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Have you seen The Customer Experience Factbook?

In this 180+ page report, you'll find all the information and support you need to build a profitable, effective CX Improvement Program that spans every part of your business. You'll be able to implement and manage meaningful and profitable change, and grow your bottom line despite a slowing economy.

Get it on Amazon (Kindle/Print)
 

Total Customer Engagement in the Post-Digital Era

First came 'shopping', when the shopkeeper made you feel welcome. In your local shop the shopkeeper knew everyone by name and could anticipate almost any request. When asked for something new, they would listen and know for next time. But the shopkeeper who was there to service their customers gave way to other priorities, according to Felix Velarde, chairman for eCRM agency Underwired, who here examines the new future in which the customer once again surfaces as 'king'.

The next evolution of retail focused on the 'shopper' instead of mere shopping, with supermarket aisles that were set out for the customer's convenience. The idea was that by watching how customers behaved in a store, the owner could set the store out best to meet the pressing needs, putting the rarely-bought at the back or in the corners where you wouldn't get in other peoples' way while you were choosing. It was a slightly more sophisticated way to put the customer's needs at the centre of the experience.

This led to 'customer journeys', perhaps biased not in favour of the shopper but in favour of the store. Studying how customers behaved led to commercially-driven thinking about how they could be tempted to buy more, or to vary their choices. Ultimately, brands started asking for prime positions, and others created ranges to meet every conceivable need. Shopping became either a world of temptation, or an annoyance, or more convenient, depending on your value to the store. Data started to be looked at in the abstract, not the personal.

Then along came digital. It removed the shop from shopping altogether in some cases. It became a distracting obsession if I'm honest; and I speak as a digital strategist. Shops talked of the digital versus bricks and mortar future, and took fright at the thought that all industries might go the way of bookselling. FMCG brands spent serious money trying to find ways to market digitally in anticipation of the demise of the real world. It took twenty years for us to get past the notion that digital would replace shopping in shops.

But digital is not the new world. Digital did not replace real life. The digital eclair didn't win. Digital, like all great revolutions in technology, is being assimilated. We live in a world where we shop. Where the role of every medium, analogue, digital or (in the traditional sense) social, will end up just being aspects of our environment. And that presents a massive step change in the way we think of strategy as it applies to marketing to consumers.

Gone are the ideas that each channel in its place, run within and by a silo of specialists, with a channel-specific goal and vision. The silos simply have no relevance in a world where a customer journey can take in so many momentary contexts where, as more are added, the boundaries disappear and the marketing ecosphere becomes more democratic.

Appearing in sharp relief once again is the customer. The new marketer has to focus on that, because to do anything else inevitably exposes massive blind spots. We are talking about viewing marketing not as disciplines like CRM, or shopper marketing, or social, digital, outdoor, PoS, but as genuinely coherent customer engagement.

"The goals are no longer awards, or social kudos, or reducing basket abandonment (although all of these play specific parts) - the goal is coherence along the entire customer journey," concluded Velarde. "This is a new way of thinking. You can think of it as post-digital if you want to put it in (or outside) a box. The reality in our stark new consumer-centric world is a new discipline: Total Customer Engagement.


Sources: Underwired /
The Marketing Factbook.
Copyright © 2015 - 2025 The Marketing Factbook.

    Categorised as:

  • Customer Experience
  • Knowing The Customer
  • Marketing Know-How
  • Marketing Technology

Have you seen The Customer Experience Factbook?

In this 180+ page report, you'll find all the information and support you need to build a profitable, effective CX Improvement Program that spans every part of your business.

You'll be able to implement and manage meaningful and profitable change, and grow your bottom line despite a slowing economy. Grab this goldmine of easily adaptable and up-to-date strategies, walk-throughs, trends, technologies, research, suppliers and partners, plus all the supporting arguments you need to build a solid CX strategy.

While most marketers could list maybe a dozen key points for improving their brand's Customer Experience (CX), the researchers and writers at The Marketing Factbook have identified FORTY main 'CX Keys' which will help you drive your customers to new levels of delight, loyalty, advocacy and profitability.

The areas in which customers have direct contact with your organization are perhaps the most obvious places in which CX improvements can be made, and this report addresses all 24 of these 'Direct CX Keys', applicable to offline and online businesses alike.

At the same time there are many other areas that indirectly affect CX (such as the supply chain, policies and processes) in which every business can make simple but far-reaching improvements. This report guides you through the problems and solutions for all 16 of these 'Indirect CX Keys', many of which are often forgotten or under-played even in the best CX strategies.

Get it on Amazon (Kindle/Print)
 
Copyright © 2001-2025 Peter J. Clark