. Over the last few years, the scope and volume of customer interactions taking place online have surged.聽
Always an early adopter in the e-commerce space, China is expected this year to become the first country where online sales exceed those from retail. But the trend is global, and other markets may soon catch up. According to one recent , nearly two-thirds (61%) of Americans have made the bulk of their purchases online during the pandemic, and an overwhelming majority plan to continue shopping (71%) and banking online (92%) when the pandemic is over.聽聽
What鈥檚 more, this behavior isn鈥檛 limited to consumers. Since 2019, the proportion of business-to-business interactions taking place online has jumped from less than half to almost 60%.聽聽
Adding to the pressure, when customers engage in digital interactions, they expect those interactions to be seamless. Almost 60% of those polled by Salesforce said the , and 80% believe the experience a company provides is every bit as important as the quality of its goods and services.聽All this has exposed the gulf between businesses who already have effective digital channels in place, and those struggling with what鈥檚 essentially a new medium.
Pandemic drives consumer expectations higher


鈥淎 customer will have some form of goal in mind when they engage with an organization, and they don鈥檛 expect that to require submitting a form and then waiting a few days for a call back or an e-mail,鈥 says Kristan Vingrys, Managing Director, Australia, at 魅影直播. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e looking for the ability to achieve that goal more or less, instantly. That means a lot of the organizations reliant on manual processing have been impacted, especially those depending on distributed or offshore locations affected by COVID-19. Processes slowed down drastically and they weren鈥檛 able to meet demands for a timely response, so the customers would shift. It鈥檚 easy to go somewhere else, to an organization that鈥檚 more automated and better positioned to act quickly on the customer鈥檚 behalf.鈥澛
Many companies are investing heavily in technology to meet new customer demands. In a recent Forrester Consulting study, commissioned by 魅影直播, on the secrets of successful digital transformation, improving customer experience was named the number one goal of organizations鈥 modernization or transformation programs. But expectations will continue to evolve, meaning businesses will be chasing a moving target.
Top enterprise modernization priorities


This constantly rising bar presents a challenge, but also offers substantial rewards for those enterprises that manage to crack the customer experience code.聽
Rujia Wang, Head of Customer Experience, Product and Design Service Line at 魅影直播 China, notes businesses that acted quickly in the initial stages of the pandemic to develop platforms that they could leverage to bring more products and services online are experiencing something of a revelation.聽
Many are now realizing those same platforms can support the 鈥渕ove into completely new business models, something they never did before,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just about being able to service customers remotely, but also thinking about new products and services that can be offered. There鈥檚 more room for innovation.鈥澛
Businesses should also keep in mind that in striving to enhance customer experience they don鈥檛 necessarily need to aim for perfection, as long as they can distinguish themselves from the rest of the pack. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a race for brand equity, and you only have to do a better job than your competitor,鈥 says Joe Murray, Chief Digital Officer, North America at 魅影直播. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to solve world hunger. As long as you鈥檙e continuously one step ahead of the competition, you will own market share. You will enjoy the highest margins, and the most customer loyalty. So you should always be reaching as high as you can.鈥澛
i. Empathy as the new currency聽
Fundamentally, building brand equity comes down to answering one key question - what do customers really want?聽
Research suggests the answer is 鈥榚verything.鈥 Consumers hope their interactions with companies will blend quality, speed and a high degree of personalization. Consumers notice the efforts that brands make to connect with them online and according to one recent survey in most industries, of excellent digital CX. Among customers who suffered negative digital experiences during the pandemic, a quarter were frustrated by the inability to reach a real person, and 14% pointed to the interaction being impersonal.聽
At the most basic level, what customers are looking for is empathy - the sense that the business is genuinely attuned to their individual needs, and is solving problems or delivering services and solutions, to match. Demonstrating empathy has an immense impact on long-term customer engagement. In , almost three-quarters of consumers said businesses that showed empathy during the pandemic earned their loyalty. Yet customer empathy is a quality that many organizations still struggle to deliver.聽
Enterprises failing to bridge the empathy gap


鈥淚t鈥檚 a well-known fact that buying decisions are driven by emotions,鈥 notes Murray. 鈥淪o the more you can build a basis of empathy and emotionally connect with your customers and what they鈥檙e wrestling with, the more successful you can be. There鈥檚 an old adage in customer service that there鈥檚 no better time to sell a customer something than right after you鈥檝e solved their problem.鈥澛
Knowing and understanding the customer contributes to empathy, but according to Vingrys, empathic customer experience is ultimately defined by action. 鈥淧eople talk about it a lot, but it鈥檚 putting the customer at the center of what you鈥檙e doing; not just the customer as an individual, but the journey or goal they鈥檙e trying to achieve,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 figuring out how you line up your systems to help customers achieve that goal, rather than looking at the way you鈥檝e traditionally structured your organization, then putting technology around that to make the operation more efficient without considering the impact on the end-user.鈥澛
鈥淚t鈥檚 figuring out how you line up your systems to help customers achieve that goal, rather than looking at the way you鈥檝e traditionally structured your organization, then putting technology around that to make the operation more efficient without considering the impact on the end-user."
