Approaches to journey mapping cxpa 2106

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Approaches to Customer Experience/Journey Mapping A SuiteCX Roundtable

Transcript of Approaches to journey mapping cxpa 2106

Page 1: Approaches to journey mapping cxpa 2106

Approaches   to  Customer  Experience/Journey  Mapping

A  SuiteCX  Roundtable

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©2016  SuiteCX– Confidential

What  we  will  cover  today

•Over  the  years  we  have  been  asked   a  lot  of  questions   around  experience   and  journey  mapping.    Some  of  them   address  what  are  the  triggers  and  reasons   for  mapping,   others  speak  to  how  do  we  plan  for  it  and  what  do  we  expect   to  see.

•This  document   addresses   a  few  of  the  questions   we  have  heard  over  the  years:•What  business   aspects   can  you  address  using   journey  mapping  efforts?•What  outputs   can  be  derived  from  CJM?• Definitions   – what   IS  CJM?• Approaches  to  mapping  with  case  studies•What  skills/tools   do  you  need  to  do  this  type  of  work?• Pitfalls  to  be  aware  of  in  any  approach

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Customer  journey  mapping  often  can  help  provide  the  information  required  to  solve  many  business  problems  

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Decline   of  revenue    due  to  known  causes   such  as  

-­‐fewer  sales

-­‐less  volume

-­‐ churn

-­‐poor  retention  

-­‐ competitive  inroads

etc.

Identifying   the  reasons  for  

unknown  revenue  declines

Economic  challenges   such  as  

recession   or  disruptive   service  

models

Know  they  are  having  experience  issues   but  don’t  know  how  to  address  them:

-­‐ NPS  declines

-­‐ CSAT  declines

-­‐ Complaint  increases

C-­‐Level   challenges  to  Sales/Marketing  

or  Service  requests   for  funds  where  there   is  no  clear  business  case/value.

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Fully  understand  existing   customer  behavior  across  the  entire  experience  &  lifecycle   as  inputs  to  strategic  planning

Evolve  and  deepen   the  science   of  customer   insight    and  their  needs  through  disciplined   data  management   and  analytics   to  drive  loyalty   and  differentiated   products  and  services

Develop  360o customer   view  to  generate  actionable   insights   and  tactics  and  treat  customers   differently

Drive  increased   sustainable   strategic   opportunities   to  enhance  customer  advocacy  &  optimize   ROI

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It  also  can  be  used  for  many  strategic  purposes

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©2016  SuiteCX– Confidential

Customer  insight  to  drive  who  to  invest/divest  in,  what  needs  they  have  that  the  organization  can  meet/address  and  where  changes  need  to  occur  in  the  organization  to  deliver  upon  the  strategy

Let  you  see  exactly  the  ‘white  space’  is  and  allows  you  to  ID  the  audience’s  need.    

Provides  insights  and  detail  determine  table  stakes  and  to  define  GTM  strategy  and  prioritize  companies  development  schedule

Support  prioritization  to  highlight  what’s  most  important’  to  your  customers,  and  understand  what  creates  or  detracts  from  value  &  drives  

retention  and  advocacy

Guides  UX  insights  from  VOC/VOE  and  path  to  purchase,  critical  moments  of  truth,  listening  posts,  

conversion  points  and  other  key  design  

elements

Experience/Journey  driven  campaigns  enable  triggered,  targeted,  and  time  based  messaging,  

offers  and  engagement

Outputs/use  cases  for  CJM

Strategic  Planning

…supports   strategy  through   execution   to  build   customer  value

Precision  MarketingUX  InputsTactical  ThrustsNew  Products

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Definition:  What  Is  Customer  Journey  Mapping?

Definition

The  visual  representation   of  the  alignment  of  the  organization  to  the  customer  needs  to  create  relevant,  engaging  and  rewarding  experiences that  connect  the  brand  with  the  customer.  

