Showing posts with label TCEL14. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TCEL14. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Customer Experience Conversations: Crystal Collier

In this next post in our Customer Experience Conversations series, we sat down with Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit’s keynote speaker Crystal Collier, CEO of CX Act, formerly TARP Worldwide.

CX Act has pioneered the science of quantifying, managing and optimizing the customer experience and has remained a leader in the CX market since 1971. Today, through its innovative research, technology and customer interaction programs, it continues to set the standard to improve clients' customer service performance, customer value and "The Profit of Interaction.”

In April, Collier and TCEL will explore these topics and the all of the new realities of building brands and relationships in today’s socially driven and data abundant world. The event will shine an important lens on the power of insights and the critical need for marketers to focus on factoring emotion into the bigger equation to get a return on customer relationships.

Here is what Collier had to say:

IIR: How is empathetic leadership changing leadership in customer experience today?

Collier: Without considering empathy—from the C-suite to the frontline employee—delivering a superior CX is nearly impossible. Customers are driven largely by emotions, and their behaviors result from feelings. If you don’t understand the emotions and leverage empathy to drive change throughout the organization, you are missing incredible opportunities to drive bottom-line results.

IIR: Why are empathy and emotion so important in when it comes to customer experience?

Collier: Emotions govern so many of the decisions we make, so CX must consider and accommodate that reality. Understanding the emotions associated with each customer touchpoint is critical—adding emotions to the customer journey mapping process is a great first step.

IIR: What are the key traits of a great customer experience leader?

Collier:  A great CX leader knows how to balance efficiency and effectiveness metrics for a complete measure of CX performance. A great CX leader knows that satisfaction is more than a score. A great CX leader taps into the voice of the employee as well as the voice of the customer. A great CX leader regularly, frequently, and passionately monitors and observes customer interactions. A great CX leader knows what touchpoints matter most to her customers and ensures they are best in class.

IIR: If your customers have a bad customer experience, how do you reconnect with them moving forward?

Collier:  One of the most important things to recovering from a bad experience is taking ownership. Ownership and accountability can set the stage for recovery. You need to own the issue with a genuine apology and deliver on promises to fix it. From there, putting measures in place to ensure it doesn’t happen again is key.

IIR: How has the digital revolution changed the overall customer experience?

Collier: The digital revolution has revolutionized access—access to customers, to data, to companies. Understanding what channels you control and where resources should be allocated is critical to an effective digital strategy.

IIR: Employee recognition can positively influence employee behaviors and cultivate a customer-centric culture. How do you recognize and motivate your employees?

Collier: Regular, timely, meaningful, and relevant employee R&R can help keep the focus on the CX; linking it to VOC metrics is also helpful.

IIR: How do you strategize and innovate on your company’s customer experience to continuously improve it as the marketplace grows increasingly competitive?

Collier:  You must understand what your customers want in 2 areas: 1- what do they need to make them totally satisfied and 2- how do you best deliver this service to them.

IIR: How do you make the connections between experience, brand and loyalty, which together create customer expectations?

Collier: The brand sets the standard for the experience and the experience drives loyalty. Delivering on the brand promise with employee behaviors is important exercises to increase loyalty and deliver a superior CX.

Want to hear more from Crystal on customer experience in person?  Join her at Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit 2014 in Miami in April where she will be presenting a keynote session entitled, “Bringing Empathy into Your Organization.”

Your experience at TCEL will include three full days of high-level visionary keynote presentations and in-depth case studies illustrating linking insights & data, data measuring & mapping, design thinking, synthesize intelligence from B2B and B2C companies across verticals, disciplines and cultures to march forward with a sound total customer experience plan.

To learn more about the event and register, click here:   http://bit.ly/1dQq6xh

About the Author: Amanda Ciccatelli, Social Media Strategist of the Marketing Division at IIR USA, has a background in digital and print journalism, covering a variety of topics in business strategy, marketing, and technology. Amanda is the Editor at Large for several of IIR’s blogs including Next Big DesignCustomers 1st, and ProjectWorld and World Congress for Business Analysts, and a regular contributor to Front End of Innovation and The Market Research Event,. She previously worked at Technology Marketing Corporation as a Web Editor where she covered breaking news and feature stories in the technology industry. She can be reached at aciccatelli@iirusa.


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Thursday, March 13, 2014

The Critical Element Missing from Your Customer Experience Programs

Following up on Tuesday’s post, “How to Create an Emotional Customer Experience,” here is another example of a powerfully compelling video containing the one critical element missing from many organizations’ customer experience programs: empathy.