Kristan Vingrys
Managing Director, Australia, 魅影直播聽
鈥淥ne of the dimensions of winning companies is that they design the business around their customer instead of their internal processes,鈥 agrees Murray. 鈥淏igger, blue chip businesses tend to struggle with that more than smaller ones because of what I鈥檝e come to think of as the 鈥楽ix Sigma hangover鈥 - they鈥檝e focused and invested so much on optimizing their internal processes and reaching zero defects that the concept of the customer and what the customer agenda is has been lost.鈥澛
Empathy then can鈥檛 be just a mindset shift. It often involves deep and meaningful changes to the way the enterprise is structured, operates and creates.聽
鈥淥rganizations need to move away from just working by themselves to move closer to the customer, considering what they really need and transferring that empathy directly into product design,鈥 Wang explains. 鈥淭hat can also mean uncovering things customers never knew they needed, by digging into the goals and motivations behind their behaviors and pain points.鈥
ii. Developing a customer experience platform聽
锘緽eyond a customer-centric mindset, the other critical ingredient of success in the experience economy is a platform that allows the business to develop, redeploy and build on a range of customer-facing capabilities. 鈥淎 lot of businesses can build a single app very well, or a website,鈥 Wang says. 鈥淏ut if you look at how much of the work or features that go into that are actually reusable, it鈥檚 very little.鈥澛
That leaves enterprises vulnerable when customer demands shift or accelerate - which Murray notes is all but inevitable. 鈥淭he importance of quickly executing is more important than ever because the dynamics in the market change so rapidly,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he shelf life of ideas has never been shorter.鈥澛
An effective customer experience platform equips the enterprise with a standard toolkit that can be drawn on regardless of how demands evolve. While technology-based, a platform is built 鈥渘ot so much around the technology as it is around business capabilities, so you can easily add new technologies as they come about,鈥 Vingrys explains.
With a platform, common capabilities such as payment systems or a recommendation engine 鈥渃an be repurposed so the business can support different ideas and bring them to market very, very quickly, instead of building those basic things over and over again,鈥 Wang says. 鈥淭he businesses that are moving faster than others have that sort of thinking set up, and are reusing core tech capabilities in different products.鈥澛
Because platforms are broadly standardized, they also provide a basis for more consistent customer experience across the various channels used by the business, even when new channels are added. This consistency is a vital part of demonstrating empathy to the customer, and an area where many businesses continue to fall short.聽
鈥淪eparate mobile and web teams will end up creating very different experiences for customers using the mobile versus the web application when there鈥檚 no consistent business capability, like a single e-commerce solution, to draw on,鈥 notes Vingrys.聽
According to Murray, a robust customer experience platform incorporates three basic layers 鈥 design experience, product strategy and the application programming interfaces (APIs) -- that come together to deliver key customer touchpoints.聽
Investing in all of these, he says, creates a 鈥渟ingle source of truth that allows you to deliver a consistent brand and experience through your touchpoints - but also gives you a lot of flexibility and resilience to leverage different aspects of the platform as you deliver experiences on top of it.鈥 In other words, an engine of customer engagement, and, by extension, brand equity.聽
The architecture of a customer engagement platform


iii. Customer-centric design聽聽
The first platform layer is created by making customer experience the focal point of the design process. This may be achieved by developing a service design model or journey map that鈥檚 built around the customer agenda. But trouble starts if these are seen as set in stone.聽
鈥淚鈥檝e worked with a number of companies where they say: 鈥極h yeah, we鈥檝e done customer research and built our journey map two years ago - there it is,鈥 and you see it posted on a wall,鈥 says Murray. 鈥淏ut as soon as you print your customer journey map and put it on a wall, you鈥檙e setting yourself up to fail, because it gets stale over time.鈥澛
Enterprises understand that a technology platform has to continuously evolve, but may not realize the same applies to their customer experience design, Murray adds. 鈥淲e've been evangelizing the idea of a customer experience evolution work stream - a team of people that are focused on continuously understanding and gardening the customer experience. You have a platform evolution team that's doing the same. And in between the two, you have application work streams that are deploying product life cycles informed by that evolution work,鈥 he says.聽
As well as recognizing that the customer journey, and expectations, will change, customer experience design has to be assessed through two lenses - value to the customer, and value to the business - and deliver on both. Rarely are these mutually exclusive, and Murray notes the first will often lead to the second, as delivering positive customer outcomes builds loyalty with existing customers and attracts new ones.聽
The principles of design thinking, and human-centered design are by now firmly part of the business mainstream, and very few enterprises would admit to not designing for their customers. Yet well-intentioned design often fails to translate into positive experience due to common disconnects.聽
鈥淎 lot of businesses have their design function in this ivory tower that鈥檚 doing all of these great empathy-driven exercises to understand the customer,鈥 Murray says. 鈥淭hey pull all of that together in some documentation and throw it over to the engineering team who goes and builds features identified by the design team. But the engineering team doesn鈥檛 understand the context of these features, so what gets built doesn鈥檛 meet the designed intent. There鈥檚 a lack of design fidelity.鈥澛
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Another issue is that the customer research used to inform design is not always adequate, because it鈥檚 a self-contained exercise.