• It  is  representative  of:• Where   the  customer  touches  the  brand• Where   the  brand  touches  the  customer• Where   they  interact  with  each  other• The  multiple   interaction  points  of  a  customers’  engagement  with  the  brand• Why  the  customer  is    seeking  contact)    with   the  brand• The  customer  expectations  of  their  experience   with  the  brands  

Terminology• Experiences:  The  sum  of  what   the  customer   takes  away  from  the  interactions   they've  had  with  you.  A  memorable   event  – with  a  beginning,   middle,  and   end.  • Customers  always  have  an  experience   (good,  bad,  or  indifferent)  • Interactions:   The  activities  in  which  customers   engage.  Any  business   supports   dozens,   if  not  hundreds   of  interactions.    • Engagement   Points  – can  be  inbound/outbound/interactive   – human   or  automated• An  experience   point  is  where  emotions,  process,  systems,  data  all   intersect  -­‐ often  the  ‘fault  line   ‘between  the  company  and  the  customer

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What  Makes  A  Good  Journey  Map?

•A  visualization   of  customer  interactions   through  many  filters  (emotional/rational)   organized  by  the  customer’s   perspective

•A  living  document   that  evolves  with  the  constantly   changing   organization   it  supports  

•A  harmonized   reflection   of  the  Voice  of  the  Customer   as  well  as  the  Company  and  the  Employee

•Art  meets   science  with  a  dash  of  chemistry

•At  a  level  of  detail   that  makes   sense  for  the  purpose

Inspiration  to  consider

Discovery

DesignPurchase,  

Deployment

Relationship

Advocacy

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We  have  found  that  the  personality  of  a  company  often  influences  approach!

•Companies   accustomed   to  detail  and  rigor   in  their  approaches   to  strategy,   technology   and  execution   tend   to  do  more   rigorous   mapping• Tend   to  have  six  sigma  “DNA”   and   Oversight/Governance   teams• Their  approach   tends   to  lean   towards  collecting  ALL  of  their   interactions,   fleshing   them  out  with  data,  emotional   elements,  pain  points,   moments   of  truth  etc.• Then  they  map   story  lines  or  processes   to  determine  gaps  or  opportunities• Have  clear  ‘questions’   they  are  asking   – hypothesis   based   -­‐ Want   clear  outcomes• Like  grids/swim   lanes  (touchpoints)• Telco,  Financial,   Insurance,   Manufacturing   (B2B),  High  Tech  tend   to  fall   into  this  group

•Brand  driven   or  more   ‘emotional’  • Tend   to  have  agency  driven   ‘persona’   driven  story's  driving   their  marketing•Want   to  visualize  quickly  and   then   identify  areas  of   interest• Stories   lead  you   to  ideas/innovation• Often  have   to  back  up  and  pull   in  data   to  move   forward• Outcomes  not  as  clearly  articulated• Like  workshops   and   fast  answers  (sticky  notes)• CPG,  Pharma,   start-­‐ups   tend  to  fall  into  this  group

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Typical  project  approach  for  customer  journey  mapping

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Customer  Experience   Improvement   Strategy

Organizational  Change  

Map

Design  frameworkPlot  customer  interactions  on  map;  

refine  &  validateOverlay  metrics,  customer  data  &  

collateral

10-­20  Days* 25-­30  Days* 15-­20  Days*

Part  1    Current  state  

Part  2    Experience   Mapping

Part  3  Recommendations

*  Typical  work  effort  will  vary  based  on  scope  with  lag  time  for  rounds  of  review

Plan•Set  the  Scope•Understand  the  objectives•Ensure  resources

Gather•Interview•Capture  data,  artifacts,  documents•Ethnographic  research•Segmentation

Map•Design  framework•Plot  customer  interactions  on  map;  refine  &  validate•Overlay  metrics,  customer  data  &  collateral

Outputs•Ideation•Deep  Drills•Prioritization  •Validation

Roadmap•Bucket  prioritized  into  Initiatives•Recommendations  Roadmap

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©2016  SuiteCX– Confidential

But  there  is  so  much  more  to  an  ‘approach’

