And so it went. But the point was this all began with conversations that I put an effort into starting. Often, I was treading on someone else’s turf. I was unwelcome. And in a big corporation, the hierarchy and structure can sometimes work to bring out an uncollaborative spirit in people. To get past this, I had to take my own ego out of it, and let those I helped look good on their own (even if I believed they wouldn’t have got there as quickly without my help – that wasn’t the point. It wasn’t about me). First and foremost, this needed to be about their success – not mine.
This never meant I was taken advantage of… well, certainly not twice anyway. You soon learn who’s less… “collaborative”, and it’s then easy to handle them once they’ve shown their hand.
Over time, my reputation in the company grew and I became a trusted advisor for many throughout the business. But this was not a quick path, and the end result was hard won. But I believe it was a better place in the end.
I’ll bet there are very, very few vendors in the CX space telling you this. For many, it’s all about the technology and how cool it looks in a demo. And I won’t lie, this is the bit that gets people excited and in the mood to buy. But, please remember – you can buy any car you like, but buying a car doesn’t make you a good driver.
It’s the same with CX measurement programs. You need to be prepared to go beyond commissioning if you want this to fly and deliver real value to your business. If you want to move beyond the sales promises, please be prepared to get involved. From my experience, it’s not something you can outsource and at times it’s less about the technology than you think.
Be cautious of anyone who tells you otherwise.
Before I go, I thought it might be fun to address a few myths to balance against the ‘truth’ as I found it when I worked… ssshhh… client side.
If you build it, they will come: oh no they won’t! No one cares how much time and effort and thought and intelligence you’ve put into the shiny new CX measurement program and its swanky metrics, complete with its cleverly integrated feedback channels and whizzy dashboards. If it doesn’t speak to them about their part of the business in a language they understand at a time when they need to hear it, then I fear you’re on a path to failure. Basically, you need to be a bit of a psychic and only tell them about critical things at just the right moment when they need to know them – or so it might often feel! None of which involves a dashboard or them reading any of your emails. Which leads me to…
It’s a CX Program, not Doctor Who: Preferably, all great CX Programs should come with the added, optional element of time travel, enabling users to make the most of hindsight – or, as it’s often sold ‘Predictive Analytics’. This is a real thing, but not as often as you’d think. Either way, there’s rarely a better way for making good decisions than spotting solid patterns in what customers have already done, combined with understanding why they think they did this drawn from feedback mechanisms. Yes, this means all future forecasting is an extrapolation of previous observations.
Telling is not the same as Communicating: a lot of CX programs fail because they mistake broadcast messages (through alerts, reports and dashboards) for communication that is received, understood and acted upon. These things are not the same, so while you certainly did tell them all about it at the time, they declined to listen to reason until it started to matter to them. Alerts and dashboards have a role to play, but don’t rely on them as much as you do your relationships around the business. From my experience, people are more inclined to listen to and learn from other people – although you do need the right technology to back this up brilliantly.