• Can You Hear Me Now? Learning from Customer Stories

    A large business generally knows its customers through quantitative analyses and summary reports, which are staples of market research and corporate reporting. Too often, the voices of individual customers are muffled by a torrent of numbers, and the stories they would tell are garbled. Few managers and even fewer executives hear customers speak, in their own words and ways, about the company's products and services. Yet, as we discuss, these stories may suggest enhanced customer service, better products, and organizational innovation; indeed, a number of companies have shown that the value of attentiveness to customer stories can be great. Herein, we describe a controlled, exploratory approach a company might take to develop its own engagement with customer storytelling-one that encompasses not only its interactions with customers along the front line, but also conversations ongoing in social media. Our proposal demands sustained commitment from senior management. We counsel senior executives to lead by example, to listen to customer stories, to learn from them, and to share them with others in the executive suite. By truly caring about storytelling, business leaders can better serve their customers and their companies.
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  • Once More, With Feeling: Empathy and Technology in Customer Care

    Information technology is reshaping relationships between companies and customers, often bringing benefits to both. The unfettered use of technology, however, can erode customer care. For a company to care for customers, its managers and front-line employees must listen empathetically to what they have to say. But a rash of 'innovations' aimed primarily at reducing costs has made many companies opaque to their customers, who are-as a consequence-inadequately served and increasingly frustrated. Equally damaging is the resulting estrangement of employees from customers, a separation that dampens the empathy upon which true care for customers depends. As a number of innovative companies have shown, though, technology need not necessarily sour relations between businesses and those they serve. Indeed, technology can actually enrich them if senior managers (1) affirm their commitment to active, empathetic involvement with customers; (2) understand the ways in which current procedures and systems mediate interactions with customers; and (3) promote the deployment of social networks and other technologies to help customers tell their stories, and to enable workers and managers alike to hear them. Only when employees can step into their customers' shoes can companies add authenticity to the claim: "We care for you."
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  • Linking Actions to Profits in Strategic Decision Making

    This is an MIT Sloan Management Review article. Although the concept is not new, profitability modeling, to date, has been limited to individual departments or business functions. Although firms develop models that are more comprehensive and cross-functional, these efforts are sporadic, relatively expensive, and time consuming. More companies might attempt this kind of modeling if they had an explicit framework and procedure for establishing links to guide them. Marc Epstein and Robert Westbrook, professors at Rice University's Jones Graduate School of Management, have studied companies' efforts to develop models that link action to profit and have devised a general model that managers can use to link any departmental action to overall corporate profitability. By customizing their general model, firms can more quickly arrive at specific links between an action and its impact on profitability. The action-profit linkage model helps managers identify and measure key drivers of business success and profit, develop causal links among them, and estimate the impact of actions to bring them about. This process forces managers to narrow their strategies to the areas with the highest payoff. Attention shifts from a preoccupation with individual performance metrics to an awareness of how those metrics work as a system and how they lead to increased profit and more shareholder value. The process of getting to the final model is valuable because managers gain tremendous insight into how their organizations' various metrics interrelate. The model also fosters a common management focus on the variables that matter most in achieving success. More importantly, it helps develop disciplined thinking about profit drivers by tracing them through the customer, the product offering and, ultimately, the company's actions.
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