100 Practical Ways to Improve Customer Experience : Achieve End-To-End Customer Engagement in a Multichannel World.
by
 
Newman, Martin.

ISBN
9780749482688

Title
100 Practical Ways to Improve Customer Experience : Achieve End-To-End Customer Engagement in a Multichannel World.

Author
Newman, Martin.

Personal Author
Newman, Martin.

Physical Description
1 online resource (305 pages)

Contents
Cover -- Contents -- About the Author -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- 01 Put the customer first: if you don't, someone else will -- The web changed everything, for ever -- Always start with the customer. Otherwise, how can you possibly know what you need to do to be successful? -- If you can't beat them, join them: it's okay to mimic successful businesses -- Think of yourself as a customer service business that just happens to sell stuff -- Think customer empowerment: what can you do at every step of the way to truly empower your customers? -- Always empower your staff to deliver the right experience for customers -- Over to Professor Malcolm McDonald -- References -- 02 Marketplaces and disruptors are eating your lunch (taking your market share) -- Let's start with the threat element -- How not to respond to the threat of Amazon and other marketplaces -- FMCG and CPG brands find new routes to market -- Exclusive products can help you to defend your position -- Listen to the voice of the customer -- Don't cut off your nose to spite your face: marketplaces are an effective route to market -- Deliver a seamless multichannel experience -- Consider offering an Amazon Prime-type delivery proposition -- Keep your friends close and your enemies closer -- Over to Professor Malcolm McDonald -- References -- 03 Removing friction from the customer's journey: getting the basics right in travel, retail, food and beverage, leisure and financial services -- The pace of change and disruption is astonishing -- Let's start with the travel and holiday sector -- Automotive sector -- Health and leisure sector -- Food and beverage sector -- Newspaper and media sector -- Utilities and telco sectors - the next to be disrupted? -- Walk through the customer's journey - regularly -- Rethink your customer value proposition -- Adopt customer-facing KPIs.
 
Learn from other verticals -- Train your colleagues to remove friction from the customer's path to purchase -- Over to Professor Malcolm McDonald -- References -- 04 How to be disruptive in your own business -- Disrupt to improve -- Always start with ensuring you get the basics right -- Let customers help define how you might improve things for them -- Leverage disruptive thinking to drive innovation -- Become an agile business -- Create a culture of innovation -- Over to Professor Malcolm McDonald -- References -- 05 The role of the store and its new footprint -- The role of the store -- From Apple to M&S: instore experiences are polarizing -- Stores: to be or not to be, that is the question -- Think acquisition, conversion and retention -- Continually review how you might remove friction for the customer through all channels and touchpoints -- Think about how you merchandise and provide discovery and access to products -- Leverage digital technology in the changing room to drive sales -- Use mobile tills to remove friction and drive engagement at the point of sale -- Capture Net Promoter Scores instore (and through all channels) -- Drive product and brand immersion -- Extend your range and offer through the endless aisle -- Add more benefits to customers above simple points-based loyalty -- Over to Professor Malcolm McDonald -- References -- 06 We live in a hyper-local world where mobile is key -- Always think mobile first -- Balance the approach to apps versus mobile web -- Leverage iBeacons and free Wi-Fi to drive engagement instore -- Review our best-practice checklist for apps -- Plan for conversational commerce -- Over to Professor Malcolm McDonald -- References -- 07 Organizational design to put the customer first -- So, who actually owns the customer? -- The case for change -- How embedded in the business does digital need to become?.
 
Digital transformation of the organization -- Prioritizing teams for digital upskilling -- The siloed state of play -- The roles required to drive change -- Develop new roles that can help drive customer-centricity -- Give someone ownership of the customer and their experience, and crucially the mandate to deliver the change required to become a customer-first business -- Create a customer-first culture throughout the entire business -- Create a cross-functional team with accountability for delivering customer first -- Adopt a two-tier organizational structure in areas such as IT - one focused on BAU, one on the road map for new developments -- Ensure you have a leader who understands what putting the customer first really means -- Over to Professor Malcolm McDonald -- References -- 08 Cultural change - must be top down and bottom up -- The importance of culture -- Defining culture -- The cultural shift from a digital perspective -- A truly customer-centric culture and ethos -- Use the 6Vs framework to develop your customer-first business culture -- Surprise and delight customers -- Lead by example: culture comes from the top -- Create a cross-functional team to ensure your culture is maintained -- Always be fully transparent with customers -- Develop a marketing plan to communicate your culture to both external and internal customers -- Culture eats strategy for breakfast - never forget that -- Over to Professor Malcolm McDonald -- References -- 09 Less about corporate, more about social responsibility -- Retailers must get their act together -- Millennials' priorities and how big brands are meeting them -- It's not all about profit -- Leverage your community -- Create a long-term plan and clear objectives -- Inauthenticity can destroy a brand -- Drop the word corporate and focus on social responsibility.
 
