I’ve long been a promoter of focusing on employee experience for any brand that aspires to customer experience leadership. Today, that focus is more important than ever as changes in technology, innovation, customer and employee expectations, and competitive forces are rapidly accelerating. And these changes aren’t a sometime thing, they’re now a constant thing.
Add in AI and its impact on the future of work, and things get even more interesting. A study by OpenAI found that approximately 80% of the U.S. workforce could have at least 10% of their work tasks affected by the introduction of AI, with around 19% of workers seeing at least 50% of their tasks impacted. And we’re still early days.
Navigating changes like these requires an increasingly adaptive, digitally adept workforce in virtually every role and industry. So, how do you get and keep those employees that are best fit for your organization? There’s a reason many of our clients use negative attrition (losing employees you wish you had kept) as a key employee experience metric. After all, the cost of turnover is estimated at about half of annual salary for entry-level positions, rising to 200 percent for more senior roles. Ouch!
Companies with highly engaged employees outperform their competitors by 147 percent in earnings per share. And companies investing in EX are four times more profitable and have than those that don't. Maybe that has something to do with the fact that study after study links better employee experience to greater customer satisfaction and loyalty.
There’s a reason I use the phrase ‘Happy employees lead to happy customers.’ Because when employees feel valued, supported, and engaged, they’re more likely to provide excellent service to customers. This is one of the many reasons many companies realize that their greatest asset isn't just their product or service—it's their people.
Employee experience is all about what an employee goes through at work—the interactions employees have with you, how they feel about your organization, how loyal they are to you, and how much they’re invested in your success. It includes everything from the physical workspace and company culture to the technology and systems they use, the support they have, and the relationships they build. Just as customer experience focuses on making customers happy and loyal, employee experience aims to create a positive and engaging environment for employees.
Experience leaders excel at both customer and employee experience. This interconnection—and the value it drives—is a key reason experience-led companies focus on both CX and EX. They have among the best and happiest employees in the world, and recognize that more engaged employees are happier, stay longer, and deliver superior performance.
Just as loyal customers will stay longer and buy more from you, loyal employees will stay longer and work harder for you. The fact is, employee experience may matter more to customer experience and value than you think.
As organizations work to compete and grow, they are increasingly working to create a workplace where employees feel valued, engaged, and motivated. These leaders play a crucial role in transforming the workplace, making it a dynamic and supportive environment that not only attracts top talent but also retains and nurtures it.
Here's a look at how focusing on employee experience can you get lots of workforce — in addition to other business and financially related — benefits, including:
Companies that prioritize their workforce and the experiences they have understand that long-term success is enabled by a dedicated and loyal workforce. After all, there’s a reason that customer experience leaders are employee experience leaders, and vice versa. These companies embrace the changing role of HR as a growth driver that can contribute to the bottom line as much as marketing, or sales.
In part, this is because the people leaders and HR teams in these organizations are really good at making the financial case for better employee experience, with ROI models that make the CFO and other executive leaders happy…by clearly showing the inseparable links between employee experiences and your organization's financial and strategic outcomes.
Which raises a couple of important questions. If you’re investing in employee experience today, how can you do it better? And if you aren’t… why not?