This document maps out a customer's negative experience with a company's dishwasher repair/replacement process. It took months to resolve, with multiple unnecessary service visits and a lack of communication. The customer grew increasingly frustrated as the process involved misplaced records and confusion about next steps. They did not feel their problem was being properly addressed or that the company cared about providing a good experience.
2. The Experience Cycle, Hugh Dubberly http://bit.ly/qhGLuQ compelling captures imagination orienting help them navigate the world embedded become part of their lives generative promise more good things reverberating ‘you just have to try this’ connect & attract orient interactextend & retain advocate
3. notices damage, takes pictures & fills in clam form takes pictures & fills in claim form 2 weeks later no record of claim no open ticket so, you’re saying the service tech closed the ticket & since you don’t have an open ticket, you can’t do anything until you send out another tech to open a new ticket? make it to 2nd level service “only thing I can do is copy everything that’s happened into an email and send it on” why I haven’t been called back? the visit was so the service tech could give the go ahead to replace the dishwasher! 2 weeks later months (and lots of hair pulling) later brand new service shows up & asks… “why am I here? what’s wrong with the dishwasher?” We’ll replace the dishwasher. But a service tech has to give the go ahead.We’ll send one over. you’ve got to be kidding me... what a way to make me feel warm & fuzzy guess they haven’t heard of the plain English campaign I’m calling with your issue number you misplaced the insurance claim one of the service techs filed, so he has to do another visit to prepare the claim?
4. no content to enable decision making no proactive education, incorrect use dissolving rubber, mold, leaking, no troubleshooting, disenchanted service tech fail to ‘know’ me, fail to resolve issues, fail to educate during service, lost documents detract ‘you really don’t want to go through this’ M M M MM connect & attract orient interactextend & retain advocate
5. Empathy is not walking in another’s shoes. First, you must remove your own. Scott Cook, Founder Intuit
6. Statistics are merely indicators. Like numbers and gauges on the dashboard of a car. No single reading can advise on the health of the car.The gauges, along with the sound of the car itself, the handling, look and feel, and smell of burning rubber all combine to give an indication that your beloved motor may be under the weather. ~Art of Community
7. design for service???? this is service design??? journey maps promote emotional contact with insight, distilling research into a concise, visually compelling story of the customer’s experience
10. customers always have an experience (good, bad, indifferent) Managing the Total Customer Experience, MIT Sloan http://bit.ly/og9wJx
11. our emotional brain (95%) our rational brain (5%) Consciously and unconsciously filter clues and organize them into rational and emotional impressions
15. experiences processes inside out systemsmisery moments Brandon Schauer,The (Near) Future of Managing Experiences http://bit.ly/pMumzn as a result of interactions (touchpoints) with emotional resonance which happen in a specific channel are the stories you tell yourself
16.
17. Customer experience… is the full, end-to- end experience. It starts when you first hear about Amazon from a friend, and ends when you get the package in the mail and open it. Jeff Bezos
19. How to Lead the Customer Experience http://bit.ly/pbHAXX Rather than creating a set of messages and images that associate a company and its products with emotional values, experience pioneers will be focused on creating a business that delivers the brand as an experience incorporating these values.
20. connect emotionally foster sense of control build trust and relationships help people make informed decisions engage in conversation design interactions (touchpoints) that outside inmagic moments brand as experience
21. lifetime experience… from the first time they go to our web site through the last time they ever use one of our cars and decide not to be a member any more. [We] map that cycle and follow it. ~Scott Griffith, CEO Zipcar
22. We don’t do advertising any more. We just do cool stuff, it sounds a bit wanky, but that’s just the way it is. Advertising is all about achieving awareness, and we no longer need awareness. We need to become part of people’s lives and digital allows us to do that. ~Simon Pestridge, Nike UK
23. You’ve gotta start with the customer experience and work backwards to the technology. ~Steve Jobs
33. What do they HEAR? boss colleagues influencers friends What do they SEE? environment friends colleagues what work offers What do they THINK & FEEL & FEAR? what really counts major preoccupations worries & aspirations What do they SAY & DO? attitude in public appearance behavior towards others PAIN fears | frustrations | obstacles Source: XPLANE and Business Model Generation by Alexander Osterwalder GAIN wants/needs | measures of success | benefits
34. heroes aren’tVulcans people are ruled by emotion, not logic what does this do? how much does it cost? what are the features? how does this make me feel? does it provide meaning or pleasure? how will it affect me?
