Mobile and desktop applications have become the new battleground for brand loyalty and, in a software-driven world where consumers are ever-more discerning about what they expect from applications, the reality is that businesses that fail to deliver a positive application experience risk losing as much as a quarter of their customer base, according to a global study commissioned by CA Technologies.
The study, entitled 'Software: the New Battleground for Brand Loyalty', surveyed 6,770 consumers and 809 business decision-makers in 18 countries to examine how each group thought various characteristics of applications impacted user experience, and how well different industries delivered on those characteristics.
Consumers identified three factors that have the biggest impact on the consumer experience:
"Consumers no longer view applications as nice-to-have novelties. They now have a huge impact on customer loyalty," said Andi Mann, vice president of strategic solutions for CA Technologies. "As businesses navigate a new, always-connected reality that produces vast amounts of ambient data, they must react by delivering a personalised, secure and engaging application experience."
Disconnected thinking
There is a disconnect, the study revealed, between how well businesses decision makers think industries are able to provide application technologies, and how well consumers believe the same industries are actually delivering. Specifically, businesses think application delivery is largely better than consumers do: a difference of 15% in financial services, and 14% each in Information and Technology and Government Administration.
The study also highlighted how applications have become a crucial meeting point between consumers and organisations. According to the survey, 49% of consumers are using applications to bank and 48% use applications to shop; and more than half of respondents say they'd be willing to use applications to perform tasks like paying taxes, managing healthcare or even voting in elections.
"In order to tap into the growth potential of the application economy, businesses and governments must make software more than just a part of their business - it must become their business," concluded Mann. "To do this, they have to let their customers lead: listen to them, understand their needs, and apply the same rigor and predictive analysis to application development and deployment as they would to determine the best location for a retail store."
Categorised as: