What is customer experience, anyway? What is all the hype about? Is it just one of the many trends that happen to be in vogue at the moment, but will soon disappear into oblivion?
Customer experience is the sum of all experiences that the customer has with a company. It encompasses the subjective evaluation of the customer’s experiences at various touchpoints during a customer journey.
The customer experience management strategy attempts to make these customer experiences along the customer journey better. The ultimate concern is the connection between corporate strategy and customer experience management.
Put simply, the task of a CX strategy is to establish higher prices for products and services on the market on the basis of excellent relationships and experiences.
To do this, each employee in the company must know the following:
Now, we know that it is a long journey from understanding the importance of customer experience management to implementing it. One reason for this is the many terms, methods, concepts, and technologies vying for the decision-maker’s attention and often contributing more to confusion than to orientation. For this reason, Prof. Nils Hafner of the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts and Harald Henn of Marketing Resultant developed the CEX trend radar
The CEX trend radar provides an overview of all relevant developments. It is a source of information for decision-makers that can be compiled quickly. The trend radar is based on interviews with international technology, CX, and finance experts, researchers at universities and forward-looking institutions, and public studies – and especially on in-house project experience. From the many trends, the most important technologies and instruments are prioritized according to their relevance for customer experience management.
The CEX trend radar can be used to observe trends on the basis of a solid maturity model. In additional to integrating the individual issues, it estimates the maturity of each trend within each dimension. Five maturity levels (and five stages of market establishment) are laid out:
Each trend is numbered and assigned to one of three areas: people, process, or technology. The bar’s position shows the degree of maturity the trend has currently achieved. The figure shows the example of the “CX management cockpit” in the Vision, Prototype, and Acceptance maturity levels. The circle with the numbers is a sort of slide control. It is positioned where the majority of companies currently are. Since the trend report is completed for various industries, this control can be in different places for different industries.
Let’s take a look at customer experience management using the specific issues of customer journey management and customer journey mapping. We will start with a definition. As with many terms used in conjunction with the issue of customer experience, we see a wide variety of definitions and interpretations in different publications. We understand customer journey management to be the following:
Understanding, analyzing, designing, managing, and optimizing persona-specific end-to-end customer journeys across all media and departments.
Customer journey mapping is the visualization of customer journeys (actual and target journey) from the perspective and preferences of the customer (persona-specific). In this context, user experience and customer experience are often used synonymously. We understand customer experience to be the entire experience of the customer journey. The user experience is the experience at a single touchpoint. The customer journey, not the individual touchpoint, is the relevant factor in successful differentiation on the market.
The number of touchpoints (channels customers use to communicate their concerns) is growing. Websites, apps, evaluation forums, telephone calls, and e-mails are used according to their availability and expediency. This “channel-hopping” on the part of the customer requires customer interactions to be orchestrated (customer journey orchestration), since contacts through the individual channels often occur in an uncoordinated manner within the company. Fragmented responsibility and poor documentation and storage of contact results lead to inconsistent statements, irritating the customer. Sales, marketing, and customer service are different departments within the company and thus pursue different goals. A holistic process responsibility for customer journeys (end to end) across departments with marketing and sales as internal suppliers and service providers has so far been very rare within companies, as have the associated control instruments, key indicators, and remuneration systems. Such process responsibility means a paradigm change in the organizational structure that will take a long time to complete. In practice, we observe the optimization of snippets and fragmented sections and a customer journey that falls within the responsibility of a single department. Onboarding (supporting a new customer in the initial phase of a customer relationship) and acquiring new customers in online commerce are two typical examples.
Customer journey mapping is successful and perfect when you are able to share the results with the customer and talk about them without any problem. Put another way, customer journey mapping serves less to optimize internal processes in the traditional sense than to optimize the experience from the customer’s perspective.
Internally, customer journey mapping provides a simple, self-explanatory way to show all those involved across departments what steps must be taken to optimize the customer journey.
There are no standards in customer journey mapping. Each company can (and must) decide for itself how it wishes to design its visualization, which may be detailed or rudimentary. Cosmetics are not the decisive factor. But certain ingredients are obligatory for good customer journey map content.
What makes for a good customer journey map in customer service?
Below are recommendations for issues and points that a customer journey map in customer service should contain:
Experience has shown that customer journey mapping generates many approaches to optimization. In conjunction with the corporate strategy, ideas from the customer journey mapping workshop can be converted to specific target measures. This provides a binding framework for action that will produce effective customer experience management oriented on customer expectations.