Empathy: The Human Connection to Patient Care by Cleveland Clinic


If the video doesn't appear, you can view it at http://youtu.be/cDDWvj_q-o8

As you can see, making a difference in people’s lives builds trust and credibility and of course, creates a better world for all of us! To learn more about creating empathy through video, check out these articles:

This year’s Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit (TCEL) focuses on “Return on Relationships: Factoring Empathy into the Stakeholder Equation.” Here are just two of the many TCEL sessions where you’ll "discover the emotional drivers that are critical in creating an effective customer story and how to factor empathy into the bigger equation to get a return on customer relationships:"
  • “Bringing Empathy into Your Organization,” Crystal Collier, CEO, Tarp Woldwide and Dan Hill, President, Sensory Logic 
     
  • “Empathetic Marketing for Total Customer Experience,” Mark Ingwer, Ph.D., Founder, Insight Consulting Group

Want to learn more about customer experience from Crystal, Dan and Mark in person? Join them at Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit 2014 in Miami in April. To learn more about the event and register, go to www.iirusa.com/totalcustomer.

Stay connected with TCEL:
  • twitter.com/TotalCustomer #TCEL14
  • linkedin.com/Total Customer Experience Leaders
  • facebook.com/TotalCustomer
Peggy L. Bieniek, ABC is an Accredited Business Communicator specializing in corporate communication best practices. Connect with Peggy on LinkedIn, Twitter, Google+, and on her website at www.starrybluebrilliance.com.

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

How to Create an Emotional Customer Experience


“Let’s not forget that the little emotions are the great captains of our lives and we obey them without realizing it.” ― Vincent Van Gogh, highly influential post-Impressionist artist

Great storytelling evokes emotion. Using the power of storytelling, you can create emotionally compelling videos with equally compelling messages that will continue to resonate with your employees and customers and build brand loyalty.
This video is one of the best examples of storytelling I’ve seen posted on www.publicwords.com. If the video doesn't appear below, you can view it at http://youtu.be/7s22HX18wDY
 
This post also provides tips on how to recreate the same “magic” for your videos.

Here are two articles from www.ragan.com to help get you started on creating videos to engage your employees, who are the “key to delivering your customer’s experience,” according to Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit (TCEL) keynote speaker Peter Neill, Former Chief Customer Officer, Level 3 Communications:

Want to hear more from Peter on customer experience in person? Join him at Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit 2014 in Miami in April. To learn more about the event and register, go to www.iirusa.com/totalcustomer

Stay connected with TCEL:
  • twitter.com/TotalCustomer #TCEL14
  • linkedin.com/Total Customer Experience Leaders
  • facebook.com/TotalCustomer
Peggy L. Bieniek, ABC is an Accredited Business Communicator specializing in corporate communication best practices. Connect with Peggy on LinkedIn, Twitter, Google+, and on her website at www.starrybluebrilliance.com.

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Customer Experience Conversations: Nestor Portillo

In this next post in our Customer Experience Conversations series, we sat down with Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit’s speaker Nestor Portillo, Director, Social Communities and Customer Experience at Microsoft who shared his best customer experience, the importance of empathy, and how social media has affected customer experience today.

In April, TCEL will explore these topics and the all of the new realities of building brands and relationships in today’s socially driven and data abundant world. The event will shine an important lens on the power of insights and the critical need for marketers to focus on factoring emotion into the bigger equation to get a return on customer relationships. Your experience at TCEL will include three full days of high-level visionary keynote presentations and in-depth case studies illustrating linking insights & data, data measuring & mapping, design thinking, synthesize intelligence from B2B and B2C companies across verticals, disciplines and cultures to march forward with a sound total customer experience plan.

Here is what Portillo had to say:

IIR: Describe your best customer experience.

Portillo: My best customer experience was with Wells Fargo few months ago. I’m not sure if this is a common practice everywhere or not (if don’t it should), but my experience with them when deactivating my debit card (lost it) and getting a replacement was awesome.

First I will say, it was flawlessly and fast which is something that I was expecting however what really surprise me was that the whole interaction was extremely effortless on my side and once the case (card replacement) was completed, I got a print out with the name of the agent who managed my case, his manager name, their contact information, a summary of the transaction, a summary of what to expect next including timing and also a promise to follow up with me a week after which took place as promised.

What made it a different experience was the low level of effort required from my end and the high level of accountability demonstrated with the print out. You don’t always you proactively get a written commitment about what to expect and on top of that the names/phone and emails of the people accountable for make it happen.

IIR: How is empathetic leadership changing leadership in customer experience today?