Implement a code of conduct for colleagues, suppliers and partners -- Make purchasing decisions that put sustainable products first -- Support your local community -- Encourage your customers to take part in your CSR initiatives -- Implement an EP&L - be clear about the value of being socially responsible -- Over to Professor Malcolm McDonald -- References -- 10 Retail as a service -- Why become a service provider? -- Maintain your relevance by providing services -- Subscription is delivering a service -- Which service would work best for you? -- Can you make customers' lives easier by enabling them to pay a subscription or for auto-replenishment of big, bulky or frequently used products? -- Enable customers to interact with a live chat service online -- What services can you offer that enhance the experience of the customer buying from you? Can you help them build, install and maintain what they have purchased? -- Ensure that there is clear 'shop my way' messaging in all channels and touchpoints -- Use the service framework created -- Over to Professor Malcolm McDonald -- References -- 11 Winning the hearts and minds of customers in international markets -- Consumers are happy to buy across borders -- What are the opportunities offered up by internationalization? -- Current approaches to internationalization -- Key drivers for success -- The great mall of China -- US brands need to travel better -- Key blockers -- The 11Cs of internationalization -- Choose the right country to expand into -- Understand local market consumer behaviour -- Localize customer communication -- Localize for culture and climate -- Offer localized customer service -- Understand the value chain and proposition of your competitors -- Offer the appropriate currency and payment types -- Know what good conversion looks like and how to deliver it.
 
Consider the most appropriate channels to market -- Think localized content -- Crew: consider staff resourcing and structure for internationalization -- Determine how you will gain trust in new markets -- Over to Professor Malcolm McDonald -- References -- 12 Customer-centric marketing communications -- Growth hacking in more detail -- Capabilities and skills required in modern-day marketing -- Don't underestimate the value of viral marketing -- Proximity marketing: get closer to your customers at the 'moment of intent' -- 'See now, buy now' fuels instant gratification -- Attribution should lead to integration of teams and activity -- Ensure you have the right mix of digital and brand-building and awareness activity -- Drive the attribution of all marketing activity: ensure that you have the right mix of skills, and ideally in a more integrated and less siloed structure -- Make sure to focus on customer retention as well as acquisition -- Be clear about the customer's journey and where the owned, bought and earned touchpoints with the customer come into play and what your approach will be for each -- Think about growth hacking and how you can leverage viral marketing to more cost-effectively spread the word -- Look at leveraging proximity marketing to provide a better instore experience for customers -- Focus on experiential marketing as this will drive the engagement and involvement with your brand, products and services -- Over to Professor Malcolm McDonald -- References -- 13 A new framework for the marketing mix: the Customer Mix or 6Ws -- The '6Ws' framework -- Is the Marketing Mix still meaningful? -- Be a victim or a victor - you decide -- Introducing the Customer Mix -- Adopt the Customer Mix - live it, breathe it, integrate its approach into all that you do -- Throw away the Marketing Mix, it is 20 years past its sell-by date.
 
Focus on 'what's next' for the customer.

Local Note
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2019. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

Subject Term
Customer relations..
 
Customer services..
 
Marketing.

Added Author
McDonald, Malcolm.

Format
Electronic Resources

Electronic Access
Click here to view book

Publication Date
2018

Publication Information
London :
 
Kogan Page, Limited,
 
2018.
 
©2018.


Shelf NumberMaterial TypeCopyShelf LocationStatus
658.8121:E-BOOK11:ON-DEMANDBrowse online or request access to ebook