35. ask what value as mentor you offer your hero on their journey elder learner
37. map the story of the current journey experience audit
38. Bruce Temkin, Mapping the Customer Journey http://bit.ly/nsdsbf collect internal insights develop hypothesis research customer processes, needs, perceptions analyze customer research map the journey visually
42. Source: DCA,Victims of crime http://slidesha.re/qMsHAc Levelofsatisfaction Reporting the crime Before the trial At court After the trial NeutralPositiveNegative Police investigation Reported crime immediately. Police ‘very good’ – told him what to do and who was coming. Felt secure Identity parade. No coaching, no reassurance wouldn’t meet attacker Barrister not very confidence inspiring Drove him home - grateful, but didn’t feel like standard service Would report a crime again, because found out defendant had been held for 5 months. But court experience was a ‘waste of time’ Received call from detective Gave statement in police car – felt were ‘helping him’ Drove around looking for attacker – ‘waste of time’ as in marked car Had to go to the detective – ‘foreign territory’. Police station ‘disconcerting’ Gave formal statement. Worried whether justice would be done. Detective seemed ‘dim’. Changed the statement into his own words Phone conversations with detective – ‘kept in touch’ Called up to identify criminal on computer system seemed ‘efficient’ Identified attacker – ‘felt good, this will be straightforward’ Few days before trial, still no information on process Called Witness Service as wanted to speak to barrister. Told to arrive early on the day. Seemed ‘disorganised’ Pack from Witness Service. Personal contact became formal. No information about process ahead Case submitted to CPS. Unclear where next contact from. Had to ask detective Didn’t see barrister, and detective late In locked witness room – ‘cut off’ Little contact with anyone – only detective Didn’t go into court at all on day 1. No information on why. Lack of information most frustrating thing Witnesses have to be flexible but judges aren’t (lunch 12-1). Annoying Food terrible – had to go out Told to come back next day. Not a big problem Asked to see barrister again. Did – but he wasn’t informative Called - court room an alien situation. From a tiny room to a theatre. Everyone else in the know Judge asked if he would like to sit – only introduction Jury is a ‘sea of faces’ Accused got off Got off because he had been identified on computer system before line-up (which made evidence invalid. Police knew this was a problem, so why didn’t victim? Other reason was that a detail of appearance had changed. Frustrating, ‘knew it was him’ Only communication with detective. Happy to explain situation Detective told him ‘You should have said…’ Too late now Detective gave him background to accused: first offence, had been held since arrest. ‘Felt a bit better’ Worried attacker could come to house September March
43. MAYA Design, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, http://slidesha.re/qLhlV8 Research the customer personas
44. Identify important journeys to map actual: travel to an event transactional: apply for old age pension experiential: live in an old age home emotional: mental journey experienced over time (aging) relationship building: development of a relationship over time (Shahbazim) rite of passage: major life change (retirement)
45. Innovation through Design Thinking http://slidesha.re/q3njn7 Break the journey into stages from customer point of view
46. Travel Experiences by Christopher Tallec http://bit.ly/nLnHp8 Capture each persona’s unique experience
47. Capture the backstory that begins before you enter the stage become aware learn about it decide to learn is this working for me? first use how do I get started? build experience intermittent use become proficient it’s how I do things champion advocate to others past experience what else I’ve used Store documents in email, personal drive, and shared drive. Consult binders of procedures. Use web at home. Have a personal mobile phone for keeping in touch with family. Poor perception of enterprise apps based on prior experience.