鈥淐ustomer research can鈥檛 be a one-off thing where you conduct a survey, come back with a report and some data, and use that to guide all decisions from then on,鈥 Wang points out. 鈥淲e continuously embed research as a capability in our product teams. It has to be continuous, not on and off, and qualitative as well as quantitative, so you鈥檙e looking at what customers are doing in real-life scenarios.鈥
鈥淭he second thing we do is look at the data from our product use itself and see whether that is actually changing over time,鈥 she adds. 鈥淎nd the third is to constantly update past demand forecasting models. If recommendation engines are based on previous customer behavior but a structural shift takes place, we鈥檒l need to think about whether those models are still able to predict customer demands and needs.鈥澛
As Murray notes, customer surveys often depend on 鈥渋nterrogation versus observation,鈥 meaning companies have in effect formed their conclusions prior to the research exercise and construct questions based on these assumptions, thereby, even if unintentionally, dictating the results.聽
Observational research, based on monitoring customer interactions with products and services in a real-life context, is a better foundation for insights. Data analytics can be a powerful tool to collect and analyze information on these interactions, particularly if it鈥檚 applied at all stages of the customer journey and used to cultivate a single point of view.聽
鈥淒ata analytics, when done well, helps draw a picture and personalization of the customer and better tailor services to meet what the customer will normally do,鈥 Vingrys notes. 鈥淏ut you need to have the right analytics and analysis across the customer journey, and test and learn how customers are using what you鈥檝e put into production. Having a consistent way of measuring your customer interfaces and interactions, collecting similar data so you can actually have a more unified view of your customer across the different products they鈥檙e engaging with, and ensuring it鈥檚 one product team looking at all of that, is all part of creating true comparisons and identifying inconsistencies.鈥澛
As more businesses become part of broader ecosystems, building a complete profile of the customer may mean going outside the organization.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really important to gather data from the end-to-end customer journey, and in China that鈥檚 quite difficult because a lot of customer behavior happens on mass third-party platforms,鈥 Wang says. 鈥淚f a customer disappears it may not be that they left you as a brand; maybe they just switched to a different channel or platform to take advantage of an offer. We鈥檝e formed partnerships with companies like Alibaba to leverage their data models and understanding of the customer because they have so much information - from maps, takeaway services, shopping, health care - that we don鈥檛. We鈥檝e found ways to collaborate where we design based on real scenarios and leverage data to improve the customer experience, while they have a lot on the engine side to provide insights across all systems.鈥
iv. Strategy and touchpoints that serve customer goals聽
Turning customer-centric design into working applications that play well with a web of existing technologies requires a unified product strategy. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a core principle that every company should be aiming to follow - that every conversation with a customer begins exactly where the last one left off,鈥 notes Murray.
An integrated and coherent product strategy serving as the next layer of the platform is key to removing the many discrepancies between cross-channel experiences, systems and the teams behind them. Without it, organizations remain constrained by the inability to capture a complete customer profile and consistent source of truth.聽
鈥淥ne of the most common problems is the use of separate logins for different channels, for example using a phone number to log into one, email address for another and Facebook ID for a third,鈥 says Wang. 鈥淎t the back end, these systems are not connected and the customer appears to the business as three separate people.鈥
Broken communication between customer channels and back-end systems like inventory management, or the use of separate order management systems for each channel, inconvenience customers, preventing them from viewing their entire order history, making returns easily, or wasting their time selecting a product that is out of stock.