Portillo: I would say it is becoming more important than ever. Companies are pushed to deliver on revenue expectations while reducing costs; this makes customer experience a key piece in the operational model to achieve these 2 goals (revenue and operational efficiency).

IIR: Why are empathy and emotion so important in when it comes to customer experience?

Portillo: In my opinion, customer experience is a combination of emotions, memories, expectations, needs fulfillment, timing and effort. All of these are important add-ons to your product or service. So, in order to deliver a great customer experience, it needs to have a high degree of empathy and emotion because the interaction goes beyond product functionality or a feature explanation. You need to engage with empathy because for customers it is no longer a transaction it is about them and their feelings that you care.

If you operate in a business that has low switching costs, then customer experience is your key differentiator or competitive advantage to drive loyalty and keep your market share. Think about cable or cellular services. They all have low switching costs, which means that the real differentiator is the customer experience.

IIR: What are the key traits of a great customer experience leader?

Portillo: I think a great customer experience leader is a person that embrace responsible innovation because customer preferences are evolving as fast as the technology evolves; is a change agent because you need the whole organization onboard and is a customer centric person because customer needs to be at the center of what processes, technology, procedures are trying to address or serve.

IIR: If your customers have a bad customer experience, how do you reconnect with them moving forward?

Portillo: It is very well known that takes years to build trust and seconds to destroy it. Keeping that in mind if your customer had an unpleasant customer experience you are now back to square one and need to rebuild trust. You can reconnect with them by acknowledging what was wrong and telling them what you are planning to do differently from now on. While this may sound easy, this requires high level of transparency and empowerment to truly change things or do things differently!  

IIR: How has the digital revolution changed the overall customer experience?

Portillo: I wouldn’t say changed, I will say changing because the digital revolution is pushing companies to embrace the concept of “Omni-channel” as more and more customers want you to engage with them where they are, when they want and how they want.

Traditional inbound channels are rapidly getting replaced by mobile, social networks and lately with wearable’s devices. With the new “Internet of things” where now you have a variety of devices that customer are using to connect with your company, this demands a consistent customer experience regardless the entry point and this is where the Omni-channel concept becomes more and more important.     

IIR: How do you utilize Big Data to gain the fullest possible understanding of your customers?

Portillo: Big Data is definitely a differentiator, while it is getting better defined as we speak, it is in its early stages and companies needs assess how big data may help however companies have to embrace it and get ready ASAP. It needs to become a formal business practice because it can tell you a lot about customer preferences and behaviors so you can better design the customer experience. Because of Big Data’s complexity, it requires specialized resources due to current tools are great aggregating data, trending it but you need analysts behind understanding what that trends means and how it aligns and impact your business strategy or your product.

IIR: Employee recognition can positively influence employee behaviors and cultivate a customer-centric culture. How do you recognize and motivate your employees?

Portillo: Customer satisfaction and loyalty needs to be part of the individual goals and a key component of their performance assessment. You need to tie compensation, bonuses and rewards with satisfaction and experience to achieve great customer experience.

IIR: How has social media affected customer experience?

Portillo: Social media is a megaphone for good or bad customer experiences. In fact, many customers are using social media to put pressure to the companies when their customer experience is poor or to simply “shame the company into a response.” Today customers know that companies are monitoring social channels so they are using these channels to capture their attention when the customer experience is broken or to expedite a response.

But, not everything is about bad experience, there are several cases where customers use social media to praise companies for their customer experience but let’s say that this is less frequent.

IIR: How do you make the connections between experience, brand and loyalty, which together create customer expectations?

Portillo: In my opinion, brand is a promise, experience is your way to demonstrate commitment on delivering on that promise and loyalty is the customer assessment of how successful you are. I don’t think you can create customer expectations, you can identify and meet customer expectations and you need to align those three to meet or exceed their expectations  

Overall, the customer experience leader needs to make sure customer experience is part of the operational agenda and not only part of the PR agenda. If you ask companies how important customer experience is for their business strategy you will get “top priority” as an answer. But, if you dig a little bit and see how many resources are allocated to ensure a quality of customer experience you may get surprised.

Want to hear more from Nestor on customer experience in person? Join him at Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit 2014 in Miami in April. To learn more about the event and register, click here:  http://bit.ly/NnARgO


About the Author: Amanda Ciccatelli, Social Media Strategist of the Marketing Division at IIR USA, has a background in digital and print journalism, covering a variety of topics in business strategy, marketing, and technology. Amanda is the Editor at Large for several of IIR’s blogs including Next Big DesignCustomers 1st, and ProjectWorld and World Congress for Business Analysts, and a regular contributor to Front End of Innovation and The Market Research Event,. She previously worked at Technology Marketing Corporation as a Web Editor where she covered breaking news and feature stories in the technology industry. She can be reached at aciccatelli@iirusa.
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Tuesday, February 25, 2014

The Secrets Behind a Successful Customer Experience Strategy

According to the Customer 2020 Report, the customer of the future will be more informed and in charge of the experience they receive.