56. What barriers & pain points block progress to the next stage value productivity simplicity convenience risk fun & image uncertainty awareness cost structural
66. Is this a potential switching moment? An explicit choice to hire or fire a solution or change a habitual behavior? Is this the right moment? Are there unmet preconditions. Better moments? MOT What are the opportunities for being proactive, relieving anxiety, combining or eliminating touchpoints, providing great recovery, or delivering a wow or breakthrough experience? How can you move them to the next stage (by reframing thinking, providing emotional cues, influencing a behavior, introducing a touchpoint, removing a touchpoint…)? What are the experience drivers? What do they value? How do they measure success? How do you measure success? insights, levers, opportunities value drivers feeling journey stage Map the task or job they’re trying to get done, problem they’re trying to solve, or need they’re trying to satisfy.Then map their interactions with you (the touchpoints) to see where they interact with your people, processes, services, content, artifacts or systems. What are their questions? How do they frame and evaluate their experience? doing thinking What emotional cues or triggers (sound, tone, visual signals, word paintings, body language, touch, smell, taste) are your touchpoints signaling? emotional cues What are their emotions & motivations throughout the experience? Map their highs & lows. What channels are they using for their interactions with you? using
76. focus on the lifetime experience… use the cars for the first time review their online billing for the first time problem on the side of the road refuel the car get into an accident ~Scott Griffith, CEO Zipcar
84. xx teachable moment delight, more value out of card opportunity to build relationships average increase of more than 10% in "Recommend to a Friend" scores
85. Mapping a Path to Better Health Care Jason Severs http://bit.ly/qRxUAg
87. what should I be watching out for? should I be concerned? visit doctor visit doctor ?
88. empowered | reassured | listened to visit doctor visit doctor monitor progress Mapping a Path to Better Health Care Jason Severs http://bit.ly/qRxUAg
89. What does the redesigned journey look like? http://slidesha.re/qMsHAc
90. think of the memories you want to evoke, then design for those memories NOT what messages to communicate or what media should carry them
91. UK Design Council http://bit.ly/pCyI6g Look for opportunities to relieve anxiety, anticipate needs, or surprise expectations
92. Ask yourself, what would make a magic moment? Where would it be? What would it involve? How would it be staged? How would it be remembered? How would it be retold? magic moment
93. then, like any good story, design a clearly articulated beginning, middle, and end for the magic moment beginning middle end
94. http://bit.ly/nFhWf0 Mapping out a wow experience We understand what is and what is not important to the customer in that experience and then we design a ‘wow’ experience to improve it. Richard Stollery, LEGO
95. What does the customer value at this moment? What adds to the experience? what could make it better? What subtracts from the experience? value plus minus magic <hear> What emotions do we want to evoke? How do we want them to feel? <see> <taste><touch> <smell> What will people remember and talk about after the experience? How will we measure the experience?What are they thinking as they begin the interaction?
105. Aaron Forth | Mint.com:Why Good User Experience and Design are Essential http://bit.ly/p0cmB7 hope, loyalty moments of self-realization that change behavior sign up insights
113. write the new journey orchestrate a series of cues designed to provoke positive emotional reactions and help a persona progress to the next stage of the journey
116. Talking with Bill Thomas http://bit.ly/pNyyFC elder 50% reduction in infections 71% drop in daily prescription-drug costs 26% lower turnover in nurses’ aides
117. instructed analysts to call the people seeking disability benefits and interview them for a half-hour to learn more about them… Leslie McMillan, Industrial Alliance complainant person with a story, wanting to move on with their life • 80% drop in spending on independent medical evaluations • settlement time fell from 8 weeks to 4 • boosted revenue by marketing higher- value disability management products • claims ending in litigation dropped from 12% to 7% • employee satisfaction shot up contract
118. economics is (now) about emotion and psychology Robert Shiller, Professor of Economics,Yale University
122. …to people (experience driven) building emotional bonds managing the customer relationship (CRM) customer value customer value designing interactions From products... Idris Mootee Customer Experience Design Talk http://slidesha.re/oyiguc
123. building emotional bonds outside-in inside-out Both outside-in… … inside-out (brand experiences) purpose, vision, brand deep understanding of customer
126. ? Who is your hero? Do you have a strong situation plot? Have you set the stage? Are emotional cues in place? Have you designed the interactions? Do you have a clear understanding of the value you create?
Do you know what your organization looks like from your customer’s perspective? In the digital age, silos and organizational bureaucracy manifest themselves through your digital presence. You can bridge these silos and overcome a bureaucratic inside-out mindset by visualizing the customer (learner, elder, citizen) experience through a customer experience journey map that captures both actual and emotional aspects of the customer experience. Then, map in hand, you can use it to write great outside-in customer experiences for your organization.