An effectively executed, comprehensive product strategy solves these issues and gives customers the experience they want: quality, speed and personalization, delivered seamlessly and empathically.聽
鈥淭he key question for organizations to ask when formulating a strategy is: How do I align my underlying systems and technologies to the customer journey - seen in the context of a customer鈥檚 ultimate intent,鈥 says Vingrys. 鈥淏usinesses have to understand the whole journey or the experience customers go through to achieve a goal, both offline and online, not just this one interaction they have with a particular representative within a business unit, or a particular system.鈥 Once that鈥檚 achieved, technology can be leveraged to make the operation more efficient.聽
Accurately assessing goals requires critical thinking about the role that the product or service plays in the customer鈥檚 life. For example, a bank鈥檚 customers 鈥渕ight be saving up so that their kids can get an overseas college education. That's much more important to them than the process of inquiring about different loans, which is mapped onto the customer journey but only looks at their needs on the surface,鈥 notes Wang. 鈥淲hen the bank realizes that the underlying reason for inquiring about loans is to help their children study overseas, they can offer more relevant services to support those goals.鈥
Forming long-lasting product teams oriented around the holistic role of a product or service, rather than functional lines, facilitates this approach. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a need to move away from project-based work to product-based work, adopt product thinking, put in place things like continuous delivery so you deliver quickly into the production environment and get new features out to test and learn,鈥 notes Vingrys.
Unlike project-based teams, typically built around specific tasks or targets and organized by departments, product teams comprise mixed capabilities - product design, analytics, development and operations. These teams are equipped with the breadth and depth of expertise and insight to solve problems and deliver new features that align with customers鈥 end goals, and sustain that success with constant upgrades to meet new demands.聽
A diverse, multi-disciplinary product-centric team


Because they can tackle a problem or task from more angles, diverse teams tend to be more creative, and to come up with better ideas. 鈥淔or example, when asked to perform observational research in a shopping mall around a shopping experience, the observations that software engineers came up with were very different from what the designers and the product people presented. But when we put them all together it painted a really robust picture,鈥 says Murray.
鈥淢oving to multi-disciplinary teams positions the business to create viability, likeability and feasibility - the essential components of a good product strategy,鈥 Murray adds. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a much better chance of coming up with products you can actually bring to market in a reasonable period of time, and to capture the desired customer and business outcomes.鈥
v. Embedding experience capabilities聽
Supported by a unified product strategy, experience APIs form the top layer of the customer experience platform and enable a range of interactions not just with customers, but also external partners and collaborators. They make it possible for the enterprise to deliver relevant, seamless personalization across all its touchpoints, reinforcing the consistency and integrity of the customer journey and also serving as a channel for insights on customer behavior.聽
鈥淥ne of the big challenges companies face is having separate personalization platforms for the call center versus the web. Customers end up getting different offers depending on which channel they come through. Taking a platform approach to these experience APIs means having one source of truth for customer profile and preferences, one source of truth for personalization, and one source of truth for ecommerce objects, shopping carts and retail habits," explains Murray.
An uninterrupted flow of credible information between organizations and their customers makes coordinating an effortless transition between digital and in-person interactions easier. Take for example an automotive company in China that delivered empathy and personalized service by enabling potential buyers to video call a salesperson through its online e-commerce platform, visit a showroom remotely and view a detailed 3D model of the car while guided virtually. Interested buyers could then book a door-to-door test drive experience, without having to set foot in a dealership. Afterwards, they were offered the option of customizing the car remotely before finalizing their purchase.聽
鈥淏uying a new car is a big investment for many. And the company understood that asking visitors to order a car online based on static photos and having that purchase delivered to their doorstep isn鈥檛 sufficient,鈥 says Wang.聽聽聽
With an effective customer experience platform and APIs, businesses have more avenues to incorporate innovative design concepts and stake out new territory, whether by creating new products or services or using the platform to interface with other enterprises. As noted by research firms like Gartner, shared platforms , and will represent one of the main paths to growth and opportunity in the future.聽
鈥淓ssentially, you are putting a business capability layer on top of your technology platform. Besides greater flexibility to create solutions that help your customers achieve their goals, you can also easily innovate and try out new technologies to develop a full, complete solution,鈥 explains Vingrys.