They will expect you to know their individual needs and personalize their experience. Immediate resolution will not be fast enough as customers will expect you to proactively address their current AND future needs.

At the 2014 Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit, we examine the power of today's customer-driven world to develop a strategy to deliver an integrated customer experience by focusing on four key content pillars - Linking, Design Thinking, Synthesis, and Data Mapping.

Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit 2014
April 9-11, 2014
Trump International Beach Resort
Miami, Florida

Download the brochure for the full agenda: http://bit.ly/1ffN4Qo

Join our keynotes as they address the main themes of the Customer Experience process:

Linking - Explore how to connect attitudinal metrics to behavioral data across the enterprise.
Personal Intelligence: The Power of Personality at Work
John D. Mayer, Renowned Professor of Psychology, The University of New Hampshire and Author, Personal Intelligence

Design Thinking - Go beyond transaction and strategize a new way forward.
The Crazy Ones: How to be a Leader that Inspires Creativity and Innovation
Stephen Gates, VP and Creative Director, Global Brand Design, Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide

Synthesize - Integrate insights and intelligence to get at the heart of the emotional experience.
Using Emotional Energy To Make Your Customer Experience Programs Easier, Faster and Smarter 
Daryl Travis, CEO, Brandtrust

Data Mapping - Discover new approaches to measuring and aligning your data.
Employees are the Key to Delivering your Customer's Experience
Peter Neill, Former Chief Customer Officer, Level 3 Communications

The Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit tells the whole story, from beginning to end. This is your invitation to join the conversation to gain a deeper understanding of your customer and provide you with the foresight you need to create a strategic and effective customer experience plan.

Mention code TCEL14BL & Save 15% off the standard rate. Register today: http://bit.ly/Ofcbrq

We hope to see you Miami!

Cheers,
THE TCEL Team
@TotalCustomer
#TCEL14

customers1stblog.iirusa.com
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Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Customer Experience is the Way to Grow a Business Today

As the marketplace becomes increasingly crowded with products, it is becoming more difficult for companies to stand out amidst the noise. In the past, product packaging and messai8ng was the most important way to stand out from competitors. Today, these elements are still critical, but in addition, you need to offer the customer a special experience.

The customer experience is a blend of a company's physical performance and the emotions evoked, intuitively measured against customer expectations across all touch-points. The customer experience should be a reflection of everything that makes up your brand – not just the products or services, but its attitudes, values and key differentiation. This means that every time a company and a customer interact, the customer learns something about the company that will either strengthen or weaken the future relationship - and with that - the customer's desire to return, spend more and recommend.

Here is an infographic produced by Nunwood  that shows just how important customer experience is to a growing business:


Thursday, February 13, 2014

Government Organizations Must Win Hearts of Public

Today, customer experience is one of the most popular phrases in the business world. Major companies across the globe have realized this trend and are now making customer experience the focal point of their entire business.

Lou Carbone, customer experience expert and founder & CEO of Experience Engineering, says that any organization looking to satisfy customers must make all the effort to enter the hearts and minds of its customers.

When it comes to government organizations, this is absolutely critical. Government organizations, according to Carbone, should strive to make an emotional connection with the public to win their hearts. At Government Summit in Dubai last week, he warned that organizations can become so intensely focused on meeting the needs of customer that they might miss other important aspects, like emotionally connection.
"Corporate managers of companies are emphatic that what counts is not the function they provide but the effect it has on people," he stated.

In fact, according to Carbone, 95 per cent of what humans process in their minds consists of unconscious thoughts. So, understanding the role of the unconscious mind, becoming clue conscious and developing systems to manage these clues for emotional experience are key to delighting customers. 

He advises that the first step is to move from a 'make and sell' attitude to a 'sense and respond' approach in order to achieve customer happiness.  Carbone said, “Organizations that fail to make this shift face the danger of doing all the wrong things.”

Want to learn more about customer experience from Lou Carbone in person? Join me at Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit in Miami in April. To learn more about the event and register, click here: http://bit.ly/1h8MTb4

This year, TCEL explores the new realities of building brands and relationships in today's socially driven and data abundant world. Discover the emotional drivers that are critical in creating an effective customer story. The event shines an important lens on the power of insights and the critical need for marketers to focus on factoring emotion into the bigger equation to get a return on customer relationships.