Experience  Design

PAIN

 OR  O

BJECTIVE

STRATEG

Y  OR  N

EW  PRODUCT

Approaches

UX  vs.  CX

Methodologies

Company  Personalities

Application

Consultancy/Marketin

g  Service  Providers

Agency

Map  All  Touches  –

Hypothesis  B

ased/Plann

ing

Quick  Fire/Problem

 Solving/Story/Decision  Sciences

Six  Sigm

a/UX  /Data  An

d  Evidence  Based  

Emotional/Persona/CX/Ethnographic  Based

Six  Sigm

a/UX/System

s  Design/SD

LC

Agile

Campaigns/W

eb  Design/

Tech  Use  Cases

Brand  Ads/Digital/Social/

Campaign  Briefs

Fast  Paced/Good  

Enough/Non-­‐traditional

Detail  O

riented/  

Conservative

Typical  ‘coaches’Drivers

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©2016  SuiteCX– Confidential

Approach  – Research  based  – Deep  and  Wide  Use  Case  -­‐ Driving  to  resolve  issues

Objectives• Got  a  pain  point  ?  Calls  for  an  inch  wide    -­‐ mile  deep  to  flesh  out  the  pain  points,  moments  of  truth  and  then  convert  to  processes  or  comparisons  of  front  stage/back  stage

Approach  – Drill  down• ID  every  touch  you  can  find  &  Identify  Marketing  Assets  &  Collateral  – content,  tools,  programs,  creative  and  annotate  with  MOT,  Pain  Points,  Data  etc.• Pinpoint  “Gaps  &  Overlaps”• Identify  and  document  Potential  Problems  or  Weaknesses   -­‐ missing  or  inaccessible   data,  channel   silos,  organizational  barriers

Outcomes• Specific   findings/recommendations   at  a  granular  level• Actionable  opportunities• Sufficient  depth  to  share/act  upon  with  others

Next  Steps• Augment  with  Audience   user  research  and  mystery  shopping  • Pull  in  as  much  performance  data  as  possible• Story  telling  process  (by  lifecycle/by   persona)  and  rolling  them  up• Front  stage  /Back  stage  stories  to  bring  to  live

Tips

• Data  driven  analysis  on  acquisition,  retention,  churn  and  key  gaps  is  critical   to  support  the  mapping  activities  with  solid  proof

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• The  company’s  commitment   to  getting  the  customer  experience  right  so  early  in  its  history,  the  company  realized  an  immediate   improvement  of  revenue  due  to  decreased  patient  drop  off.  Survey  results  showed  improvement  in  comments  around  the  patient  experience,  and  patient  referrals  were  on  the  rise.

• Implemented   a  marketing  automation  tool  was  selected   to  help  manage  the  new  comprehensive  segmentation  and  contact  strategy  across  lifecycle  stages  as  well  as  at  key  moments  of  truth.

• SuiteCX  was  the  repository  of  record  for  the  customer  experience,  enabling  East  Bay  Group  and  JumpstartMD  management  to:  

• Conduct  company-­‐wide  diagnostic  with  patient,  employee,  and  institutional  inputs• Create  customer  journey  maps  fully  understand  the  patient  experience   across  all  lifecycle  

stages• Develop  initiatives  to  close  gaps  around  organization,  processes,  information  and  technology• Develop  requirements,   RFP’s  and  managed  bid  processes  for  a  marketing  automation  

solution• Develop  sales  and  marketing  training  for  patient  segmentation  and  1:1  Marketing  concepts

C HA L L E N G E   /  O P P O R TU N I T Y

R E S U LT S

A P P RO A C H   /   S O L U T I O N

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Case  StudyIdentify  reasons  for  decreased  revenue  and  retention

JumpstartMD  was  experiencing  growing  pains  as  it  expanded  across  the  huge  Bay  Area  region.  However,  the  inordinate  focus  on  acquisition  and  growth  by  expansion  left  patients  feeling  neglected.  The  company  needed  a  customer-­‐centric  data  and  marketing  automation  solution  to  better  track  and  retain  current  patients,  deliver  triggered   campaigns  and  monitor  likelihood  to  churn.  In  addition,  they  needed  drive  automation  and  consistency  across  multiple  storefronts  and  communications  channels.

