4 Requirements for Linking CX to ROI
Article by Ernan Roman
Featured on crmirewards.com
Eighty-one percent of consumers are willing to pay for a better experience, according to the Capgemini’s study “The Disconnected Customer.”
Yet, customers don’t feel that companies are delivering high quality customer experience (CX), and one in five consumers stopped purchasing from a company after a poor experience, Capgemini’s research found.
In our own ERDM learnings from more than 16,000 hours of
interviews, consumers were emphatic that short-term sales-focused tactics were irritating, brand damaging, and undermined loyalty. As empowered consumers, they
expected engagement oriented communications and experiences.
Here is a representative quote from the research:
“You marketers don’t understand that personalized engagement post-sale is valuable for the customer and... forges strong ties with your company that serve as a ‘grace account’ upon which to draw when there is the almost-certain problem or outreach from competition.”
Chris Hull, Chief Merchandising Officer at the iconic American luxury lifestyle brand Shinola, puts it this way, “Consumers are looking for
meaningful experiences that differentiate one brand from another.
One way we do this is by designing our stores to engage the five senses:
Sight – see team members build bicycles or do personalized embossing;
Sound – a warm welcome and vinyl playing on our Runwell Turntable;
Touch – well-crafted products, such as watches and leather bags;
Taste – a complimentary bottle of Shinola Cola;
Smell – the smell from our Shinola candles lit throughout the store.
This is all part of conveying our distinctive handcrafted products and has resulted in higher engagement, satisfaction, and conversion rates.”
With this in mind, here are four factors that will help you link CX to improved ROI:
1. CX strategies must align with consumer demands
Too often sales strategies are spray painted to look like CX strategies. However, customers are smart and know the difference between sales pitches posing as engagement and true CX. They resent when marketers think that customers are too naïve to know the difference.
According to
Nike Chief Executive Mark Parke
in comments about CX strategy development, “The important thing to point out is that
changes are being driven by the consumer
…. They want it fast, easy, and [they want] personal service.” Nike has implemented measures to drive personalization and has seen sales improvements in a landscape where so many other retailers and brands are failing.
2. Accurate data is essential for driving CX initiatives
As
Jim Conning, managing director at Royal Mail Data Services
so aptly puts it, data accuracy is non-negotiable for ROI: “CMOs and marketing directors all understand the importance of accurate customer data, but I’m not sure that more inexperienced members of the team understand the
increased ROI of more accurate data.
” The company’s research indicated that 3
4% of marketers fail to fully understand the financial impact of poor quality data;
70% of the 300 companies surveyed admit to having incomplete or out-of-date customer data; and 6% of annual revenue is being lost through poor quality data.
3. ROI also requires CX-focused content
Irrelevant content hurts your brand, so stop sending spray-and-pray blasts!
This quote from our VoC research is a blunt reminder.
“When I receive generic emails, it’s obvious that you do not care enough to understand my individual needs. Instead, you are trying distill my complex needs into simple generalities to make your email blast easier for you...and useless to me!”
Consider this from a
: “If you provide superior content, and a competitive price, you have the opportunity to both close the sale and build long-term consumer loyalty.” The study found that…
88% of consumers say that product content is extremely or very important to their purchase decision
Price matters, but it’s product content that gets consumers to buy
4. Establish CX-oriented metrics and compensate accordingly
New and additional metrics are required to track and compensate for CX-oriented behaviors. Too many companies fail to change metrics to reflect their CX strategies and still compensate based on legacy “sell ‘em and forget ‘em” models.
In this
, Michael Klein, director of industry strategy for the Adobe Marketing Cloud, presents some effective soltuions that brands can implement to select the optimal CX metrics. One, from Epsilon’s Rob Cantave, especially stood out: “CRM data helps us understand what current customers are interested in seeing. Combining that with our third-party data lets us better understand what clusters of customers have in common. We present that information to the automated models and have them test and ultimately identify the product, categories, or content most likely to be of interest to returning customers and brand new unknown users who’ve been seen elsewhere in our network.”
Linking CX to ROI is a complex, multiphased, and corporate-wide pursuit. Remember:
CX requires company-wide consistency and communication so employees understand and are trained on the goals and behaviors they need to demonstrate every single day.
It also requires an omnichannel, data-driven strategy that’s based on meeting the requirements consumers indicate are important—to them. CX is useless without a consumer-focused approach because it will be observed as sales-y and meaningless.
Similarly, irrelevant content is perceived as demonstrating that a brand does not care about developing long-term customer relationships.
To achieve maximum ROI, companies need to rethink how they view CX and build impactful and sustainable strategies to satisfy customer needs over the customer lifecycle.