Bringing True Customer Focus In To Reality
In spite of all the catchy slogans and corporate pledges, customer service levels of major corporations have only slightly improved in the last few years..
Some observers maintain that they haven’t moved at all, or
have even worsened. Virtually all organisations today claim that
they’re in the business of serving customers—but closer
inspection makes clear that their focus remains on serving
themselves.
Most businesses are consumed by task-focus; all reference to
“customer service improvement” is superficial, and typically
involves introducing training programs whose primary function is
to legislate behaviour change among employees—what workers
derisively refer to as “smile training.”
Most senior managers are not even acquainted with what a
customer-focused culture even looks like, and are not ready to
turn their own business culture inside out in order to cultivate
such a focus.
By comparison, those organisations that make customer delight a
core element—or even the main driver—of their strategic focus
will have been through massive cultural transformation to ensure
that at the customer interface, their people are empowered,
equipped, and motivated to do whatever they must to enhance the
total customer experience.
The key elements in this kind of cultural transformation are
alignment of shared goals, company values, systems and
processes, and organisational structure. The dual objective of
this kind of cultural alignment is organisational effectiveness
(doing the right things) and efficiency (doing the right things
right.)
A somewhat different philosophy is summarized on a colleague’s
coffee mug: Drink coffee, do stupid things with more energy and
faster. In the face of cultural misalignment, drinking more
coffee may help mask the reality that little of what you do will
be adding much value from the customer’s perspective.
People are at the heart of any cultural transformation. Whilst a
company’s success clearly depends upon its people, their
collective power stems, in part, from the organisation’s ability
to point them in a common direction—a shared “sense of
purpose”—and its ability to eliminate obstacles and impediments
to progress. When the organisation’s workforce and culture are
aligned with its strategic focus, people become a major source
of sustainable competitive advantage.
In an effective organisational culture, systems and processes
should follow, serve, and support—rather than control, direct,
and dictate. Central to cultural alignment is the question, "For
whose convenience is this system or process designed?" The
Organisation’s structure, as well as its systems and processes,
provide a clear indication of management's true values
(regardless how they may be described in Annual Reports).
Arguments rage about the extent to which operational excellence
drives down costs, or whether customers any longer even have a
requirement for greater levels of service excellence. Studies
have shown that between 20-40 percent of the operating costs for
most North American organisations are consumed by poor quality.
This includes redoing work, processing warranty claims, handling
disgruntled customers or employees, scrapping defective
materials…in other words, fixing things that weren't done right
the first time.
The principle of alignment embraces the principle of getting
things right first time and doing only those things that add
value for the customer, and thus by definition, drive down the
costs of doing business.
Although operational excellence can drive down cost, many
cost-focused organisations are not close enough to their
customers to know that despite lower costs, their products or
services are missing the mark. It means not only are great
revenue opportunities lost, but also millions of dollars are
wasted delivering or supporting products or services that
customers no longer perceive as useful or relevant.
A large (and growing) number of executives and managers now
recognise that the quality of their future will be a direct
reflection of the quality of the products and services their
organization delivers.
Developing and implementing cultural transformation is one the
hardest tasks that any organisation can undertake. When it comes
to implementation there are hundreds of ways to do it wrong:
omit the senior executives from the planning, disseminate a drab
mission statement, neglect the customer during the change
process, mandate data collection but not data analysis, keep
employees in the dark about what's happening etc. Only through
careful and thoughtful planning can these hazards be avoided.
About the Author
Andrew Wallbridge and Paul Levesque are co-Directors of UK-based AndrewsLevesque. Paul Levesque is the author of several books, including The Wow Factory, Breakaway Planning and Customer Focus Made Easy. To learn more about the Customer Focus Process and the Breakaway Planning workshops, contact AndrewsLevesque at info@chal.co.uk.

