Archive for the 'culture' Category

A ‘social’ revolution?

Posted by: admin | 23.04.2010

The UK General Election has accelerated the interest in what is called ‘social media’ – in this context meaning Twitter, Facebook, Bebo, etc. And in particular, how these new ways of communicating with people can be used to win the election.

A lot of this has to do with the perception that the use of these new tools was hugely influential to Barack Obama’s success in the US Presidential election. We can debate whether this is true or not, but my purpose here is only to recognise that social media has become widely acknowledge and discussed. I want to look at the potential impact social media may have on business.

The current news items are only the public face of a debate that began some time ago in the business and government worlds. But what the added attention has done is move the topic of social media up the corporate agenda – and no doubt many will rush to ‘”do something”, to be seen to be doing something and not to get left behind.

Like most bandwagons, and especially technology-led ones, it pays to be cautious and spend time thinking – hard – about what you want to achieve by engaging in these new forms of communication. In amongst the uncertainty about how organisations should react to this change in customer behaviour, one thing does seem to be certain. There is no going back once you have started. 

Many groups and forums are springing up to address this area, many of which are ill-informed and offering poor advice. But, there is lots of valuable thinking and sharing being done as this new area is explored. One that I like is called Social CRM Pioneers. It has somewhat of a technology slant (which suits my background) but there are some very informative and insightful conversations being had there.

The first question is how to start – what should be done first? There is no single right answer to that, as individual circumstances differ massively, but here are a few thoughts for you.

Your customers have always been having these conversations between themselves about your products and services (although with less reach and fewer people to listen). You now have the possibility to ‘overhear’ what they are saying in these public communities and networks and, if you are careful and respectful, the possibility to be invited into the conversations and maybe influence attitudes and opinions. 

How will this change in customer behaviour affect your corporate culture? Firstly, remember, your employees are customers too – and will be feeling this change first-hand in their everyday lives. So, you probably already have a lot of knowledge internally. Perhaps, you could start by asking employees about their experiences and how they would like brands to interact with them in this environment? Start an internal conversation as a precursor to external conversations.

The rise of Customer Relationship Management (CRM) systems over the last fifteen years should have been accompanied by corporate adaptation to a more customer-centric model, although in most cases only the technology was implemented. Maybe, in this new social revolution we should be building ‘people-centric’ organisations.

That is, not companies facing off to individual customers (remember the ‘market of one’ and 360 degree customer views?) but individual people in organisations building trust and relationships with individual prospects and customers over time and through multiple channels and media – whether that be for marketing, sales or service needs. That would mean organising internally to meet customers’ needs and not simply organising for efficiency.

Oh, and don’t forget that there are a large number of customers who do not not participate in online communities and social media. Their needs must not be overlooked in the seeming stampede for this new promised land.

brilliant basics, culture, customer experience, customer forums, frontline agents, listening, managing, people, social media | No Comments

Frontline of inspiration

Posted by: admin | 11.03.2010

One of our ‘truths’ is that customers and staff that interact directly with customers already know a lot about issues and problems … and often how to solve them. Listening to their stories is often inspiring. The following was inspired by a customer advisor on a recent client engagement.

View from the front

We the unheeded, doing the unneeded.
Showing the unknowing.
Too much pressing, too many stressing.
The unneeded our undoing.
 
Talk more, rest less.
 
Always collecting, something new to show,
never reflecting, learning from what we know.
The knowing unheeded, bright new world unweeded.
Doing the unneeded, defection speeded.
 
They talk, I squeeze.
They talk, I breeze.
I talk, they freeze.
I talk – on their knees!
 
I hear them, they are my feed.
I hear them, know what they need.
 
Now is the time to hear me speak.
Now is the time to heed the call.
Now is the time to follow my lead.
I’m undoing the unneeding, starting now.

 

                image

Voice of the Customer, agent experience, culture, customer experience, feedback, listening, process improvement, reduction in contacts | No Comments

What makes a great customer culture in sales?

Posted by: Peter Massey | 18.12.2008

Someone asked me this week what makes a great customer culture in sales in b2b. Here’s my thoughts

The fun thing about a culture is that it comprises many elements, not one thing. And it can be designed, the major point being not how great anyone element but how aligned are the elements. People go round great places and come away saying I don’t see why they’re so wonderful – often they are not stunning in one sense – but you will find by careful observation that everything is congruent ie every element of the culture, processes and behaviours, supports every other element.  I can take you thro this in more detail if it helps

My favourite customer culture in direct sales from personal experience has a couple of points to look for:

  • The sales guys talk to the engineers all the time so they have a reality, an edge. They discover arguments to make, what not to sell, who to sell to, how to sell easily. They love the support staff and work with them to help customers
  • Everything they say is relevant to the customer – they listen and they think before speaking
  • They have a huge pride in who they work with and therefore the company. They respect their leaders for doing common sense things that work.
  • They ruthlessly kick out any dumb things, however small, and won’t stand for them
  • The sales processes drive sales not paperwork
  • Sales feels like helping customers get what they want, because you can have faith it’ll get delivered properly and on time 

My favourite sales culture by story was a telco who instigated a very simple strategy. Its based on the “Find X” slide. Sales went up 35%. You can see how the customer is baked into the very simplicity of it

  • Every customer who buys, feels great at the point of purchase, feels great about their purchase and tells all their friends. At that point in time they think we’re brilliant – so how do we keep them at that high emotional point?
  • By getting them to buy more
  • How can we get them to buy more?
  • Simply ask them what they want to buy next, when it would be and how they would like us to get in touch
  • Just simply doing what they said – they’re blown away that anyone would do remember let alone keep a promise 

Food for thought. Give me a call or email  if you want to share ideas

culture, customer experience | No Comments