Sunday, July 22, 2012

How does Good Customer Experience equate to Happy Customers Everywhere?

I had interaction with Bernd Schmitt recently regarding customer happiness. If you don't know the guy he is the author of Happy Customers Everywhere, Big Think Strategy, Customer Experience Management and Experiential Marketing and is a professor of International Business of Columbia Business School. He have very good insight and of course real world cases about customer experience and customer happiness. Anyway his view is that customer happiness  can be achieved using various methods such as "feel good", "values and meaning", and engagement. I highly recommend that you read his book "Happy Customers Everywhere" especially if you are in sales and marketing, customer care/support, brand manager, entrepreneur or general management.

Being in the Telco Customer Experience Management (CEM) field, let me relate a few things that are relevant to Telcos. The basic premise is making customers happy so they keep using the services provided by their service provider. But how do you define customer happiness? Is it customer satisfaction? Let's go back to Bernd Schmitt for a second, according to him Customer happiness focuses on the positive emotional aspects of purchase and consumption. Customer happiness results from joyful, meaningful and engaging experience executed in creative and innovative manner. In my little Telco world Customer Happiness is a result of good Customer Experience. But why should you care about Customer Happiness? Does it have a big effect on the bottom line or the dreaded churn? Customer happiness  stems from customer satisfaction and customer delight. Customer satisfaction is where customer feels content while Customer delight is the joy they feel or the "WOW" factor. With happy customers you get loyal customers who helps promote your products and services. Think Apple… they managed to capture very loyal customers, almost fanatical even.

Its not easy to make and keep customers happy. The hardest part to deliver to a any customer is delight, the WOW factor. Usually that comes from a surprise, a very strong positive reaction arising from the unexpected. An event that a customer will never forget and will share to others. Having said that happiness can provide a tremendous value to a business, especially in this day and age of social media when customer feedback are easily shared and travels faster than wild fire. In the world of marketing there are 3 distinct ways to make customer happy namely pleasure, meaning and engagement. But how does that translate to real Telco world?

To make a customer happy they must feel good about a product or service. In terms of CEM, how can this be delivered?  How can their experiences be enriched? How can they savor such experience? And how can do you expand that for your customers? The Customers experience can be enriched by increasing touch points and attention to details. For example in the Telco world a customer touch point is limited to phone calls, messaging and data connectivity then the occasional interaction with customer care, this can be enriched by increasing the customer care touch point such as apart from providing a simple customer care hotline,  also provide a one touch portal on their smart phones. Let customers savor that experience by providing call centers and customer chat lines that are friendly but efficient. Expand that with new services that are targeted, tailor made and specific to a particular customer, making them feel more special. This can be achieved with a very good knowledge of the customer's behavior, preferences and usage.

Why targeted, tailor made and specific services to individual customers? Because the key to customer happiness is the core value of using a client-centered approach not only in managing customer relationships but most especially in the services that are being provided to them. Remember a customer's experience is personal, emotional and motivational…. threat every customer with a personal touch then they become happy and  loyal.

The most powerful ace on the deck of customer experience is engagement, that is engaging the customer to the point that the experience is a pleasant surprise. Think about the Coca Cola Open Happiness  campaign which is one of the most successful customer engagement campaigns ever. Its not only about having a good insight of the customers behavior and preferences but also going the extra distance to give a pleasant surprise the customer when they least expect it. For example giving the customer a rebate for experiencing degraded service performance without the customer complaining about it. An engaged customer is a customer that shares those pleasant experiences to others, especially as mobile communications becomes more data centric, sharing content and experiences becomes more common.

Having said this what are you doing today to improve your customer's experiences? Are you dedicated as a service provider in making your customers happy?

Friday, July 13, 2012

Who will win the Mobile OS wars?


With the global smartphone penetration expected to increase 3 billion smartphones in 5 years, or half of the world's pollution the positioning of various OS platforms are becoming more and more important. Now considering the various devices powered by smartphone OS then that market far exceeds half of the world's population. With such a very big and lucrative market OS and platform developers continue to fight for market share, iOS and Android is now very powerful, however some platforms have fallen or falling. The most glaring example is BREW and Symbian. Although there are four times more devices shipped by Symbian compared to Windows phone devices in 2012 they do now have the ecosystem to generate the kind of fire works that iOS and Android are currently enjoying. 60% of BREW developers indicates they will stop using it since its at the end of its life cycle and Qualcomm is quietly preparing for its discontinuation. Symbian has the highest rate of developer abandonment amongst all platform at 52%, especially that Nokia have declared that Microsoft is its preferred smartphone platform.



