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Who’s accountable for ensuring that every single customer encounters a well-designed and well-executed experience – regardless of where they are in their journey? In today’s B2B world, customer experience management (CEM) often falls to the customer success team. Customer experience involves everyone’s voice.
Who’s accountable for ensuring that every single customer encounters a well-designed and well-executed experience – regardless of where they are in their journey? In today’s B2B world, customer experience management (CEM) often falls to the customer success team. Customer experience involves everyone’s voice.
In the past decade, we’ve seen the number of companies with an individual in the role of ChiefCustomerOfficer (CCO) – nicely defined by Wikipedia as “the executive responsible for the total relationship with an organization’s customers” – grow from under 100 to thousands today. Michael Lowenstein, Ph.D.,
These easy-to-use best practices provide CX leaders with the tools needed to build exemplary Voice of Customer programs that deliver ROI, turning customer feedback into gold. Many companies collect customer feedback, but very few act on what they hear. and ChiefCustomerOfficer 2.0.
However, along the way many companies have ‘processed out’ any empathy or recognition of how the experience feels for a customer. Ease and efficiency won’t make customers stick around; emotion will and they will pay for a good one.
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