connect and attract: the initial connection with the person and using that contact to make an effective and affective impressionorient: the overview or preview of what’s available or possible, allowing exploration and supporting the early stages of learninginteract: the completion of valuable or valued activities while delighting the senses, skilling, and establishing expectations about the overall content of the encountersextend & retain: the person comes back for more as their expectations are raised – at the same time a significant level of loyalty and leverageable relationships are achievedadvocate: the person actively communicates their satisfaction to others
Delivering great experiences requires empathy – seeing what the customers sees, feeling what the customer feels. But delivering great experiences also requires deep self-awareness. Awareness of who you are as an organization, of your purpose, values, strengths and weaknesses. Awareness that you have mental maps built upon assumptions which need to be surfaced and questioned.“People discover unseen opportunities when they have a personal and empathic connection with the world around them. For individuals, that means developing the ability to walk in other people’s shoes. For companies and other large institutions, that means finding a way to bring the rest of the world inside their walls.” - DevPatnaik, Wired to Care
While audiences cannot see themselves in raw numbers and bullet points, they can see their desires and concerns reflected in the plight of your story’s “hero.” In one rhetorical stroke, the right story establishes a context for your message and a framework for its elaboration, and, most important, creates an empathetic connection between yourself and your audience. – Using Stories to Persuade, HBR
The remembering self uses story to make sense of the world. As soon as we experience something, we fit it into the story in our heads. What we keep from our experiences is a story. Therefore, when we recount a memory, we’re sharing the experience of the story we created, not the actual experience. And when we make a decision, we choose between memories of the experience of the story. The experiencing self has no voice in the choice. And what defines stories? Most of the individual moments of an experience are lost and don’t make it into the story we remember, except for changes, significant moments, and endings. Take, for example, endings. Kahneman uses colonoscopies to illustrate the importance of endings on memory. In studies that measured how much patients actually suffered (as measured by their experience at the time) versus how much did they think they suffered (based on their memories of how bad the experience was), patients that experienced more pain remembered it as less painful if the operation ended on a less painful note. They were able to give patients a better story of their experience by prolonging the operation.
Managing the Total Customer Experience, by Leonard L Berry, Lewis P. Carbone and Stephan H. Haeckel.
Diagram modified from Brandon Schauer’s The (Near) Future of Managing Experiences http://bit.ly/pMumznSystems: Companies have core systems that serve as the foundation for their efforts. The most obvious example are IT systems — WCM, ECM, ERP, accounting, CRM… But also facilities — such as real estate, architecture, and infrastructure.Procedures: The policies, processes, and business rules that provide the "logic" for how the business is run. Some of this is embedded in the systems, some of this is taught to employees.Touchpoints: The liminal spaces where engagement with customers occurs. Typically considered through channels such as in-store, call center, postal mail, or online.Interactions: The activities in which customers engage. Any business supports dozens, if not hundreds of interactions. With a bank, you can deposit money, withdraw money, write a check, pay a bill, move money between accounts, open or close accounts, apply for a loan, etc. etc.Experiences: The sum of what the customer takes away from the interactions they've had with you. A memorable event – with a beginning, middle, and end.
experience is the meaning we take away, the story we tell ourselves, the change in how we see the world
Image from Design for Service, www.designforservice.comRather than creating a set of messages and images that associate a company and its products with emotional values, experience pioneers will be focused on creating a business that delivers the brand as an experience incorporating these values. And this, we assert, is the real transformation, the real meaning, and the real potential of becoming a customer-centric business. Touchpoint are the places where process, systems, data all intersect - often the fault line between different divisions, functional, and geographic areas. Thisis the real transformation, the real meaning, and the real potential of becoming a customer-centric business. - How to Lead the Customer Experience http://bit.ly/pbHAXX
Customer experience design is taking the customer views of the interactions to understand the emotional bond between the brand and customers. It requires a common understanding of the customer journey, then align the company actions to build emotional bonds. - IdrisMootee
integrated ecosystems open up possibilities in a way that isolated touchpoints can’t
In my opinion Nike have created a customer experience where the foundations are set in health and fitness. They enable each individual to assemble the components that they need within the framework they provide to manage their own personal fitness experience. The framework is the commodity, the experience is personal. I’ve said before and I will say again, “You can’t commodotise the experience – that’s the differentiating part – it’s a personal and, at times, emotional connection between the person, the activity or interaction, and the brand”. You can however provide the framework (as a commodity) to enable the experience to happen. The Running Man, A Customer Experience Tale http://adobe.ly/oj3Ofs
Apple, A Love Note: The Power of an Ecosystem http://bit.ly/qECRka
journey as story is a tool to change your organization,business, university,libraryThe best servants of the people, like the best valets, must whisper unpleasant truths in the master's ear. It is the court fool, not the foolish courtier, whom the king can least afford to lose. - Walter Lippmann, A Preface to Politics
While audiences cannot see themselves in raw numbers and bullet points, they can see their desires and concerns reflected in the plight of your story’s “hero.” In one rhetorical stroke, the right story establishes a context for your message and a framework for its elaboration, and, most important, creates an empathetic connection between yourself and your audience.
