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4 Steps to Develop Engaging New Customer Experience Strategies

4 Steps to Develop Engaging New Customer Experience Strategies

The experience a brand offers is now its key differentiator — and customers vote for great experiences with their wallets. Here are four steps to developing experiences customers want.

Tethered to smartphones and accustomed to nonstop innovation, today’s customers are more informed and less loyal than predecessors. The experience a brand offers is now its key differentiator — and customers vote for great experiences with their wallets. More than 50% of consumers have stopped buying from a company altogether because a competitor beat them on experience.

For brands that take customers’ rising experience expectations to heart, there’s an opportunity to carve out a reputation as a premium company in their industry — while achieving unparalleled business success. According to Salesforce’s State of the Connected Customer two-thirds of respondents will pay more for great customer experiences.

We know that implementing these insights might mean building (or rebuilding) your customer experience strategy and that requires input and buy-in from company stakeholders. Here are four steps to develop new customer experience strategies and earn stakeholder buy-in.

Discovery

To start, ask yourself what your brand’s typical customer experience is like now. Do you measure and analyze results against those experiences? Do you have the right technology, people, and processes to support your business and customers? The answers to these questions can help identify your needs as you develop a strategy to take customer experience to the next level. 

Scope

Whether establishing or refining customer experience strategy, bringing in new teams and perspectives will be crucial. Integrating new perspectives will take time and patience, but the benefits will be well worth it. 

Your team and stakeholders should agree on current customer experience obstacles, what you aim to improve and how to improve it — and how you’ll measure success with key performance indicators (KPIs)It should be a group endeavor to determine the scope of a new customer experience strategy. Don’t do it in isolation, stakeholders need to agree (or at least have an opportunity to voice their opinions on the strategy).

Deployment

Once you’ve set the scope and developed materials needed for the new customer experience strategy, you can start to bring all that hard work to life — make sure everything connects, works, and doesn’t break. Take the time to switch on and test new channels one at a time. Be thorough in tests.

Optimization

This is where all the work put in — developing the new customer experience strategy, bringing together the right stakeholders, planning the new customer experience initiatives, and measuring success — pays off. If you’ve created experiences that are true to your brand and resonate with customers, you will unlock new levels of customer interest and business success. 

With great customer experiences at the heart of everything your company does, you’ll stand apart from competitors, and cement a reputation as an innovative and engaging leader in your industry.

Get started on your new (or improved) customer experience strategy with tips and checklists from our new Practical Guide for Delivering Better Customer Experiences.

 

 

Kelsey Jones

Kelsey Jones is the managing editor of Search Engine Journal and also works as a marketing consultant and writer under MoxieDot, her marketing agency. She has been working in digital marketing since 2007 and journalism since 2004, gaining proficiency in social media, SEO, content marketing, PR, and web design. Kelsey has worked with and written for Yelp, Contour Living, Social Media Examiner, FitFluential, Bounty, Gazelle, and many more. Based in Kansas City, a fast-growing metro of the "Silicon Prairie," she enjoys writing and consuming all kinds of content, both in digital and tattered paperback form.

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