Your experience will include three full days of high-level visionary keynote presentations and in-depth case studies illustrating linking insights & data, data measuring & mapping, design thinking, synthesize intelligence from B2B and B2C companies across verticals, disciplines and cultures to march forward with a sound total customer experience plan.


About the Author: Amanda Ciccatelli, Social Media Strategist of the Marketing Division at IIR USA, has a background in digital and print journalism, covering a variety of topics in business strategy, marketing, and technology. Amanda is the Editor at Large for several of IIR’s blogs including Next Big DesignCustomers 1st, and ProjectWorld and World Congress for Business Analysts, and a regular contributor to Front End of Innovation and The Market Research Event,. She previously worked at Technology Marketing Corporation as a Web Editor where she covered breaking news and feature stories in the technology industry. She can be reached at aciccatelli@iirusa.com. Follow her at @AmandaCicc.
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Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Michaels’ New Kind of Customer Experience: Pinterest Parties

Online interaction has become one of the major aspects of the customer experience today. If I ever came across a company that didn’t have a website, I’d most likely take my business elsewhere. Social media has become a predominant platform to interact with customers. Now, with the rise in smartphones and tablet use, businesses have no choice but to think about their mobile and social customer experience strategy, if they want to be profitable.

Over the last few years, the number of channels consumers use to reach companies has doubled over, and the Internet has become the predominant medium for consumers to express their opinions about a product or company. In fact, a survey found that 50 percent of consumers are more likely to buy a product from a company that they can contact via a social media page. In addition, 56 percent of consumers that actively use social media to interact with businesses feel a stronger connection to that business.

Not to mention, using mobile to reach customers is growing more prevalent. A recent survey of smartphone users found that 63 percent will use online coupons to get the best price. In addition, 57 percent of users indicated that would like to receive location-based offers from companies, and 80 percent said they have received promotions on their smartphones from preferred brands.

Motivated by this social customer experience revolution, Michaels has partnered with Hometalk to bring its customers Pinterest Parties. The craft store is setting aside dedicated time for you to make those cool projects that you’ve been pinning all this time.

According to the companies, these parties will provide live access to Hometalk's network of DIY experts. Hometalk has selected 100 of its members to lead a series of DIY craft demos for customers to learn from as they shop for supplies in Michaels stores. Handpicked for their DIY expertise, Hometalk members will put their own twist on one of five Pinterest-inspired projects, offering customers hands-on help and tutorials, ideas and advice.

"Michaels is all about providing inspiration, instruction and ideas for creative DIY projects," said Michaels CMO Paula Puleo, in a statement. "As a top destination for home and garden project supplies, Michaels is happy to welcome Hometalk members into the stores for these fun, educational events."

The next in-store Pinterest Party will be held on Sunday, February, 16th, 1pm – 4pm at all store locations. There will be plenty of project inspirations, or you can bring in a Pinterest idea of your own!

The Pinterest Parties at Michaels have been a great success for the company’s web presence. Between October and December 2013, visits on the website more than doubled — jumping from two million visits in October 2013 to more than four million in December 2013.

Want to learn more about social customer experience in person? Join me at Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit in Miami in April. To learn more about the event and register, click here:  http://bit.ly/1lx8EDx

About the Author: Amanda Ciccatelli, Social Media Strategist of the Marketing Division at IIR USA, has a background in digital and print journalism, covering a variety of topics in business strategy, marketing, and technology. Amanda is the Editor at Large for several of IIR’s blogs including Next Big DesignCustomers 1st, and ProjectWorld and World Congress for Business Analysts, and a regular contributor to Front End of Innovation and The Market Research Event,. She previously worked at Technology Marketing Corporation as a Web Editor where she covered breaking news and feature stories in the technology industry. She can be reached at aciccatelli@iirusa.com. Follow her at @AmandaCicc.
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Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Customer Experience Conversations: Janet LeBlanc

In this next post in our Customer Experience Conversations series, we sat down with Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit’s speaker Janet LeBlanc, who is also President of Janet LeBlanc + Associates Inc. LeBlanc discussed how empathy and emotion has a critical impact on customer experience today.

This year, TCEL will explore the new realities of building brands and relationships in today’s socially driven and data abundant world. The event will shine an important lens on the power of insights and the critical need for marketers to focus on factoring emotion into the bigger equation to get a return on customer relationships.

