June is always exam time. So, if we were to test the performance of customer experience in Ireland, it’s probably fair to say that those involved here would get a collective B+, with a note about ‘room for improvement’!
To be fair, customer experience is getting better. There is increasing focus on what matters most in the customer journey and on progressing that. But the fact remains that customer experience standards in Ireland lag behind that of our UK and US counterparts.
Most companies in the Irish market are still at the stage of identifying and ‘fixing’ what is wrong. The Ryanair experience is fairly typical. The airline has claimed that the first two years of its ‘Always getting better’ programme were essentially about improving the existing offering by fixing the things that, to quote Michael O’ Leary, "unnecessarily piss people off". As the programme takes hold, the third year will see Ryanair move into a new space with customers, responding innovatively to changing consumer behaviours and use of digital technology.
As Irish companies mature and the delivery of great customer experience becomes the norm, we too need to go beyond ‘repair’ and boldly and rigorously re-imagine and deliver the ideal experience.
Obviously the key to designing a great customer experience is to understand what customers want as well as what they need. But how do you create a customer experience that differentiates from competitors, delights your customers and matches your culture and capabilities?
The answer lies with your brand.
Companies spend hundreds of thousands of euros every year on advertising which makes implicit and, sometimes explicit, promises about the experiences customers can expect in store, online and on the phone; promises that you need to keep. The risk of not doing so is amplified in today’s society where customers now share disappointing brand experiences on social media. A case in point was when McDonald's launched a Twitter campaign using the hashtag #McDStories. The corporate giant was hoping that the hashtag would inspire heart-warming stories about Happy Meals. Instead, it attracted disgruntled detractors who turned it into a #bashtag to share their #McDHorrorStories #McDonalds.
The ultimate goal, when you practice what you preach, follow through on your brand pomise and deliver great customer experience on the ground, is brand authenticity. In this way you’ll turn deeply satisfied customers into the sort of brand advocates that support a tangible lift in sales as well as shareholder return. As Jeff Bezos of Amazon says:
“Your brand is formed primarily, not by what your company says about itself, but what your company does”.
Great customer experiences deliver on the promises and exceed the expectations that are at the heart of a brand.
This all sounds great in theory, but in practice it’s more challenging. Here are some basic principles which we believe work:
We give the last word here to Kerry Bodine, author of Outside In:
"The future of customer experience is not just about companies looking to improve the customer experience, but asking how they can create a customer experience that is truly theirs and their alone."
And the answer is - they can do so, simply but oh so powerfully, by delivering on the brand promise.
W5 works with leading organisations to transform their customer experience, enabling them to deliver their brand promise every day, in every way.
If you are interested to learn more about how we can help you deliver consistently excellent customer experience, contact our team at (+353) 1 4973400 / info@W5.ie or Managing Director Tim Farmer at tfarmer@w5.ie