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Approach  – Research  based  – Outside  inUse  Case  – Real  time  research  – CX  ‘inside’

Objectives• Wrap  your  arms  around  a  big  opportunity• Identify  table  stakes  or  benchmarks  for  strategic  advantage• Competitive  Research  – from  the  people  who  count  – your  customer  base• Calls  for  a  balance  -­‐ wide  enough  to  see  the  big  picture  and  just  deep  enough  to  flesh  out  the  key  elements  -­‐ moments  of  truth  

Approach  – Wide  first  then  some  drill  downs• Map  as  many  ‘benchmarked’  comparisons  as  possible  to  have  a  range  of  information  to  draw  from• Personas  are  great  here  – especially  if  you  are  targeting  prospect  groups  you  don’t  know  well• Pinpoint  key  moments  of  truth  – lifecycle,  friction  in  the  process,  personas  that  have  very  different  expectations• Identify  and  document  to  provide  insights  to  the  whole  organization  – when  they  are  ready  for  it• Lots  of  ‘roll  ups’  and  front  stage/back  stage  insights  so  they  can  see  a  360  view

Outcomes• ID  Actionable  opportunities• Investment  guidance  – what's  table  stakes  – what's  nice  to  have  – what  not  to  focus  on  at  all• Sufficient  depth  to  share/act  upon  with  others  

Next  Steps• Keep  augment  with  audience  user  research  and  updates• Use  story  telling  process  (by  lifecycle/by  persona)  to  create  your  own  story  and  bring  it  to  life• Keep  a  finger  on  your  competitors  pulse• Spur  your  internal  teams  on

Tips

• Mapping  by  persona  as  a  great  way  to  research  your  competitors  when  developing  a  new  product/service  for  purposes  of  driving  design,  and  UX

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©2016  SuiteCX– Confidential

• Bank  will  release  the  new  product  in  2016  with  most  of  the  CX  recommendations  intact• Key  moments  of  truth  such  as  Account  Opening  will  not  only  rival,  but  exceed  current  

competitive   best  practice• The  new  product  – and  all  future  new  products  – will  be  grounded  in  this  focus  on  CX• Bank  is  keeping  the  competitive   database  in  SuiteCX  up  to  date  to  use  for  other  Bank  

projects

• Documented  the  current  customer  experience  across  eight  banking  competitors• Mapped  the  customer  journey  from  Awareness  and  Funding  though  Account  Opening  and  

Closing• Compared  all  banks  across  four  targeted  personas  to  determine  the  pain  points  and  

moments  of  truth  for  Millennials  vs.  Baby  Boomers,  for  example  • Identified  dozens  of  opportunities  to  provide  the  best  product  offering  and    customer  

experience  from  the  moment  the  product  hits  the  market

C HA L L E N G E   /  O P P O R TU N I T Y

R E S U LT S

A P P RO A C H   /   S O L U T I O N

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Case  StudyNew  product  development  with  CX  at  its  core

Bank  was  planning  to  enter  a  new  market  for  a  state-­‐of-­‐the-­‐art  banking  service  that  needed  to  met  the  highest  standards  of  customer  experience  as  well  as  product  offering

A  fresh  approach  needed  to  be  taken  to  allow  the  bank  to  launch  the  product  with  a  competitive   advantage    but  realistically  had  to  understand  what  it  had  to  do  – table  stakes  – vs.  what  might  be  nice  to  do.

In  an  ever-­‐changing  market,  the  bank  had  to  build  a  product  that  would  be  flexible,  easy  to  use,  and  strongly  competitive  

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CX  design  =  UX  design  Or  what’s  the  difference?