Your experience at TCEL will include three full days of high-level visionary keynote presentations and in-depth case studies illustrating linking insights & data, data measuring & mapping, design thinking, synthesize intelligence from B2B and B2C companies across verticals, disciplines and cultures to march forward with a sound total customer experience plan.

Here is what LeBlanc had to say:

IIR: Describe your best customer experience.

LeBlanc: The best customer experiences are those that elicit the strong positive feelings and emotions that strengthening the relationship and loyalty a customer has with a company. Statements such as: “I felt like she understood what I wanted or they treated me with respect” are the best examples of a great customer experience.

IIR: How is empathetic leadership changing leadership in customer experience today?

LeBlanc: Empathy is considered one of the five categories of emotional intelligence. It will enable a leader to develop a closer, more collaborative relationship with others. Taking a personal interest, showing that you care, and having a genuine concern about another person’s point of view fosters an environment of trust and caring—the ideal environment for employees to perform at their best and for customers to feel appreciated and valued.

IIR: Why are empathy and emotion so important in when it comes to customer experience?

LeBlanc: Recognizing the power an emotion has on determining the outcome of a customer experience is paramount to a successful customer experience management program. We may forget what someone says to us, but we rarely forget how they make us feel. Having empathy and understanding emotions throughout the customer experience journey helps organizations to stay connected to their customers, to design a better problem resolution process, and to create a more collaborative empathetic work environment.

IIR: What are the key traits of a great customer experience leader?

LeBlanc: Today’s savvy business leaders recognize the shift towards collaborative leadership capabilities. Implementing a large-scale customer experience program requires the commitment and collective forces of the entire leadership team. No one leader can drive customer-centricity alone. Strong alignment and collaboration is a must to be successful.

IIR: If your customers have a bad customer experience, how do you reconnect with them moving forward?

LeBlanc:  When a problem occurs, the bond between a company and the customer is broken. It places the relationship in crisis and creates a pivotal time for a company to re-establish the relationship and repair the damage. Most companies will train employees to apologize, but often will forget the most important ingredient needed for successful resolution—empathy. Even when an apology is offered, without recognizing the emotions at play or a statement acknowledging the gravity of the situation, the apology will not have a positive impact.

IIR: Employee recognition can positively influence employee behaviors and cultivate a customer-centric culture. How do you recognize and motivate your employees?

LeBlanc: Recognition programs motivate employees to make an extra effort or go the extra mile. By acknowledging and giving special attention to an employee’s actions, an organization is reinforcing the specific behaviors needed to realize its customer experience strategy and goals. The best employee recognition programs use a combination of informal and formal approaches that balance feedback from leaders, peers and customers. An effective employee recognition program not only recognizes top performers but also motivates all employees to reinforce and achieve the desired customer-focused behaviors.

Want to hear more from Janet on customer experience in person? Join her at Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit 2014 in Miami in April. To learn more about the event and register, click here:  http://bit.ly/1dmzfJe  


About the Author: Amanda Ciccatelli, Social Media Strategist of the Marketing Division at IIR USA, has a background in digital and print journalism, covering a variety of topics in business strategy, marketing, and technology. Amanda is the Editor at Large for several of IIR’s blogs including Next Big DesignCustomers 1st, and ProjectWorld and World Congress for Business Analysts, and a regular contributor to Front End of Innovation and The Market Research Event,. She previously worked at Technology Marketing Corporation as a Web Editor where she covered breaking news and feature stories in the technology industry. She can be reached at aciccatelli@iirusa.com. Follow her at @AmandaCicc.
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Wednesday, January 29, 2014

How HP, Forrester, Dell and Others Master the Customer Experience

Translating data insights into an actionable plan is the foundation for building a successful and emotionally connected brand.  The 2014 Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit shines an important lens on measuring and aligning data, along with linking attitudinal metrics to behavioral data across the enterprise. This three day open forum allows for high-level knowledge exchange with the most distinguished leaders in the customer experience space. 

See for yourself - download the brochure for full program detail and session descriptions: http://bit.ly/1fhJFi9

Our visionary speakers on data and linkage include:
KEYNOTE: Employees are the Key to delivering your Customer's Experience
Peter Neill, Former Chief Customer Officer, Level 3 Communications

The ability to deliver upon a differentiated CE falls upon your employees and how your culture enables them and your customers. Your employee experience requires investment and shouldn't be left to chance if "how" you deliver is equally as important to your customers as "what" you deliver. It's critical to incorporate employees and customers into your VOC Program - Measurement, E2E Analysis, Action, Communications, and Recognition.

