3 Ways Your Company Should Be Customer Obsessed
Are you working for the customerâs success or are you working to increase your profits this quarter? Honestly, the answer is probably both, but the two are more interconnected than you might think through a customer-obsessed mindset.
A popular and often misunderstood buzzy catchphrase, customer obsession means building deep, long-lasting relationships with customers by putting them at the center of your business. Itâs a scalable, cultural change. It isnât a one-off good deed that lands the brand in the headlines.
Customer obsession extends beyond offering excellent customer support. It bleeds into every area of work. Donât forget to save your customers a seat at the table when considering these aspects of your business.
In the Numbers
If someone is obsessed with a celebrity, they likely know everything about him or her. A customer-obsessed company treats its customers the same way.
The easiest way to get to know your customers is through data. If youâre not already collecting data and analyzing it, you should be. To gather a holistic picture of your customers, youâll need several streams of varying types of information:
- Demographic: Who is your customer? Where do they live? How much money do they make? How many kids do they have?
- Behavior: This data comes from point-of-sale or tracking users on your website. How do they access your website? What page do they exit on? What page in the checkout process do they spend the most time on? What type of payment methods do they prefer? Do they utilize your rewards program?
- Feedback: Think things like follow-up surveys and in-person focus studies.
Numbers donât lie. The data will both back up what customers are saying and reveal what they wonât tell you outright. For example, a customer likely doesnât have the right words for explaining how your online checkout process isnât user friendly, but some well-worded questions in a follow-up survey might help them translate their thoughts.
âBeing customer-obsessed means listening to their concerns and feedback and collaborating with them,â says Nu Skin president Ryan Napierski. âCompanies cannot advance if they fail to build and sustain customersâ trust.
At Nu Skin this looks like surveying customers annually on over 52 areas of the business. The company turns this data around to better understand their customers and where Nu Skin could improve.
Collecting the data is just the first step. Being truly customer obsessed means returning to this data at every turn. The data should become a touchpoint for all decisions in every department. By doing this, customers will feel heard and understood in a way that makes them think youâre reading their minds.
In Product Development
You might think your newest idea is the greatest thing since sliced bread. But whatâs it worth if your customers donât value it? By being customer obsessed at the product development stage, youâre bringing customers in on the ground floor and innovating with them in mind. Putting them at the center means youâre thinking more about changing your customerâs life for the better instead of making another buck.
The key is to know the problem youâre solving. For a budget software, the competition isnât Quicken or Mint; itâs people with debt. Donât focus on what competing products are doing and how theyâre acquiring customers. Instead devote your creative energy to figuring out how to solve the problem for your customers. After all, when someone seeks out a product or service, theyâre looking for a solution to a problem. To offer customers products they care about means you have to know your customers as real people with everyday problems.
Amazon, an infamously customer-obsessed company, engages this process by writing a press release detailing the product, what problem it solves and why itâs a success.
âIt also forces the team to start with the customer â again, working backward â rather than a set of features,â writes Jeff Gothelf, author and organizational designer. âIt forces the team to understand the purpose of the work theyâre doing rather than just the construction and delivery aspects.â
In Customer Support
Maintaining positive customer relationships is a baseline element of good business. Customer obsession meets customer support when you are first for customer success, meaning you want the customer to solve their problem even if your product isnât the solution. Itâs a service strategy thatâs relational, not just transactional.
âThe more we understand whatâs motivating our customers at a personal level, the better weâll be able to partner with them to reach their desired outcomes,â writes Walter Rogers, CEO and CCI of Global Holdings.
Itâs important for everyone, even the CEO, to remember your customers are real people with real needs. On a practical level, this looks like rotating all levels of staff through shifts on the support desk. If the marketing team spends an afternoon answering support queries, theyâre more likely to remember the real humans they helped next time theyâre talking about promotional strategy. On the customerâs end, itâs important that they know real people are answering the phone and support chat. Do this by empowering support workers to engage with customers person-to-person by working to truly understand the problem and not just operating off a canned script.
Related, consider how customers contact you and how your team is handling requests. A quick turnaround time helps customers know theyâre important to you.
-ValueWalk
Hakan Ozturk
Founder, theCScafe.com, #1 Weekly Customer Success Newsletter
Hakan Ozturk is a Paris-based Customer Success leader with over 15 years of experience in the computer software industry. Passionate about driving growth and delivering value to strategic customers, Hakan has established himself as a trusted industry expert. As the Founder of The Customer Success CafĂ© Newsletter and TopCSjobs.com, Hakan provides valuable industry insights and daily-updated job opportunities worldwide in the field of Customer Success. Connect with Hakan to boost your career in CS and your company’s potential for massive growth.
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