•CX  design,   on  the  other  hand,   looks  at  the  entire  experience   and  requires   a  great  deal   of  business   skills• A  customer   is  any  person  getting   in  contact  with  the  brand  whether   or  not  they  may  at  some  point  use  one  or  several   products  provided  by  the  brand• The  customer’s  touch  points  with  the  brand  are  various  and  a  customer  may  become  user  of  several   different  products  or  services   at  some  point  across  her  journey.  UX  is  part  of  CX,  as  each  product  needs   to  be  user  friendly

•UX  -­‐ User   involves  a  product  that  should   be  used• Being  a  user  involves   a  product  that  should  be  used.  The  experience   surrounding  this  is  basically   limited   to  that  product,  may  it  be  an  app,  a  website,   or  a  physical   object

•The  customer   experience   as  a  whole   is  of  course   influenced   by  the  quality   of  the  experience   at  each  point  but  CX  is  especially   interested   in  the  entire   customer   journey  from  start  and  until   the  end  not  with  just  one  product

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Approach:  Fast  paced  or  agile  -­‐ Inch  deep  – mile  wideUse  Case  -­‐Taking  in  the  ‘big  picture’  to  see  opportunity

Objectives• Looking  to  drive  a  deeper  strategy  or  first  90  days  in  the  job  and  need  a  quick  diagnostic?  • CX  driven  innovation  – white  space  – new  product  development  – competitive  advantage

Approach• ID  lifecycle  phase(s)  with  the  key  interactions  you  know  about  – use  this  as  your  ongoing  framework• ID  key  touchpoints• Story-­‐tell/Map  across  department  – note  department  tends  to  expose  over/underlaps   and  waste/gaps  faster• Start  with  current  state  and  ID   findings  • Start  with  an  inch  deep  – mile  wide  to  see  where  you  might  have  issues   or  opportunities• Move  to  future  state  and  add/delete  touches  that  add/subtract  from  customer  value  equation

• Outcomes• High  level  view  for  use  in  socializing  information• High  level  action  items• Basis  for  validation  or  ongoing  research

• Next  steps• Fleshing   out  touchpoints   or  deeper  dives  into  stories  to  answer  questions   or  address  ideas• Front  stage  /Back  stage  stories  to  validate

Tips• By  mapping  inside  out  first  – how  much  are  you  spending  on  touches  your  customers  may  never  resonate  with…

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©2016  SuiteCX– Confidential

• Approved  Phase  2  implementation   of  new  programs• Phase  2  -­‐Starting  deep  dive  journeys• Phase  2  -­‐ Starting  segment   driven/journey  driven  contact  strategy

• Developed  buying  journey  through  research  and  interviews  – quick  fire  workshops  3  days  in  each  country  for  Huggies  and  Depend  Brands

• Created  views  with  MOT’s  and  likely  buying  patterns• Mapped  pre-­‐natal/first  100  days/active  toddler    purchase  cycle  based  on  journey/MOTs  

and  typical  content  consumption  and  campaigns• Survey  driven  VOC/VOE/Maturity  model   led  to  recommendations  for  

People/Process/Data/Technology  requirements

C HA L L E N G E   /  O P P O R TU N I T Y

R E S U LT S

A P P RO A C H   /   S O L U T I O N

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Case  StudyIdentify  gaps  in  CX  as  part  of  global  opportunity  analysis

KC  Global  CRM  team   needed  to  understand  the  Huggies  Brand  customer  journey  and  how  it  was  executed  globally  to  understand  gaps  in  experience

Initial  program  design  needed  to  take  in  current  and  future  state  opportunity  analysis  

Gap  assessment   led  to  a  maturity  model  assessment  with  a  plan  and  3  year  budget  for  the  Global  CRM  team  covering  Marketing  and  MarTech.

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Approach:  Blended  -­‐ start  agile  drive  deeperUse  Case  – Find  the  opportunity  – develop  an  action  plan

Objectives• Quickly   determine  where  the  best  use  of  focus/funds  might  be  • Create  actionable  approach  – do  now,  do  next,  fit  in,  do  not• Move  complex  organization  forward  -­‐ together

Approach• Diagnostic  for  a  broad  view  of  VOC,   VOE,  CX  Maturity  – ID  key  areas  for  improvement• Mystery  shop   an  story-­‐tell/map  across  properties  to  ID   CX  issues  • Develop  segments  and  supporting   personas  for  use  in  strategy  (investment)  and  tactics  (campaign  planning,  cross  sell)• Map  future  state  3  year  roadmap• Create  future  state  experiences  for  training  hospitality  teams  and  transformation• Create  CX  driven  precision  marketing

