
Why a quarter of CX staff will lose their jobs in 2020 - and how to ensure you're not one of them
byThere's no shying away from it. Predictions suggest 25% of CX pros could lose their jobs this year. How do you ensure you're part of the 75%?
Your CFO doesn’t care about your customer experience surveys. She cares about the health of your business, and it’s unlikely she sees a direct link between your survey scores and the measurements she follows.
Meanwhile, your CEO is focused on your customers, but that doesn’t mean he cares about your surveys, either. As one business leader confessed to me, “I keep seeing these survey scores saying we’re doing great. Then I meet with customers who tell me how frustrated they are. So I don’t believe in the surveys.”
By extension, that means he doesn’t believe in his CX team.
If you're just focusing on customers scores, you’re at risk. Forrester predicts that one in four CX pros will lose their jobs in the year ahead, because they aren’t showing business impact.
Measurements beat metrics
Metrics are survey scores – that’s what customer experience focuses on. We’re really into them. They’re nice and neat, and easier to collect.
Measurements are what the business cares about. But they are trapped in operational systems, making them messy and hard to nail down. Lost customers, reorder rates, order size, service costs, repeat business – those are all measurements with financial impact.
That’s where you grab your CFO’s interest. You’re at risk if you don’t tie your programme into these measurements.
The evolution of CX’s trouble
I see this story played out repeatedly. A customer-focused leader introduces the concept of customer experience to the organisation and builds a CX team. She believes in the power of CX, and the team puts together a survey system and introduces the Net Promoter Score (NPS) system or the Customer Effort Score to the company. All is right in the world.
Until that leader moves on. That’s when things get dicey.
The new boss isn’t steeped in CX philosophy. So she asks a simple question: “How does this impact the business?” And CX struggles to respond in a compelling way.
This happened to a friend of mine. Her boss was terrific, sharing the CX story throughout the company. She loved working for him. Then his position was eliminated.
His replacement met with her still-new team and shared that he didn’t really understand what they did. Furthermore, he said, “So, you have insights – so what? What are you doing to drive the business?”
Suddenly, my friend and her team were at risk of being among that 1 in 4.
You’re at risk if you don’t tie your programme into measurements with financial impact.
How do you ensure you’re one of the 3 in 4 who will keep their jobs?
Or, better yet, how can you become one of the 25% of companies that are able to quantify CX benefits or achieve a competitive edge?
One way that we’ve seen work well is loosely based on the research shared in our book, How Hard Is It to Be Your Customer? Using Journey Mapping to Drive Customer-Focused Change. My co-author Nicole recently addressed this topic here, too. To do this:
- Understand what the business cares about. Look for the measurements that matter and find a meaty business problem you can attack.
- Identify a journey and customer that impacts that measurement. Start with a journey, because since it involves multiple silos, it likely involves handoffs, a common source of customer friction. It’s also easier to impact than the entire end-to-end experience, as I discussed here. One phrase that came up repeatedly when we interviewed successful CX leaders for our book was “boiling the ocean.” Avoid that pitfall by choosing a focused journey. Identify a clear business problem, then rally your leadership to conquer it.
- Form a team that can create CX impact, as we discussed here and here. Involve every silo that touches the journey, including back-end teams such as IT, Finance, and Legal.
- Involve customers to learn what’s really driving their experience, so you truly understand what’s causing the lost business or low reorder rates. And remember – you can’t create a customer journey map if you don’t involve customers in the process.
- Identify the measurements that matter in the journey. You may have started with a high-level measurement, but you’ll discover many more, such as wait time, number of interactions, and handoffs. Track these as you…
- Drive change. Identify what most needs to change and rally your teams around these problems.
- Don’t forget to record the CX impact you’re having on those business measurements!
It’s the last part that will keep you out of that 1 in 4 at risk – showing how you’re actually impacting the business. And then bring that back to your CFO, so she can validate that you’re truly driving value.
Customer experience has a tremendous ability to impact your business – there’s no shortage of data to demonstrate that on a macro scale. But that doesn’t give you a blank check. You need to show your CX impact if you want to continue to drive change.
This post Why 1 in 4 of You Will Lose Your Job in 2020, originally appeared on heartofthecustomer.com.
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Jim Tincher, CCXP, is a nationally recognized customer experience expert, journey mapper, author, speaker, and entrepreneur.
Heart of the Customer, the cutting-edge CX consultancy he founded, empowers companies to achieve sustainable growth, reduce costs, and increase revenue by driving customer-focused change, improving customer loyalty...
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Jim, you are absolutely correct... in the customer service business, metrics of surveys have been the focus. However, a high NPS score doesn't always align with or guarantee customer loyalty or increased market share. Successful and sustainable company divisions, departments and teams align with company strategy and drive financial impact. Customer Service departments can't be any different.