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Chaos Rules, OK

Do you ask yourself any of the following:-

  • How can I cut costs and give customers a better experience
  • Is there climate change or isn’t there?
  • How do I allocate my digital marketing spend?
  • Do we give out plastic bags?
  • Is there any benefit to us in Facebook?
  • How can we compete with China on labour costs - should we use ’slave’ labour?
  • Advertising isn’t working - what about word of mouth?
  • How do I engage marketing with the call centre data - they are so busy with fluffy creative?

If so the answer is not a tactical one. It is a fundamental change in organization mindset from product marketing for mass consumption to conversational marketing to mass innovation. New ‘mutual’ marketing has three rules

  • Join in the conversation
  • The business of business is social
  • Be ‘of service’ to stakeholders

Click here for presentation from IDMF

May 12, 2008   No Comments

Don’t Ask Customers What They Want - Ask Your Staff

Lighting the way Many organizations ask customers what they want: that’s a mistake. How does the customer know? Errrrmmm I’d like that widget in pink and tuned into Radio Mars please.

Meanwhile, in HR the latest employee satisfaction survey (fashionably renamed engagement survey) shows that front line employees dislike the lack of two way communication, and a ‘them and us’ attitude by managers. Although job roles are clear, customer service is seen to have a high priority, and only 7% rate it a poor place to work.

Killing two birds with one stone

In the traditional, unconnected organization these issues might well remain unconnected. When the answer to both is the same – engage front line staff by asking them to be the voice of the customer, and involve them in product and service design. Set them free from the chains of transactional measures, and recognize their importance as insight workers. For not only do they understand what customers want – after all they deal with them day to day – but they also understand what the solutions are - because they know your business.

It may be very true that senior managers are out of touch with customer needs, but it is highly unlikely that your front line staff are!

When your service giving staff are used in this way, customer service moves from the end of the ‘make and sell’ process into the heart of the customer proposition design – and lo sales through service gets in the DNA.

(Extract from Engaging Employees the John Lewis Way more…..)

May 12, 2008   No Comments