• Outcomes• Both  executives  and  part  time  teams  ‘get  it ’  at  a  level  they  can  relate  to• Up  to  800%  lift  in  campaign  response   – REALLY• 3  year  investment  plan  with  benchmarks  and  KPI’s   being  achieved

• Next  steps• Ongoing  updates  and  continuous   improvement  using  mapping  and  added  data  as  it  is  available

Tips• By  mapping  outside  in  first  – able  to  see  what  need  to  be  fixed  NOW  as  well  as  opportunities   for  future  investment

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• Using  as  a  basis  for  2015  go  to  market  strategy• Creating  lifecycle  marketing  using  new  CRM  database  and  toolkit

• Developed  journey  maps  for  top  brands  and  properties• Identified  strengths  and  weaknesses   for  each  property  across  customer  lifecycle• Created  a  lifecycle  marketing  strategy

C HA L L E N G E   /  O P P O R TU N I T Y

R E S U LT S

A P P RO A C H   /   S O L U T I O N

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Case  StudyUse  Case  – Creating  precision  marketing  strategy  to  execution

Hospitality  conglomerate  had  multiple  properties  with  different  experiences

Marketing  was  challenged  with  pulling  emotional  and  rational  information  together

In  order  to  drive  revenue  using  new  segmentation  and  marketing  platform  needed  to  understand  guest  journey

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Do  you  have  to  have  personas  to  start  mapping?No  – you  can  do  current  state  without  them  or  with  aspirational  personas  and  then  move  to  more  statistical  ones  as  you  get  the  time  to  do  that  work

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Benefits  of  segments/personas• Personas  help  you  relate  to  the  

customer  and  understand  what  they  are  thinking/doing/feeling.

• They  can  more  easily  pull  in  emotional  cues

• Display  personas  at  every   touch  point  and  highlight  the  touches  that  most  matter  to  each  persona

• Show  personas  as  they  change  over  time  from  current  state  through  transitional  stages  to  the  future  state

• If  your  objective  is  to  transform  your  experience   stories  into  campaigns  for  execution  – statistical  segments  are  highly  useful  to  target  and  engage  with  differentiation

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What  skills  and  technology  increase  the  speed  of  success  

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Robust  technology   Skills  to  bring  to  table

• Technology  allows  you  to  better  express  your  findings

• It  shortens  the  time  to  present  different  views  and  opinions

• It  doesn’t  imbue  any  knowledge  or  experience   – that  comes  from  you

• It  helps  share,  collaborate  and  present  your  insights  and  best  practices   up  and  down  the  corporate   ladder

• Keeps  the  process  alive  and  ongoing

• Strong  business  acumen

• Focus  on  innovation

• Ability  to  envision  what  the  company  needs/wants  to  achieve

• Experience   to  identify  company  best  practices

• Finger  on  the  pulse  to  ID  achievable  improvements

• Asks  the  right  questions   to  the  right  people   to  uncover  opportunities

• Open  to  surprises  and  ah  ha’s

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What  kind  of  obstacles  to  effective  journey  mapping  do  you  come  across?  

Siloed  organizational  alignmentNeed  the  full  cooperation  and  access   to  the  staff  across  the  organization   to  be  sure  the  right   information  is  collected   and  shared.Solution:  Be  as  deep  and  wide  as  possible  

No  clear  view  of  actionable  outcomesInteresting  collection   of  facts  that  are  not  actionable.   No  understanding  of  how  they  connect.Solution:  Focus  on  actionable  insights  and  the  initial  objectives.  

Mapping  processesProvides  lots  of  data  but  no  real   insight  into  the  emotions  of  the  employees  or  customers  limiting   actionable   insights.      Solution:  Be  sure  to  add  emotional  inputs,  social,  ethnographic  research  and  VOC  /VOE.  

