There’s little argument that customer experience is a pretty high priority for just about everyone. The reasons are myriad – competitive differentiation, increased customer satisfaction and loyalty, increased acquisition and decreased churn, greater top-line growth – the list goes on.
In a field as new as this, success means being smart in lots of ways – including finding the right experts to help you and your organization ask the right questions, learn what you need to know, and make plans to light up the capabilities, competencies and processes you’ll need to drive the very real business results customer experience improvements deliver.
Because the biggest reason to turn to outside help is performance. In fact, research by Gleanster suggests that over three-quarters of top performers (those companies that out-perform their peers when it comes to customer experience) engage outside professionals with specialized expertise in customer experience strategy, quality and improvement.
When Roger Federer, Tiger Woods or any high-performing athlete wins a match, they don’t just pop the bubbly – they head to their coaches to learn where they can do even better. Executives are no different – today, record numbers of leaders and senior managers turn to outside coaches to drive greater performance.
No matter your end goal, there are many areas a customer experience coach can help. And while we’re clearly talking about a consultant, the role of a coach is very different. They don’t do, they guide. It’s not a team performing a task, it’s an individual supporting you – as you make the hard choices, navigate the journey and guide your team to get the job done.
Some of the more common areas where executives responsible for or charged with customer experience improvement have asked for help include:
By no means is this complete. In fact, the potential for an outside expert to guide you can be as complex as a true along your customer experience transformation journey, as simple as optimizing a particular channel or group (like the call center) or somewhere between.
The point is, an objective third party – like a coach – can provides a perspective and focus that other types of organizational support simply can’t.
Today, the majority of self-described customer experience experts are really leveraging backgrounds in things like customer service, call center, training, research and other prior experiences in an attempt to create relevance in this exploding field.
But the more complex realities of creating a customer experience capability in an enterprise of any scale is something that very few have done – which means that experts who’ve “been there and done that” are truly thin on the ground.
This means you need to be clear that the person you’re hiring is a seasoned pro. Either they’re among the few who have really done this work inside a company, or they’ve explicitly guided the creation of customer experience capabilities (and proven the results) for complex organizations. This means doing your homework and making certain your needs align with the actual skills of your prospective customer experience coach.
But before you make the leap, make sure you’re willing to take action on what you learn, and that you’re willing to commit. After all, coaches are very different than cheerleaders – their job isn’t to tell you how great you are, it’s to make sure you get where you want to go. Sometimes, this means a little tough love.
And remember – the coach is just that, the coach. You’re the one who needs to actually run with the ball.