What do they see in their environment?what does it look like? who surrounds them? who are their friends, colleagues, influencers, enemies? what types of messaging, demands, requests, influences are they exposed to daily? what problems do they encounter?What do they hear? How does the environment influence them.what do their colleagues, boss, friends say? who really influences them & how? which communication channels are influential?What do they really think and feel?what is really important (that they might not say publicly)? imagine their emotions… what moves them? keeps them up at night? what are their dreams and aspirations?What do they say and do in public?what is their attitude? what might they be telling others? think about conflicts between what they might say and what they really think and feelWhat is their pain? frustrations? obstacles standing between them and what they want or need to achieve? what risks might they fear taking?What do they gain?what do they truly want or need to achieve? how do they measure success? what are they measured on? what are some strategies they might use to achieve their goals?What’s their sacrifice to adopt your idea?What beliefs or ideals do they need to let go? How much will it cost them in time or money?What’s the perceived risk? Are there physical or emotional risks they will need to take? How will this stretch them? Who or what might they
rational: tasks, goals, preferencesemotional:emotions, context, meaning
While audiences cannot see themselves in raw numbers and bullet points, they can see their desires and concerns reflected in the plight of your story’s “hero.” In one rhetorical stroke, the right story establishes a context for your message and a framework for its elaboration, and, most important, creates an empathetic connection between yourself and your audience.
collect internal insights: surface observations and ideas about customers and their experiences, help identify sources of customer data, and get stakeholders involved earlyinternal hypothesis: document internal insights, share with stakeholders, provide framework or prototype to build out research-based mapsresearch: capture insights from all touchpoints (ethnographic studies or social media outlets)analyze the research: how customers interact, what they want from each interaction, and how they feel about each interaction todaymap: translate into simple, visual representation of customer processes, needs, and perceptions
Customer experience journey maps take into account not only what happens to a persona, but also their responses, how they feel about their experiences. By breaking down an experience into individual interactions, maps make needs and emotions easier to recognize.
Service StrategyAmtrack High Speed Rail
http://bit.ly/nLnHp8 Locating Value with Alignment Diagrams, Parson’s Journal for Information MappingFour travel experiences recording the interactions between service providers and four different users on international trips - Christopher Tallec. The touchpoints of each journey are aligned in two dimensions. Each set of color-coded touch points are located vertically between the customer action on the right and the transportation service on the left. At the same time the journeys are divided into seven stages, with the touch points aligned horizontally. By looking across the top of the diagram we can see the concentration of website, email, and phone application touchpoints in the early stages, followed by the increased reliance on signage, dynamic screens, and interaction with other people as the journeys continue.
Captura asked “How do we take what could feel like a handicapped ecommerce experience and instead make it feel like an augmentation to the in-store experience? This service map detailed the emotional journey of their online customers and the supporting features and systems we’d need to provide to ensure conversion.”
Spaces where interactions occur. Channels such as in-store, call center, email, advertising, website, product… physical, virtual, human
People’s behavior is activity focused. What are the activities in which a customer persona engages with yourorganization?Anything from viewing a marketing message, visiting a website, learning about your organization, using a product or service, or calling customer service to solvinga problem.
A possible journey across the photography eco-system. Different touchpoints that are part of the system (vertical axis) and the different actions that are supported by the system (horizontal axis). Allows a quick visualization of what is possible in terms of interaction with the different touchpoints. After that, the introduction of personas drives the representation of several specific journeys within the graph and the comprehension of the possible user scenarios.