Mapping  only  outbound  touches  you  know  about  – really  a  campaign  planDoes  not  address  the  whole  customer  experience.   Omits  initiation   points  as  well  as  feedback   loop.  Solution:  A  customer  journey  map  starts   from  the  customer’s  starting  point,  motivations,  and  desired  outcomes  rather   than  the  company’sYou  must  map  ALL   interactions  to  get  a  full  picture

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For  more  information  -­‐ SuiteCX.com@custoholic510  655-­‐6511

Thank  You  -­‐We  hope  this  clarifies  some  things  for  you  and  adds  to  your  insights  and  conversation

“Great  customer  experiences   often  exist   in  the  space   between   knowing   and  anticipating   needs.   Data  helps  with  both,  but   in  very  predictable  ways  (predictable   is  mostly   good  for  the  former,  not  the  latter).   Intuition,  on  the  other  hand,  might  as  well   be  the  most  undervalued   asset   in  business,   and  yet  is  what  makes   the  difference   between   simply   anticipating   needs  and  redefining  a  category.”        fastcompany

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About  usTeamTools

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Founding  team  members

Valerie  is  a  senior  executive  with  several  start  ups  under  her  belt.    She  has  deep  experience  in  the  CEM  space   as  well   in  developing  new  products/practices  at  companies  such  as  Pacific  Bell,  KPMG,  PwC  and  StorageTek.    Valerie’s  focus  as  CEO  is  to  be  the  main  evangelist,  cheer  leader  and  deal-­‐maker  for  suitecx.    She  has  over  25  years  experience  in  building  new  businesses  and  making  them  profitable.

Valerie  Peck,  Head  bottle  washer

Michael  Hill,  Product  Developer/CTO

Anne  Cramer,  Marketing,   Customer  Success,  Ops

Michael   is  a  passionate  technical   leader,  product/service  developer  and  technical   strategist.  Michael  has  over  25  years  of  experience  in  Technology,  Web  development,   e-­‐commerce,   CRM  solutions,    Technical  Services,  Technology  Manufacturing,  Start-­‐ups,  Government  and  Not-­‐For-­‐Profits.  His  experience  comes  from  tackling  projects   large  and  small  and  managing  teams   of  up  to  64  members  and  budgets  of  up  to  14  million;  Michael  has  delivered  many  business  critical  solutions  and  strategic  plans.

Anne  is  a  seasoned  marketer  and  management   consulting  professional.    She  has  global  experience  leading  teams  in  marketing,  diagnostics  and  journey  mapping.    Anne  has  experience  in  start-­‐ups  such  as  Kefta,  Touchpoint  Dashboard  and  UBI  Soft.    She  has  deep  training  and  coaching  experience  which  makes  her  ideal  for  the  roll  of  “Head  of  get  things  done”  Anne  is  an  accomplished  writer  and  has  published  a  significant  number  of  white  papers  and  blogs.

Darcy  specializes   in  selling  improved  customer  experience  (CX)  to  drive  bottom  line  growth.  We  enable  organizations  to  understand  their  customers  by  using  customer  experience  mapping,  market  research,  ethnographic  research,  customer  segmentation  &  analytics  to  understand  how  customers  interact  with  your  brand  thru  all  the  channels  (email,  web,  social,  call  center,  retail,  etc.)  and  across  the  customer  lifecycle.

Darcy  Bevelacqua,   VP  Sales  

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Board  and  Advisors

Martha    Rogers-­‐ Chair  – Board  of  Directors  Recognized  for  more  than  20  years  as  one  of  the  leading  authorities  on  customer-­‐focused  relationship  management  strategies,   Dr.  Martha  Rogers,  Ph.D.  is  an  acclaimed  author,  business  strategist  and  a  founding  partner  of  Peppers  &  Rogers  Group,  the  world's  premier   customer-­‐centric  consultancy.  An  adjunct  professor  at  the  Fuqua  School  of  Business  at  Duke  University,  Dr.  Rogers  is  the  co-­‐director  of  the  Duke  Center  for  Customer  Relationship  Management.  