鈥淏usiness is moving beyond the 鈥榦mnichannel鈥 buzzword and into every channel - including channels that aren鈥檛 your own,鈥 notes Murray. 鈥淐ustomer needs can only be met by a mashup of your company and a couple of others, so you need to set yourself up to accommodate that. A perfect example is how Uber directly solves the customer problem by embedding their service into Google Maps because Uber knows the customer agenda is to figure out the quickest, least expensive way to get from point A to point B.鈥澛犅犅
鈥淧latform thinking is not limited to internal processes; it can be deployed externally to an ecosystem of partners as well, to facilitate innovation,鈥 Wang adds. 鈥淔or example, a car company can make the data they have gathered on road conditions available to the government to help them identify roads that are bumpier than others.鈥澛
Examining the customer鈥檚 entire purchasing journey and what they are trying to achieve is an effective method for identifying new opportunities for products and services. 鈥淔inancial services is an area where we鈥檙e seeing massive change,鈥 notes Vingrys. 鈥淭raditionally, organizations tend to think that certain services are the domain of specific providers - for example that providing credit is the bank鈥檚 role, plumbing companies sell plumbing products and delivery companies offer delivery services only. But a company that started out selling plumbing products to plumbers may now be thinking about providing their customers with credit to pay for those products, and when a customer orders a product, how to pick it up and deliver to a certain location.鈥
鈥淭he best approach to innovating is to maintain a portfolio of multiple 鈥榖ets鈥 at any given time,鈥 notes Wang. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 really predict financial returns in the traditional way if you鈥檙e evaluating completely new business models, so we look at other means to do it using innovation accounting, and much more customer prototyping, testing and validation.鈥澛

鈥淭he best approach to innovating is to maintain a portfolio of multiple 鈥榖ets鈥 at any given time.鈥
锘縍ujia Wang
Head of Customer Experience, Product and Design Service Line, 魅影直播
vi. Making customer experience future-proof聽
To retain customer interest and engagement, innovation also means being constantly on the lookout for novel ideas and emerging technologies that can enhance existing experiences or create new ones.聽
Looking outside your own industry for inspiration can help spark fresh yet feasible applications, according to Wang. 鈥淔or example, if you're trying to design a luxurious retail experience you can look at how high-end hotels serve customers, or break down the idea of luxury from a scientific or psychological point of view,鈥 she says.聽聽聽
On the technology front, more interactive experiences - enabled by promising technologies such as augmented reality (AR), virtual reality (VR)and voice - are helping product teams to explore and develop new means to enable customers to achieve their goals. For example, IKEA鈥檚 3D wardrobe app, built using augmented reality, allows shoppers to customize furniture virtually and see how a full built-up model would look in their home. IDC鈥檚 most recent Worldwide Augmented and Virtual Reality Spending Guide predicts over the next few years, with retail showcasing among the top five use cases.

鈥淭he types of technologies we have at our fingertips to equip humans with better insight into what the customer's real challenges are is becoming more and more sophisticated.鈥
Joe Murray
Chief Digital Officer, North America, 魅影直播
鈥淭he types of technologies we have at our fingertips to equip humans with better insight into what the customer's real challenges are is becoming more and more sophisticated,鈥 notes Murray, who sees the evolution of contact center technology as a big leap forward in customer experience. 鈥淐loud-based technologies that bring the call center into the same digital ecosystem, and thoughtful and measured application of machine learning algorithms to that experience, can make a big difference.鈥
According to Murray, one retailer saw a lift in sales when a personalization engine based on machine learning algorithm was applied to their call center routing logic to predict caller intent and pair them with the best or most experienced agents for corresponding products. 鈥淲e鈥檝e only just begun to discover really interesting and innovative ways to apply machine learning to deliver better customer experience,鈥 he says.聽聽
However, as companies explore new customer experience frontiers, Vingrys advises them to stick closely to first principles.聽
鈥淲hatever new technology you鈥檙e considering, focus on customer goals and think about how technology can help achieve them,鈥 he says. 鈥淓nsure the technology is actually enabling and enhancing the customer experience, and not getting in the way. Whether it鈥檚 dealing with existing legacy systems or new technologies, having that deeper understanding of how to solve customer problems and aligning that to customer outcomes is what鈥檚 really important.鈥澛

鈥淲hatever new technology you鈥檙e considering, focus on customer goals and think about how technology can help achieve them. Ensure the technology is actually enabling and enhancing the customer experience, and not getting in the way.鈥澛
Kristan Vingrys
Managing Director, Australia, 魅影直播聽
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