Mood-o-gram: one person’s emotional journeyThe strength of our emotions generally corresponds to the relative importance we place on the outcome. According to appraisal theory, five factors cause us to experience an emotion or some combination of emotions:1. The change in outcome improves our situation or makes it worse.2. The new outcome is associated with a penalty or a reward.3. The new outcome is certain or just a possibility.4. The causal event is significant or powerful, and its resultant change difficult to cope with; alternatively, the event is not very significant and the changes are easy to cope with.5. You are responsible for the event and incumbent change; alternatively, an outside agency is responsible for the event and change.Appraisal theory makes it possible systematically to analyze customer-facing processes and anticipate customer emotions. We refer to the service flowcharts that describe how customers feel as “Emotionprints.”http://www.eiu.com/report_dl.asp?mode=fi&fi=817571066.PDF&rf=0
Emotional/experienceclue is anything that can be discerned, perceived or sensed — or recognized by its absence. Experience cues answer questions like: what sort of people work here? what do they care about? Highlight images, characteristics, and personalities that make the brand memorable… experience signposts create anticipation and signal arrivalrecognize and connect with customers and their affinitiesdefine experiential zones and destinationsmove you through the experiencecreate and modulate expectationssignature brand values and performance characteristicssign brand identify and build cumulative brand imagerynumber and diversity
Emotional/experience clue that reduced air-rage incidents: “It’s hard to be nasty to a girl in a sarong kebaya. Put them in pants, and passengers think they can take more abuse.” Singapore Girl - You're A Great Way To Fly Female flight attendants wear designer dresses and receive intensive training in body posture, grooming, and voice tone. The epitome of Asian grace and hospitality, the Singapore Girl been synonymous with Singapore Airlines since 1972, symbol of impeccable service standards.
Critical opportunity for good or bad brand customer experience or brand impression.
Are the touchpoint addressing motivations, answering questions, allaying concerns? Do they work for all personas?Do they address unmet needs, both functional and experiential? Are there unstated needs that provide opportunity to innovate?Are you speaking with the same tone, presenting the same personality, across all touchpoints?Are they handoff gaps in the flow between stages that cause drop-offs or dissatisfaction?Do the touchpoints differentiate your brand?
Four Things a Service Business Must Get Right, HBR, Frances X Frei. http://bit.ly/r6TbZBProgressive has shown up at the accident scene, processed the claim form and handed the insured a check -- all right at the crash site. Field adjusters are more productive. First notice of loss is processed more quickly. Cycle time is shorter, reducing exposure to litigation. Reduces exposure to litigation, its Loss Adjustment Expense, and the length of time its clients are forced to rent a car. Key to Progressive's ability to fund this service is the cost savings it ultimately yields. Normally insurance providers are subject to fraud, with criminals making claims for accidents that were staged or never happened. Because of these and other types of disputed claims, firms also incur high legal fees – which, combined with the other costs of fraud, add up to some $15 out of every $100 in insurance premiums across the industry. Since deploying its vans, Progressive has seen costs in both categories plummet. Sending a company representative to the scene pays for itself.
Progressive offers another customer convenience that many competitors have so far shied away from: giving quotes from other providers alongside its own when a potential buyer inquires about the cost of insurance. It's not that Progressive is determined to go one better than rivals to win the business. In fact, Progressive's is the lowest quote only about half the time. What Progressive does believe is that its quote is the right one given the probability of that person's getting into an accident – a probability that the insurer is best in class at determining. If indeed its quote is spot-on, then allowing a competitor to insure the customer at a lower rate is doubly effective: It frees Progressive from a money-losing proposition while burdening its competitor with the unprofitable account. Thus a level of service that looks downright altruistic to the customer actually benefits the company. This is an example of leveraging operations into a value-added service.
Progressive offers another customer convenience that many competitors have so far shied away from: giving quotes from other providers alongside its own when a potential buyer inquires about the cost of insurance. It's not that Progressive is determined to go one better than rivals to win the business. In fact, Progressive's is the lowest quote only about half the time. What Progressive does believe is that its quote is the right one given the probability of that person's getting into an accident – a probability that the insurer is best in class at determining. If indeed its quote is spot-on, then allowing a competitor to insure the customer at a lower rate is doubly effective: It frees Progressive from a money-losing proposition while burdening its competitor with the unprofitable account. Thus a level of service that looks downright altruistic to the customer actually benefits the company. This is an example of leveraging operations into a value-added service.