KEYNOTE: Personal Intelligence: The Power of Personality at Work
John D. Mayer, Renowned Professor of Psychology, The University of New Hampshire and Author, Personal Intelligence

John is a groundbreaking behavioral psychologist and key innovator in intelligence research having written more than 125 scientific articles, books, and psychological tests, including the internationally known Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test. John argues that understanding personality is the key to our well-being. We are all curious about what people are thinking and what makes them tick. This urge to understand others helps us to adapt successfully to the world around us. Mayer talks about personal intelligence at work and the use of personal intelligence to understand our customers.

Twelve Year Customer Experience Journey
John Sullivan, Global TCE Leader, HP Financial Services

The key to the success of this twelve year journey could only happen through an engaged employee workforce. This presentation deconstructs the twelve year journey of a global company with over 1,500 employees supporting customers in over 50 countries competing for loyalty and wallet share in an industry and marketplace that provides superior customer experiences. John focuses on identifying and segmenting customers; internal as well as external, implementing a measurement process that gives continuous feedback and how to turn this information into meaningful, measureable action that would drive customer loyalty.

Making Promises, Keeping Promises: Building Brand and Loyalty Through Customer Experience
Kerry Bodine, Former VP and Principal Analyst, Customer Experience Research Practice, Forrester

Companies are waking up to the fact that customers' perceptions have a profound impact on business metrics ranging from brand equity and customer loyalty to increased revenue and cost savings. But for businesses to succeed, they need to get serious about the way they define, implement, and manage the customer experience. This session will explore how to make the connections between experience, brand and loyalty, the role that various touch points play in creating customer expectations and delivering on them and how marketers need to collaborate with the rest of the organization to ensure a high-quality customer experience.

....and, many more industry leaders!

Mention code TCEL14BL & Save 15% off the standard rate. Register today:  http://bit.ly/1fhJFi9

Join us and the greatest customer experience strategists of our time and together we'll advance business relevancy through customer strategy.

Cheers,
The TCEL Team
@TotalCustomer

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Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Mastering the Digital & Social Marketplace

To call this an event is an understatement. The annual The Total Customer Experience Leaders 2014 is a meeting of the minds for those folks dedicated to advancing business relevancy through customer strategy. This salon style event facilitates the exchange of higher level dialogues and access to the greatest strategists of our time. It's where provocation is grounded in actionability and presented through articulate facilitation. The 2014 event has a specialized focus on today's digital & social marketplace. 

April 9-11, 2014
Trump International Beach Resort
Miami, Florida

Our distinguished speakers include:

How Current Trends are Shaping the 10 Growth Areas of Tomorrow
KEYNOTE: Jared Weiner, Futurist and Vice President, Weiner, Edrich, Brown 
Several emerging consumer trends for 2014... and beyond...are revolutionizing the future of customer engagement. This session will focus on how major technological, social and economic trends are shaping the 10 growth areas of the emerging Metaspace Economy. Together, we will take a quick journey into the short - and long-term future to uncover the growth opportunities of tomorrow for businesses. Jared brings his experience as a futurist working with some of the world's largest companies to the table and observes how the economy is evolving to put more of a premium on customer experience than ever before.

Move Brands Faster and Longer in the Social Media Era
Nestor Portillo, Director, Social Communities and Customer Experience, Microsoft 
With new social media networks/platforms emerging almost every day, how can brands timely and efficiently engage customers while delivering a cohesive experience that drives customer loyalty? This presentation shares Microsoft's strategy of serving +22 million customers per month through different social platforms (Blog, Forums, Wiki, Social) in 13 languages, and why customer experience is the key to making the content viral and engaging. What's the trade-off between the social platform used, the level of trust and the cost when delivering a customer experience through your website and social channels? Customer experience involves customer service and support, how both can co-exists in today's organizational model and how companies need to get prepared for the new wave?

Thriving in a Digital Commerce World
KEYNOTE: Jay Topper, CIO & CTO, VITACOST.COM
To succeed as a dotcom retailer, it isn't enough to sell cheap and deliver on time. The entire end-to-end digital eco-system must constantly transform: From marketing, through the web experience, into fulfillment and post-sale services-consumer expectations are on the rise-and must be met in order to create the loyalty necessary to thrive.
How does technology both serve and lead transformation within marketing, merchandising and operations?
How have expectations in internet retail increased and what's around the corner?
How does post-sale innovation contribute to life-time value-cracking the code of loyalty isn't easy when your competitor is a click away

Mastering the Mindset of the Millennial Candidate
Kassandra Barnes, Research & Content Manager, CareerBuilder 
The millennial generation is the first to grow up in a digital world. That's why this new generation of candidates, who navigate the increasingly complex and fragmented digital environment with ease, is a challenge for many organizations. We'll examine insights gleaned from years of studying candidate behavior online and discuss how organizations can use this new media environment to their advantage and personalize their experience with this ever-changing talent pool.