Allen  Pennington-­‐ Board  Member  As  the  co-­‐founder  and  leader  of  the  market   leading  global  Customer  Experience   business  Mulberry  Consulting,  Alan  is  recognized  as  one  of  the  global  experts   in  the  field  of  customer  experience  mapping  and  design  and  has  been  responsible  for  the  design  and  deployment  of  customer  experience  programs  in  large  service  and  B2B  organizations  for  over  25  years,  clients  have  included  Citibank  Cards,  Emirates  Airlines,  UPS,  Aon,  Aviva,  Reed  Elsevier,  British  Council,  Mazda  and  Merrill  Lynch.    Following  the  sale  of  the  Mulberry  Consulting  business  in  2014  he  is  now  working  independently  in  the  Customer  Experience  discipline.  Since  selling  Mulberry,  Allen  has  been  advising  Suitecx  on  strategy,  partnerships,  and  sales  .  

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SuiteCX  -­‐ Customer  Experience  Diagnostic

• Voice  of  Customer  surveys   collect  current  state  customer  experience  for  key  interaction  categories

• Voice  of  Employee  surveys  balance  the  VOC  responses   and  validate  where  key  pain  points   are  occurring

• Voice  of  Institution   surveys  the  senior  staff,  who  can  see  more  strategically  what  may  be  causing  customer  pain

• Verbatims  are  pulled  in  from  open  text  questions   to  provide  color  commentary  to  back  up  the  survey  results

• A  Maturity  Model  shows   across  all  categories  how   the  company  compares  against  industry   benchmarks  and  where  the  greatest  gaps  between   good  and  bad  experience  are  occurring

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SuiteCX  -­‐ Customer  Journey  Mapping

• Inventory  grid  maps  contain  every  possible  interaction   point  (IPoint),  which  can  be  used  over  and  over  in  other  map  types

• Storytelling   maps  showcase  the  experience,   using  icons  and  color  to  provide  a  powerful  visual   customer  story

• Brainstorm  maps  look  like  butcher  paper  and  sticky  notes,  replicating   the  workshop  experience

• Front  Stage  /  Back  Stage  maps  show  what  may  be  going  on  in  the  background  while  the  customer  undergoes  a  certain  experience

• Process  Flow  diagrams  tell   the  story  with  a  more  traditional   focus  on  decision   tress,  data  stores,  etc.

• Roll  up  maps  allow  you  to  pull  many  individual   maps  into  one  location   to  tell   the  customer  story  across  the  entire   lifecycle

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SuiteCX  -­‐ Customer  Experience  Improvement  &  Planning

• Findings  and  Recommendations   are  collected  from  the  surveys  as  well  as  from  the  mapping  effort

• A  prioritization  module  allows  you  to  decide  which   initiatives  have  the  most  impact  to  customer  and  company,  as  well  as  which  are  the  most  feasible  in  terms  of  cost  and  resource  investment

• A  two-­‐by-­‐two   grid  shows  which  initiatives  were  prioritized  to  do  first,  next,   later  and  fit  in

• A  road  map  provides  a  more  linear  timeline  view  of  initiatives

• An  editable  project  charter  allows  you  to  pull  the  CX  recommendations   all  the  way  forward  to  project  planning,  budgeting  and  resource  management

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SuiteCX  -­‐ Customer  Contact  Strategy

•Communications   plans  and  paths  to  purchase   can  be  rendered  across  a  time   line

• IPoints  are  now  campaign  planning   receptacles   of  data,  assets,   business   rules  and  approval  chains

•Story  maps  now  show  multi-­‐wave  campaigns   with  all   their  requisite  touches

•Contact   strategies   can  be  planned  against   desired   customer  behaviors

•Roll  up  maps  show  campaign  results   and  statistics   over  time

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Other  Resources

•SuiteCX.com   – links  to  case  studies,   blogs,  slide   shares  etc.

•CXPA.org  – research,  blogs   and  forums

•Forrester  research  – many  good  articles   on  CJM/CEM

•Sirius  Decisions   – CJM  tool  evaluations

•Feel   free  to  contact  us!    We  enjoy  sharing   our  ideas   and  resources• [email protected][email protected][email protected][email protected][email protected]

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