Vedula your question here has a number of points which may not seem immediately obvious so I’ll address them in my own disjointed style!
The first appears to be about consistency. Consistency is absolutely CRUCIAL. Let me explain.
Letssplit the interaction outcome, in terms of its impact on customers, into three. It can be either BAD, NEUTRAL & GOOD. Our experience shows that it is NOT the majoritive experience that we are left with as an overall impression – i.e. if the experience is NEUTRAL 70% of the time and GOOD 30% we do not leave with a Neutral feeling. What we leave with is a feeling of it being GOOD! It’s a bit like the weather. If it rained heavily 10 days last month and was neither rainy NOR hot the other 20 days, whenrecalling the weather we tend to say it had been a wet month. Conversely, if it had been HOT for 10 days and neutral for the other 20 we tend to say it’s been a hot month. I have no idea why this is, it just is! Its been demonstrated by our research time after time but we have no particular ryme nor reason for it. No doubt someone somewhere knows.
So, going back to our customer experience, if that ‘experience’ is say bad for 30% of the time and normal for 70% of the time the impression left oncustomers (what we call the Trend) is BAD. There is a problem with this though. If the experience balances out with say 30% Good, 40% Neutral and 30% Bad we end up Neutral. This means that to really drive forward, there can be no bad experiences and you must strive for consistent good ones.
There’s a bit more to be taken into account here too. Gestalt theory suggests that all people need completion before an issue is closed. If an issue hasn’t been addressed – e.g. when a practical motive has been addressed but not the Emotional, we are left with unfinished business. When an issue has been resolved to our satisfaction (i.e. both motives satisfied) THEN we have closure, then we can forget it/file it away.
Uncompleted issues stay inour conscious mind and often amplify with time. For customers this means that what seems like a simple issue to the business, is VERY important to them and the business thinks the customer has blown things up out of all proportion. The customer thinks the organisation doesn't care. In effect, the issue is never finished and it can be a huge cause of stress. If however, BOTH motives are addressed then satisfaction follows and effectively the relationship is reset – back to ground zero.
So, this hopefully addresses your second point, our experience is that we then approach the next interaction with slightly more optimism. However, we do not generally let this optimism rule until a very clear pattern (established by the company) of exceeding our expectations (i.e. delivering REAL satisfaction by addressing both motives) has emerged over time.
To answer your 'real' question, in terms of having a metric, that metric already exists in our system and it scores both the Practical and Emotional performance of the business. Moreover, it works with all businesses, cultures and nationalities
By the way, whilst a ‘first’ impression is important as it sets the tone/stage for the rest of the interaction it is NOT the be all and end all.
Think about it. In a call centre it is virtually impossible to be able to deliver a welcome to every caller that makes them FEEL extremely welcomed in the ultimate/personalised way. This is not through a lack of drive or willingness, it's simply that technology does not yet exist where we can GUARANTEE that we know with 100% accuracy WHO is calling. So, we cannot say, “Good morning Vedula, it's really nice to hear from you again. How can I help you today?” The best greeting we can offer is one of a genuine friendliness but, driven by the lack of supportive technology, it must be generic in nature and almost anonymous. "Good morning welcome to the Customer Experience Company."
As important, is what we term the ‘Close’, the end of the interaction. The very best description I have ever heard of this element of the interaction is, “The beginning of the rest of the relationship.” and this is the one I use today. If you think about it, at a superficial level the last contact is the one you relate to first. So when you recall the interaction it's nearly always the impression you were left with at the end that stays with you at a conscious level though the rest of the interaction does impact you but at a deeper level.
Hope that helps a bit but sorry, the metric is already invented and works…
Interested for India Vedula?
David
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