....and, many more industry leaders!

Download the brochure for the full agenda: http://bit.ly/1iPF4El

Mention code TCEL14LI & Save 15% off the standard rate. Register today: http://bit.ly/1iPF4El

The take away? A viable actionable plan to securing your company's future success. Join other leaders charged with creating a sound strategic customer plan in Miami this April.

Cheers,
The TCEL Team
@TotalCustomer
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Wednesday, January 15, 2014

Customer Experience Conversations: Keith Ferrazzi

In this next post in our Customer Experience Conversations series, we sat down with Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit’s keynote speaker Keith Ferrazzi, who is also CEO of Ferrazzi Greenlight and Author of Never Eat Alone. Ferrazzi discussed how customer experienced has evolved in the digital age and the importance of customer experience leadership.

This year, TCEL will explore the new realities of building brands and relationships in today’s socially driven and data abundant world. The event will shine an important lens on the power of insights and the critical need for marketers to focus on factoring emotion into the bigger equation to get a return on customer relationships.
Here is what Ferrazzi had to say:

IIR: Why are empathy and emotion so important in when it comes to customer experience?

Ferrazzi: Technology's pretty much leveled the field with regard to quality, making customers more likely to develop relationships with the companies they choose to work with. That's put the customer in the position of looking for a more personal experience. They want to work with people they trust. Empathy, vulnerability, emotion are ways to develop that trust. 

IIR: What are the key traits of a great customer experience leader?

Ferrazzi:  Obviously, accountability is critical. You're responsible for your customer's experience, good or bad. But trust, creativity and adaptability are also pretty high. You have to trust your team to constantly look for new ways to improve the customer experience. You need the creativity to see the bigger, longer picture. And you need to be lean enough to change courses when necessary.

IIR: If your customers have a bad customer experience, how do you reconnect with them moving forward?

Ferrazzi: Before anything else, admit your mistake, if it was your mistake, and apologize directly. So many difficult situations can be neutralized with two simple, but sincere, words: "I'm sorry." Customers are angry after a bad experience because they feel like they were treated poorly. By apologizing, you've already changed the dynamic and make resolving the situation more collaborative. From there you can turn a bad customer experience into a loyal customer just by being open to their feelings.

IIR: How has the digital revolution changed the overall customer experience?

Ferrazzi: It's certainly had an equalizing effect. Neither customer nor company is limited by the old, pre-digital marketplace. Small start-ups can compete against big brands by serving a specific niche and can reach customers all over the world, just by being where their customers are online. And with so much market segmentation targeting your specific customers is more cost effective. You'll reach fewer eyes but the ones you do reach are more likely to be interested in your product.

IIR: How has social media affected customer experience?

Ferrazzi: It's made feedback instantaneous. You know immediately whether your customer's had a good or bad experience. The customer is far more empowered and a dissatisfied customer is always more likely to voice his or her opinion. One bad meal, one rude CSR, and Twitter, Facebook, Reddit knows immediately. You can see that as a problem, or you can use that same medium to show how much you value your customers.

IIR: How do you make the connections between experience, brand and loyalty, which together create customer expectations?

Ferrazzi: Understanding what your brand brings to your customers, not just in the specific goods or services, but in the visceral experience, is critical. Even if you are your brand, is your audience one who is looking for something posh or homey? Luxurious or utilitarian? Intellectually rigorous or practical? Know what emotional need your fulfilling in addition the good or service you're providing, and you'll turn a generic transaction into an "experience" which will trigger loyalty. 

Want to hear more from Keith on customer experience in person? Join him at Total Customer Experience Leaders Summit 2014 in Miami in April. To learn more about the event and register, click here:  http://bit.ly/1ces31p



About the Author: Amanda Ciccatelli, Social Media Strategist of the Marketing Division at IIR USA, has a background in digital and print journalism, covering a variety of topics in business strategy, marketing, and technology. Amanda is the Editor at Large for several of IIR’s blogs including Next Big DesignCustomers 1st, and ProjectWorld and World Congress for Business Analysts, and a regular contributor to Front End of Innovation and The Market Research Event,. She previously worked at Technology Marketing Corporation as a Web Editor where she covered breaking news and feature stories in the technology industry. She can be reached at aciccatelli@iirusa.com. Follow her at @AmandaCicc.
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