Adapting to cautious customers
In this webcast, panelists from our Customer & Growth teams outline steps that brands can take to better serve customers in a post-pandemic world.
Companies have a new mandate around the customer journey and rapid acceleration of digital transformation. You need the right growth strategy and the right customer experience now, next and beyond. Here are three priorities:
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Reimagine growth with a customer-centric lens
Reimagine and redesign your growth strategy by establishing a future-back vision around customer-centric growth, enabling your business to optimize customer lifetime value focus and invest in the most valuable customers and customer touchpoints including considerations on organic growth, M&A, geographic expansion and segmentation.
Eight ways to keep up with your customers during and after COVID-19
Consumer spending and behavior is changing dramatically in the face of the pandemic. If you don’t plan for the future today, you may find tomorrow’s too late.
6 May 2020 Janet Balis
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Anticipate relevance and innovate products & services
Empowered to shop wherever and however they want, customer preferences around the world are increasingly evolving e.g. toward products and services that are local, authentic, transparent, traceable, and ethical. This is forcing brands to continuously re-imagine and optimize their offering strategy and portfolio, and even develop and implement new business models and concepts, both in the current core functions or in peripheral functions to meet the evolving needs of consumers now, next and beyond.
Where does innovation at scale meet the new S-curve of growth?
A future-back approach to strategic planning will help innovative companies be at the fore of reshaping industry and customer expectations.
26 Aug 2020 Michael Kanazawa
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Personalize customer experiences and remove friction in a data-driven world
Building a strong understanding of customer needs, behavior, emotions and satisfaction and being able to quickly translate these insights through effective use of data and technology into business actions on all levels of operations and realize smart customer journeys that increase acquisition, retention, and growth is an important value driver in this time of disruption. This includes:
- Implementing customer experience (CX) measurement models and understanding customer engagement with novel methods that complement traditional ones such as net promoter scores (NPS) and customer satisfaction scores (CSAT).
- Using “design thinking”, automated orchestration of customer journeys, and personalization to deliver the best and most relevant experiences that are closely connected to customer needs.
- Designing and implementing customer-centric operating models and CX technology stacks using scaled, agile frameworks and methods.
- Shifting the business model and customer experience to digital and direct to consumer (eCommerce)
To realize a customer data-driven strategy that drives value and operational efficiency, growth leaders need to look beyond just braving the headwinds of technological debt to:
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Quantify and optimize the economic impact of customer experience investments
Growth and customer leaders need a significantly larger budget to pay for an effective data-driven strategy and customer experience, and they need to make stronger business cases and forecast return on investment (ROI) in a way that is satisfactory for the chief financial officer (CFO). 61% of marketing leaders in a recent EY survey said that they wanted to increase their spending in data and analytics.
This includes:
- Quantifying the right way to measure ROI
- Focusing on customer lifetime value
- Driving financial performance through smart and effective pricing
- Balancing short- and long-term investments and better leveraging existing investments
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Transform customer-facing functions with commercial excellence
The new market realities and evolving growth strategies are forcing marketing, sales and customer care leaders to re-evaluate how they think about their respective functions and how they need to work to drive top- and bottom-line results. Commercial excellence addresses such key issues as:
- Landing on the most efficient, effective and agile operating model, including inhouse/outsource strategies
- Structuring and incentivizing organizations correctly to drive effectiveness, productivity and cross functional collaboration, and developing the right skills and talent
- Identifying the right ecosystem of technologies to support the front lines, such as market intelligence, performance management, enterprise resource planning (ERP), CPQ, CRM
- Optimizing sales channels across field, inside, and digital sales
- Using customer care to drive revenue through better upsell/cross-sell
EY Future Consumer Index
Customers’ expectations are rapidly changing. What do they value? What will it take to serve them? How will your business adapt?
The team
How EY can help
Customer experience
When it comes to serving the customer of the future, the answers lie in being client-centric, especially in today’s world.
Read moreService leader
Customer engagement
In today’s world of empowered customers, competitive advantage shifts from being purely competing over product and price to building trust. To prosper, you need to consider a customer-centric marketing model built on unwavering trust and loyalty.
Read moreData protection and privacy
EY data protection and privacy services help organizations stay up-to-date with leading services in data security and data privacy, as well as complying with regulation in a constantly evolving threat environment and regulatory landscape.
Read moreCase study: Why people and tech are the fuel for customer-centric transformation
The benefits of the major transformation program undertaken by TNB, while working with EY, could be achieved across many other sectors.