"Expecting A Different Result?" (2 of 3 in 'No Customer Left Behind' Series)
- by Kathryn Perry
A guest post by David Vap, Group Vice President, Oracle Applications Product 
Development
  Many companies already have some type of customer experience initiative in 
process or one that could be framed as such. The challenge is that the 
initiatives too often are started in a department silo, don't have the right 
level of executive sponsorship, or have been initiated without the necessary 
insight and strategic business alignment.
 
  You can't keep doing the same things, give it a customer experience name, and 
expect a different result. You can't continue to just compete on price or 
features - that is not sustainable in commoditized markets. And ultimately, 
investing in technology alone doesn't solve customer experience problems; it 
just adds to the complexity of them. 
 
  You need a customer experience strategy and approach on how to execute a 
customer-centric worldview within your business.
 
  To develop this, you must take an outside in journey on how your customers 
are interacting with your business to establish a benchmark of your customers' 
experiences. Then you must get cross-functional alignment on what you are trying 
to achieve, near, mid, and long term. 
 
  Your execution of that strategy should be based on a customer experience 
approach:
 
   
    Understand your customer: You need to capture the insights across 
interactions, channels (including social), and personas to better understand 
whom to serve, how to serve them, and when to serve them. Not all experiences or 
customers are equal, so leverage this insight to understand the strategic 
business objectives you need to address. Then determine which experiences can be 
improved immediately and which over time to get the result you need. 
    Empower your ecosystem: You need to align your front-line employees 
with your strategy and give them the power, insight, and tools that allow them 
to cultivate a culture around strengthening the relationships with your 
customers. You also need to provide the transparency, access, and collaboration 
that enable your customers and partners to self serve and self solve and to 
share with ease. 
    Adapt your business: You need to enable the discipline of agility 
within your organization and infrastructure so that you can innovate, tailor, 
and personalize experiences. This needs to be done both reactively from insight 
and proactively in real time so you can stay ahead of shifting market trends and 
evolving consumer behaviors. 
   
  No longer will the old approaches provide the same returns. To compete, 
differentiate, and win in a world where the customer has the power, you must 
execute a strategy that is sure to deliver a better brand experience for your 
customers.
 
  Note: This is Part 2 in a three-part series. Part 1 is here. Stop back for 
Part 3 on November 28.