CRM - March 2008 - (Page 12) REALITY CHECK BY DENIS POMBRIANT The Longitude of Experience Reconsidering the life cycle of customer interaction N O T L O N G A G O , I had the pleasure of speaking with Joe Pine. If that name sounds familiar but you can’t quite place it, that’s probably because Pine’s name is often paired with James Gilmore’s on book covers. The Experience Economy is one example—you probably know that book had a lot of influence on the CRM industry in recent years. These days, you can’t swing the proverbial dead cat in the CRM world without hitting the notion of customer experience and associated ideas such as customer centricity. In several conversations recently, Pine and I discussed the life cycle of an idea in the marketplace—specifically how, through use and interpretation, an idea can be molded and sometimes distorted beyond its original meaning. We were talking about the customer experience and here’s part of what Pine said: “So many folks who claim to have read The Experience Economy missed—or act and talk as if they missed—the main MANY OF US NEED TO COME TO TERMS WITH THE FACT THAT NOT EVERY ENCOUNTER NEEDS TO BE A STAGED AND TRANSFORMATIVE EXPERIENCE. thesis: that experiences are a distinct economic offering, as distinct from services as services are from goods.” He went on to clarify that statement: “So many glom on to the language of ‘customer experience’ or ‘experiential marketing’ rather than truly design and stage experience output.” In many cases, we have opted to think of the customer experience as the de facto result of an interaction: You can’t help but have an opinion of that interaction—your “experience”—so a vendor tries to ensure that the opinion is a positive one. A lot of vendors try to cookie-cut this or that customer experience to make it predictably wonderful— only to follow up with inane customer service surveys that ask such questions as, “Was your call answered instantly/within so many rings?” This would seem to violate the central idea that experiences are distinct and staged uniquely for customers. 12 CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT | MARCH 2008 To a degree, every vendor needs to have standards against which performance should be measured. How else can anyone hope to improve? But dragging customer experience into that mix simply degrades the idea and potentially leaves the customer feeling cheated because she wanted more—a real experience. But we need to refocus on what it truly means to stage a real experience: Many of us need to come to terms with the fact that not every encounter needs to be a staged and transformative experience. Many of the examples provided by Pine and Gilmore were taken from a retail perspective—a restaurant, for example, or a theme park, places where you spend a specific amount of time for a specific purpose. The idea here is to stage a discrete experience that will resonate with the customer for a long time, even after the customer goes home. Think of it longitudinally: Over the long haul, experience takes on a different meaning. In fact, in everyday life, that’s how customer experience is built up: through the slow accretion of (hopefully) mostly positive encounters. The courteous help you receive from customer service might not remind you of the exhilaration you felt when you made the initial purchase, but taken together with many similar interactions—or experiences—it will go a long way toward making you a repeat buyer. This “drip” experience is much closer to real life than any one-time experience found at a theme park, no matter how memorable. Pine and Gilmore recently took their ideas further with a new book, Authenticity: What Customers Really Want, which deals with the difference between what’s fake and what’s real. (See Required Reading, November 2007, page 17.) In the reality outlined by the book, everything is “fake, fake, fake”; only the human mind can determine what’s authentic. So how do you achieve authenticity? The ideas of experience and authenticity nicely dovetail. Pine says a company or an offering achieves authenticity by “being true to itself, and being what it says it is to others.” All the more reason to reconsider what we mean when we talk about the customer experience. Denis Pombriant is the founder and managing principal of Beagle Research Group, a CRM market research firm and consultancy. He can be reached at denis.pombriant@beagleresearch.com. www.destinationCRM.com http://www.destinationCRM.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of CRM - March 2008 CRM - March 2008 Contents Front Office Feedback Reality Check Customer Centricity The Tipping Point Re-shoring Contact Centers NetSuite’s Sweet Ride Takes Another Turn SaaS X.0? destinationCRM Dashboard Retailers Dream Big Detroit: Driven to Distraction Required Reading The Markets Within the Masses In Search of... Selling CRM to Your Sales Force Quixtar’s Quick Fix Travelocity’s New Traveling Companion Chasing Down First-Call Resolution Governing Better Marketing Secret of My Success Re: Tooling Connect Pint of View CRM - March 2008 CRM - March 2008 - CRM - March 2008 (Page Cover1) CRM - March 2008 - CRM - March 2008 (Page Cover2) CRM - March 2008 - Contents (Page 3) CRM - March 2008 - Contents (Page 4) CRM - March 2008 - Contents (Page 5) CRM - March 2008 - Contents (Page 6) CRM - March 2008 - Contents (Page 7) CRM - March 2008 - Front Office (Page 8) CRM - March 2008 - Front Office (Page 9) CRM - March 2008 - Feedback (Page 10) CRM - March 2008 - Feedback (Page 11) CRM - March 2008 - Reality Check (Page 12) CRM - March 2008 - Reality Check (Page 13) CRM - March 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 14) CRM - March 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 15) CRM - March 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 16) CRM - March 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 17) CRM - March 2008 - Re-shoring Contact Centers (Page 18) CRM - March 2008 - NetSuite’s Sweet Ride Takes Another Turn (Page 19) CRM - March 2008 - destinationCRM Dashboard (Page 20) CRM - March 2008 - Retailers Dream Big (Page 21) CRM - March 2008 - Detroit: Driven to Distraction (Page 22) CRM - March 2008 - Required Reading (Page 23) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 24) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 25) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 26) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E1) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E2) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E3) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E4) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E5) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E6) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E7) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E8) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E9) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E10) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E11) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page E12) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 27) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 28) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 29) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 30) CRM - March 2008 - The Markets Within the Masses (Page 31) CRM - March 2008 - In Search of... (Page 32) CRM - March 2008 - In Search of... (Page 33) CRM - March 2008 - In Search of... (Page 34) CRM - March 2008 - In Search of... (Page 35) CRM - March 2008 - In Search of... (Page 36) CRM - March 2008 - In Search of... (Page 37) CRM - March 2008 - Selling CRM to Your Sales Force (Page 38) CRM - March 2008 - Selling CRM to Your Sales Force (Page 39) CRM - March 2008 - Selling CRM to Your Sales Force (Page 40) CRM - March 2008 - Selling CRM to Your Sales Force (Page 41) CRM - March 2008 - Selling CRM to Your Sales Force (Page 42) CRM - March 2008 - Travelocity’s New Traveling Companion (Page 43) CRM - March 2008 - Chasing Down First-Call Resolution (Page 44) CRM - March 2008 - Governing Better Marketing (Page 45) CRM - March 2008 - Secret of My Success (Page 46) CRM - March 2008 - Re: Tooling (Page 47) CRM - March 2008 - Connect (Page 48) CRM - March 2008 - Connect (Page 49) CRM - March 2008 - Pint of View (Page 50) CRM - March 2008 - Pint of View (Page Cover3) CRM - March 2008 - Pint of View (Page Cover4)
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