Seven Habits of Successful Customer-Based Firms
What makes a successful customer-based initiative tick? Over the last two decades, our
consultants have spent countless hours helping companies in a wide range of industries in their
efforts to implement customer-based strategies. One of the most frequent
questions we hear is: "What do successful customer-driven companies have
in common?" In our experience, when a firm launches a successful customer-focused
initiative, it's likely to be characterized by the following traits:
1. The firm is obsessed with delivering value to customers. This
means elevating the customer experience, improving customer satisfaction, and
paying close attention to customer feedback and attitudes. The firm might
have one or more customer advisory boards and/or
deploy a customer survey in
order to capture data and
suggestions. It's also likely to seek out customer insight through
quality-improvement initiatives.
2. The firm is comfortable with long-term business results. It's
careful not to allow the push for quarterly results to overshadow
its business investment rationale or its internal operations.
3. The customer-based initiative is sponsored by senior executives. The
firm will have a specific project manager accountable and
responsible for executing the plan. And the customer-based initiative won't be
the first set of process changes the firm has managed in this way, either.
4. The firm demonstrates a commitment to the initiative by communicating its launch plan both internally and externally. As
the initiative moves forward, reporting capabilities and a vehicle to communicate successes
are crucial for building and sustaining momentum.
5. The company is unafraid to assign a completely new set of metrics to assess the incremental progress and success of the initiative. It
will use the results from customer surveys for explicitly assigning
priorities to objectives.
6. The firm actively invests in training its employees. Companies
that invest in training are much more likely to enjoy successful
customer relationships, particularly because these types of initiatives often
require the firm's people to do business in a different way. But the training
will take root easily in a culture that is centered on the concept of
constantly seeking to provide more customer value.
7. The firm identifies internal stakeholders who can act as key disseminators of the customer-based vision. The
search for stakeholders will be carried out not just among employees, but among customers as well.
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