Print.IT Reseller - issue 45 - page 18

01732 759725
18
CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE
for organisations with more than 10
employees. Certification for each additional
category or sector costs £250.
A corporate rate of £2,995 covers
membership in multiple technologies and
sectors.
Building awareness
The success of techtick will depend on
its ability to attract a sufficient number
of end users to the website. To this end,
it will also provide independent content
with advice on business technology and
the procurement process and a no-frills
directory of non-approved suppliers, so
that in areas where there is not yet an
approved reseller, users can still find
useful information. In addition, Ogden
plans to run a rolling PR and social media
programme to raise awareness in specific
market sectors.
“Our aim is to try and become known
in certain areas. For example, if you are
an education client we would provide
independent content and run groups on
LinkedIn and through social media, so you
could talk to buyers in other schools. Not
everything has to be moderated by us,”
he said.
“On the PR side, the aim is to focus
activity on certain verticals. Every two or
three months we will choose a different
vertical sector to focus on depending
on what activities are going on in the
market place. For example, in the run-up
to the BETT show, we would focus on the
education sector and produce relevant
content for buyers in schools.”
Amid mounting evidence of a
disconnect between the quality of the
customer service organisations think they
provide and what their customers actually
experience (see below), there is a clear
need for a certification scheme based on
independent client feedback. By providing
buyers with a quick and easy way to
find reputable suppliers with relevant
experience and satisfied customers,
techtick removes much of the fear,
uncertainty and doubt from the supplier
selection process. For suppliers themselves,
it provides independent validation of their
commitment to customer service and
a way to differentiate themselves from
competitors who make claims they can’t
back up.
Reality check
New report highlights gap between
business perceptions and the customer
experience
A new report from Capgemini’s
Digital Transformation Institute
highlights a positive correlation
between investment in digital
customer experience initiatives and
the satisfaction of customers and
their willingness to spend more.
Based on an international survey of
more than 3,300 consumers and 450
company executives,
The Disconnected
Customer: What digital customer
experience leaders teach us about
reconnecting with customers
highlights
a gap between how businesses and
consumers perceive the quality of their
customer experience.
For example, while 74% of businesses
describe themselves as customer-centric,
only 30% of consumers agree with this
perception.
The gap between business and
consumer perceptions is narrowest for
internet-based services, with just 12 points
between the percentage of companies who
believe themselves to be customer-centric
and the percentage of companies whose
consumers believe they are customer-
centric (68% vs 56%).
This compares to a 71-point gap for
utilities (78% vs 7%) and a 47-point gap
for retail (79% vs 32%).
The report shows that many businesses
are also over-optimistic about customers’
willingness to recommend their products
or services, measured by the Net Promoter
Score (NPS). While 90% of businesses
believe their NPS has increased by five
points in the last three years, only 54% of
consumers agree.
Businesses that invest in technology
to narrow the gap between their own
and their customers’ perceptions can look
forward to increased loyalty and business,
with 81% of consumers surveyed saying
they would increase spend in return for a
better experience. Almost one in 10 (9%)
say they would increase their spend by
more than half.
The digital experience
Capgemini argues that investment to
improve the digital experience should be
a key area of focus. Its Digital Customer
Experience (DCX) Index, which rates
business performance across 80 digital
experience attributes, shows that the
higher the DCX Index score, the greater the
willingness of consumers to spend money
with and recommend a business.
Analysis shows that for each single
point increase in the DCX Index score,
consumers would be willing to spend 0.6%
more with an organisation and the NPS
would go up by nearly five points.
Companies that closely link their
business operations with the customer
experience enjoy a 14-point NPS
advantage over those in which business
operations are not connected to the
customer experience.
Currently, just 19% of organisations
are meeting consumers’ digital experience
expectations. Those that aren’t face a
number of challenges including the rapidly
evolving technology landscape (56%);
rising consumer expectations (57%); the
difficulty of integrating disparate platforms
(38%); poor user interfaces (32%); and
a lack of dedicated customer experience
budgets (41%) and internal ownership of
the digital customer experience (35%).  
7%
14%
32%
42%
56%
30%
78%
81%
79%
67%
68%
74%
CPG
Retail
Bank Internet-Based
Services
Overall
Utility
Percentage of companies whose consumers believe they are customer centric
Percentage of companies who perceive themselves to be customer centric
Consumer and company perception of customer centricity
– by Industry
The gap
between
business
and
consumer
perceptions
is
narrowest
for
internet-
based
services
...continued
1...,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17 19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,...52
Powered by FlippingBook