Peter Talks Shop with Zipcar CEO Scott Griffithhttp://bit.ly/niPBTvAlmost every conceivable customer question, problem, and need has been anticipated and addressed, creating a seamless experience that appears — to the customer — effortless. This doesn't happen by accident; it happens by design. As is often the case in life, making something look easy is very difficult.We have a culture that we’ve tried to develop that, we hope, matches the brand that we deliver; and that’s all around self-service. The design is meant to be simple in nature, elegant, and self-service focused. It starts in the company’s culture and in the DNA of our brand. We’re very serious about keeping all of our user systems very simple, but we have a group internally that we call our product group [used to be product marketing, now called experience team].
For example, we went through a major change to our billing system and to how we handle parking tickets that our members get. Our members get parking tickets all the time, and sometimes they just forget to pay them, and we have to find who was in the car; this was a big problem for a while. We resolved it through the kaizen technique. We used a kaizen on the co-pilot to see what we thought we could improve around the in-vehicle experience when people use our service. The result of another kaizen was a video that we now show. It’s an orientation video — it’s actually very funny — that’s on our web site for new members.
when people engage in activities, it triggers emotion, which means they have experiences
American Express Reinvents Its Approach to Customer Service http://bit.ly/rbo1wZIn late 2008 Jim Bush, head of worldwide service at American Express, led this charge to again reinvent the company’s approach to customer service. Bush rolled out a three-pillar enterprise strategy called Relationship Care to facilitate this transformation. “Moving forward we will create the integration of information so that we can serve the global citizen,” Bush says. “We want to be able to connect this flat world with technology and people under the common vision of delivering extraordinary care with the right margins. We have people who care. Our company is built on a heritage of service. It is something that permeates the company. It’s an incredible legacy to build from and to help support the growth of the company.”When call-center agents hear that a customer has a specific need or situation, they'll quickly explain relevant card benefits and features -- essentially marketing the card by helping customers get more value out of it. American Express customers who receive such help show an average increase of more than 10% in "Recommend to a Friend" scores. This approach -- the right message at the right place and time -- will lessen marketers' dependence on out-of-context messages delivered through vehicles such as TV ads and direct mail, and bolster marketing's role within the customer experience ecosystem.
So to inform this system, we need to move from the mental model of “sick patient” to “consumer of health products and services.”
Dr. Basch is currently working on a way for patients to become better at self-reporting by providing a vocabulary and protocol for self-reporting symptoms to the providers.
Initial considerations for experiential engagement aren’t what messages to communicate or what media should carry them. Instead, think about what could make a great 'moment': Where would it be? What would it involve? How would it be staged? How would it be remembered? How would it be retold?
About: Experience Design by Ralph Ardillhttp://bit.ly/pCyI6g How do you craft interactions, emotional cues, that allow customers to experience your brand?Customer delight can be created consciously, systematically, and reliably Reasons to increase delight it increases loyalty - which means increased revenue highly positive experiences generate highly positive word of mouth as well as increased loyalty delight dissolves price resistance Financial payoff Proactively educating customers how to avoid problems not only makes them happy but also saves you the money that would have been spent solving their problems creating delight generates word of mouth that reduces the need for marketing cross-selling and up-selling create direct revenue as well as delight five ways to increase delight enhanced product value (major association found if they tailored reason for joining to drive the content of the welcome package sent to new members, a significant % were moved from satisfied to delighted) enhanced transaction value financial delighters proactive communication creating emotional connections
For Pine and Gilmore, an experience is a memorable event. The first step toward making an experience memorable is to make it recognizable. The philosopher John Dewey wrote about this process in his classic essay “Having an Experience” (from Art as Experience). Most experiences are what Dewey called inchoate; they’re unfulfilled, with no closure. To elevate an experience from the daily stream of activity that we encounter, that experience needs to be fully formed with a clearly articulated beginning, middle and end.