Vision Mobile mapped the performance of various OS below.






Blackberry is never far behind BREW and Symbian and is very close to becoming an endangered if not extinct platform. RIM has significant difficulties competing with iOS and Android even considering the expected release of the BB10 platform this year especially with email and instant messaging commonly available across  all platforms, Blackberry has lost its edge. As a result RIM investors are pressing the company to break up and sell all its assets. 14% of BlackBerry developers are abandoning the platform, even though the platform still brings considerable revenue to developers, the main reason being the very weak sales and market position of BlackBerry devices.

Samsung's Bada is next in line in the list of platforms being abandoned, with 49% of developers planning to drop it, it will end up to be an pure South Korean platform that is immature, substantially buggy and only limited to low-end smart phones. Samsung is losing its bargaining power towards Google's android which is now also penetrating the low cost smart phone market.

Windows Phone, the new kid on the block is the new cool: Even though  Windows Phone sales continue to disappoint, a year on, with 2.6 million devices sold in Q1 2012, according to Gartner, interest among developers continues to build up. The majority of developers who plan to adopt a new platform, plan to adopt Windows Phone (57%). Overall, 42% of developers using iOS and Android indicate that they plan to adopt Windows Phone and while the intention is slightly stronger among developers using mobile web (44%) or other, less popular platforms, intention doesn’t seem to vary significantly by the platform developers currently use.

Now there is a duopoly between Android and iOS, who will be the most dominant is still to be determined, although  Android is currently on a clear lead, there is a threat coming from HTML 5. Cross platform development is on the rise with 72% of iOS developers using Android and 64% of Android developers using iOS. The future of smart phones are pegged on this 2 giants. However for cross platform functionality HTML 5 is entering that space. This means that the choice between native applications and HTML 5 will be a cat and mouse game, where native applications will alway be in the forefront in terms of capabilities and feature set, HTML 5 will leverage in its cross platform functionalities. As Tom Hume, founder of FuturePlatform argues, “User expectations will always be formed by the native platforms, and native will always be a step ahead of HTML, as that’s in the interest of platform vendors”. He explains that “today, HTML5 performs poorly with new user interface paradigms like Microsoft’s Metro UI. Tomorrow, HTML5 will need to catch up with ambient sensing. It’s always going to be a cat and mouse game.”



The question is how will shape the ever growing smart phone market. So take your picks. As for AmanziTel being in the Customer Experience Management sphere, we support most of the platforms today and will continue to do so as long as there are consumers using this platforms. Although we have focused mostly on Android and iOS, while Windows Phone is of interest the platform is too closed for higher penetration amongst developers. How about you, will you pick one platform from the other?

Solving poverty problems through sports

Last month I had the opportunity to meet Cesar Guerin, who is poised to become the 4th man to run around the world, and the first Filipino to do so. This quest is not just a personal trophy but more importantly to raise awareness of poverty in the Philippines and alleviating such conditions through sports. The man himself is very admirable such a feat is very hard to achieve, yet he makes it simple by running marathon distance every day, unassisted.

Now on the quest to alleviate poverty through sports, it is definitely achievable even in the Philippine. Manny Pacquiao is a glaring example from rags to riches and fame through boxing. The challenge is how to put that into context in a large population such as the Philippines. Only exceptional athletes are paid handsome amounts and there are only a few of them. For such concept to work it is needed that who ever succeeded should give back to development of the community and its infrastructure so the next generations will have a better foundation for their future, that is the only way it will work. Think about it, most athletes who became successful never really look back to the community where they came from, they just wanted to leave and be better of personally. It is of course a personal decision, however if everyone can be convinced that there is a better future for others if they are given the chance then the quest of alleviating poverty will work. Its not just about the sports in itself, its all about infrastructure and education to start with that enable poorer communities to prosper.