Don Peppers

Managing Customer Experience and Relationships


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in an enterprise's product or service bears a direct connection to how important or urgent the customer understands their need to be. Since customers have different opinions about these needs, they will have different opinions about the value of an enterprise's offering. We know this to be true because there is an economic principle that someone who considers the value of an offering to be higher than its price will likely buy it, while someone who considers its value lower than its price will likely not. Moreover, the value delivered in any customer's experience will increase directly in proportion to the amount of friction that is removed. Because friction is frequently costly to a company, removing it can also provide compounding benefits for both the customer and the enterprise.

      In addition to product competence, however, delivering a frictionless experience requires an enterprise to be customer competent, and this is a much rarer quality among today's businesses. Customer competence depends on two additional qualities in the customer experience: relevance and trustability. These two attributes relate directly to the question of whether a business is capable of treating different customers differently. Can the enterprise recognize and remember individual customer differences and preferences, and act on that knowledge by tailoring its behavior to meet the different needs of different customers, one customer at a time? Is the enterprise's business model structured in such a way as to profit by proactively working to protect the customer's own interest? Unfortunately, most enterprises are not nearly as advanced in their customer competence as they are with respect to their product competence.

      A relevant customer experience is one in which an enterprise can identify and remember individual customers from transaction to transaction, across different channels, products, services, and organizational silos. Then it recognizes the differences among customers in terms of their many different desires from the enterprise and their different values to the enterprise. Unfortunately, a large proportion of companies fail to deliver a very relevant customer experience. Every time we have to tell a contact-center agent our account number again, having just punched it in on our phone, we come face to face with an irrelevant customer experience. Beyond simply remembering individual customer details, however, the fact is that every customer is uniquely individual (because every human being is uniquely individual), and a frictionless customer experience is one that is configured appropriately—i.e., relevantly—for each different customer.

      Don't Run Your Business on the Goldfish Principle

      Many of today's businesses still operate on “the Goldfish Principle” when it comes to their customers. They evolved in the age of mass marketing, before computers made it possible to remember customers individually, so whatever business model they developed didn't rely on remembering an individual customer from transaction to transaction. For instance, we can recognize a company operating on the Goldfish Principle when we sign up for a promotion with our airline or car rental firm, but then we continue to get email blasts urging us to sign up. Another example is when we go online to our credit card website and schedule our payment a few days before the due date, but then they still send us an email reminder that our payment is almost due.

      Sometimes when a company is operating on the Goldfish Principle the results can actually be funny. For instance, below is a copy of an email message that a colleague of ours received from Marriott Rewards, with a comically irrelevant message. They might as well be broadcasting a message to the customer saying, “We don't care who you are!”

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      With today's information technology there's absolutely no excuse for operating on the Goldfish Principle. It's actually worse than doing nothing, because it demonstrates a level of incompetence that destroys a customer's trust in the business.

      Operating on the Goldfish Principle today doesn't just communicate that you aren't competent enough to run a sound business, it screams that you don't care enough about your customers to even try to be competent.

      Of course, trust has always been important in commerce and it is still essential to any company's economic success. Few companies will prosper long if they cheat their customers, or steal from them, or deceive them. But in today's hyper-interactive world, mere trustworthiness—that is, doing what one says one is going to do and not violating the law—is no longer sufficient to render a truly frictionless customer experience. As the velocity and volume of interactions have increased, customers have come to expect more from the businesses they deal with. Today they expect an enterprise to be proactively trustworthy, or trustable. A trustable enterprise provides complete, accurate, and objective information, and helps the customer avoid mistakes or oversights. If a customer feels they have to count their change or double-check that they aren't doing something they're going to regret later, this is one more type of friction to be avoided in a streamlined customer experience.

      A few good markers of a trustable customer experience would include:

       Facilitating objective customer reviews

       Reminding a customer that the warranty period is nearly up

       Reminding a customer that a subscription renewal is imminent

       Advising a customer that they might be buying more of a product than they need

       Providing a refund when one is due, without waiting for the customer to have to request it