LEGO improves customer loyalty, brick by brickhttp://bit.ly/nFhWf0
boundaries, spaces between, are ripe for innovation
I've never talked about Dopplr properly. And so I shall do that now. Dopplr is basically a social network for frequent travellers. But you don't have to travel that frequently. And you don't have to be a Lounge junkie either. You simply add your trips to your page and your friends can see where you'll be and when. This leads to interesting little coincidences and global bump-in-to's. It's simpler than it sounds.It shows all the traveling you did last year and wraps it up in a nice, funny, quirky, and sort of useful fashion.And perhaps most importantly it makes me feel remiss for my incompleteness. It makes me feel like I need to put all my trips in there so that next year my document will be perfect. It flicks a really interesting psychological switch. Bloody nice work http://www.crackunit.com/2009/01/21/brilliant-dopplr-annual-report-another-pdf/
Get through barrier of sign-up to insights once they’re signed up…. 2-3 minutes… make assumptions & decisions for client. Emotion of personal finances has a large impact on how Mint approaches design. A few of the most important factors have included the name, the light color tones, and framing the topic of finance in the light of ‘hope’… money not source of frustration, but hope… achieving the things you want in life. About happiness, progress in life. College education. about where you’re heading, not where you are. Take away mundane feeling of personal finance. people are trying to get education….Mint.com will also refer you to financial products that might be worthwhile. If, for instance, it knows your savings account pays only 1 percent interest, it will notify you if you can qualify for a better deal elsewhere. Mint.com earns a commission if you bite. make assumption, if confident, make a call and put transaction into bucket… do the work for them… about not giving the users their way, make assumptions,decisions and not bothering the user and asking them to spend time & energy to put things in buckets over & over again.Design for WOW moments. Add a couple of accounts. Show that are downloading transactions. Then wind up on Pie Chart (iconic symbol). People have moment of self-realization… can’t believe I exceed my beer budget again. Or I eat out so much (on twitter0> potential to change behaviors because people learn about themselves. Love to see comments cause rare moment get insight… “focus on providing insights”… once they have ability & knowledge can make decision to change if they want.Coolest feature: With one click, turn your average spending into a monthly budget -- and then adjust amounts in each category until you find a balance you can live with.
So if you aren’t sure if another restaurant meal will bust your budget, it will quickly show you how close you are to your monthly limit. Likewise, if you’re curious how much you spent on that cab ride you charged last week, you’ll find the exact amount in the merchant category. If you’re at the store and aren’t sure how much room you have beneath your credit limit, you can send a short-code text message to Mint, and it will send you the balance information for that account.
Snakes and Ladders is an analogy to a kids board game where the goal of the game is to get from start to finish. But along the route there are ladders, jumping you ahead in the game, and snakes, setting you back in the game.Using this analogy is meant to symbolize that even though there is some form of linearity in every sales/purchase process, it is not constant. Sometimes you jump far ahead, but suddenly something affects the process and you are taken back again to a previous state. Mark Caris and Alex Barclay, Stephan Philips Snake and ladders, desires and needs http://bit.ly/oMIzxO
loyalty evolves from great experiences and emotional connections that happen over time... the stories people remember- Action Based Loyalty. This is measuring the activity of repeat purchase. But! Action Based Loyalty has got little to do with loyalty, because it is only concerned with the action itself, not the drivers or incentives behind it. As Lou Carbone has said “Just because I fly AIRLINE doesn’t mean I love them, I hate AIRLINE”. This is unfortunately the loyalty most often tracked and used as a success metrics by brands. - Rational loyalty. A much used technique where price, accessibility or other rational characteristics are used to create repeat purchase. An example from Norway is a retail store lowering their prices on fruits and vegetables by 20%. Very effective. But the weakness of Rational Based Loyalty is that it doesn’t stick, it is very unfaithful. You have it only as long as you are the best in the category where you aim to build your loyalty. As soon as you stop investing in it, or someone delivers an improved service, the loyalty shifts.- Affective Loyalty. This is the loyalty created by an emotional brand. By building an idea, a story around the brand and communicating this in a way that the customers finds relevant and want to engage with – in order to become participants. Affective Loyalty sticks, it lasts longer than any other form of loyalty, and it creates a unique position the brand can establish an ownership of:“Affective loyalty is the strongest form of loyalty and will be the most difficult form to compete against.” – Brand Building in Norwegian, Samuelsen, Peretz and Olsen
Branding in 2009, Part 2 Loyalty HelgeTenno http://bit.ly/qAm2DgCustomer loyalty in e-commerce: an exploration of its antecedents and consequences Srini S. Srinivasana,*, RolphAndersona, Kishore PonnavolubAccording to the study “Customer Loyalty in e-Commerce” from Drexel and McKinseythe most important aspects of e-loyalty is trust and personality. It’s not low prices, usability or a coupon. No, it’s a brands that they can count on, that helps them feel secure and informed. That goes out of its way to offer extra service. And it’s a brand with an identifiable and unique personality one can relate to.