Lessons From The Sports Industry to Level Up Your Game and Customer Service Performance

Lessons From The Sports Industry to Level Up Your Game and Customer Service Performance

Doing CX Right podcast show on Spotify with host Stacy Sherman
DoingCXRight-Podcast-on-Amazon-with-host-Stacy-Sherman.
Doing Customer Experience (CX) Right Podcast - Hosted by Stacy Sherman
Doing CX Right podcast show on iHeart Radio with host Stacy Sherman

Leveling Up Your Customer Service & Business Performance

What can the highest-performing basketball players teach us about delivering exceptional customer service experiences? What are leadership strategies that elite athletes use to perform at world-class levels that you can do too?

Stacy Sherman and featured guest Alan Stein, who has worked with 2-time NBA Finals MVP Kevin Durant and other superstars, answer these questions. Plus, you’ll learn how to create unparalleled organizational performance, cohesion, and accountability with earned trust at the forefront.

Without a doubt, after listening to this episode, you’ll shift your mindset and actions that raise your game and customer service to new levels.  

This episode of DoingCXRight answers the following questions about customer service …and more:

  1. The links between customer experience (CX), customer service, and the sports world.
  2. How to have “a winning mindset and avoid resistance.
  3. Valuable routines and habits of sports champions that business people could benefit from replicating.
  4. Advice to people who care to be influential leaders yet hit many internal roadblocks.
  5. The one key takeaway to level up the organization and individual performance

Press Play To WATCH Interview:

About Alan Stein, Jr ~Leveling Up Leadership and Customer Service

Alan is a keynote speaker and author who spent 15+ years as a performance coach working with the highest-performing basketball players on the planet (Kevin Durant, Stephen Curry, and Kobe Bryant). He now teaches audiences how to utilize the same strategies in business that elite athletes use to perform at a world-class level.

He recently published, “Sustain Your Game” which is built upon a simple premise: each of us will always be under construction, a work in progress, and constantly evolving. The goal is to be moving toward our highest potential, toward making a meaningful contribution, and toward becoming the best version of ourselves.

Alan brings you the keys to lasting, unimaginable success. The secret? Sustain Your Game teaches a timeline of short-term to medium-term to long-term because we are always battling all three: stress in the now, stagnation in the present, and burnout in the long term.

Part I—PERFORM is about managing stress in the day-to-day (short term)
Part II—PIVOT is about avoiding stagnation in your current situation (medium term)
Part III—PREVAIL is about beating burnout and making a lasting impact (long term)

Connect with Alan on LinkedIn + Get his book on Amazon.

About Stacy Sherman: Founder of Doing CX Right®‬

An award-winning certified marketing and customer experience (CX) corporate executive, speaker, author, and podcaster, known for DoingCXRight®. She created a Heart & Science™ framework that accelerates customer loyalty, referrals, and revenue, fueled by engaged employees and customer service representatives. Stacy’s been in the trenches improving experiences as a brand differentiator for 20+ years, working at companies of all sizes and industries, like Liveops, Schindler elevator, Verizon, Martha Steward Craft, AT&T++.   Stacy is on a mission to help people DOING, not just TALKING about CX, so real human connections & happiness exist. Continue reading bio >here.

Creating Memorable & Personalized Customer Experiences At Scale

Creating Memorable & Personalized Customer Experiences At Scale

Doing CX Right podcast show on Spotify with host Stacy Sherman
DoingCXRight-Podcast-on-Amazon-with-host-Stacy-Sherman.
Doing Customer Experience (CX) Right Podcast - Hosted by Stacy Sherman
Doing CX Right podcast show on iHeart Radio with host Stacy Sherman

Nurturing Customer Relationships At Scale

How often do you get a handwritten letter in the mail? When you do receive a personalized letter, how does it make you feel? You likely remember it and may even look at the message longer than a quick text or email that’s buried in your inbox. This episode of Doing CX Right is about leaving a lasting impression, nurturing customer relationships, and being memorable to grow your company at scale and retain customers and employees, too.

Featured guest David Wachs is a serial entrepreneur. His latest venture, Handwrytten, is bringing back the lost art of letter writing through scalable, robot-based solutions that write your notes in pen.  He’s changing how people interact and connect while also driving more appreciation and gratitude on a massive scale. 

While Doing CX Right podcast is typically brand-agnostic, David’s business model is appealing and recommended because it’s about humanizing business in a simple and effective way. Creating more memorable experiences for your customers, work teams, business partners, and others must be intentional. It doesn’t happen by accident. So, listen to the show and take notes, as there are a lot of actionable gems shared.

This episode of DoingCXRight with Stacy Sherman answers the following questions about customer relationships …and more:

  1. How can I personalize the customer experience in a high-tech world?
  2. What is the value of a handwritten note to achieve business goals?
  3. How can I proactively nurture customer relationships even when mistakes happen?
  4. Why is personalization essential for customer experience success?
  5. How can I increase employee loyalty on CX day, Customer Service Week, and beyond?

Press Play To WATCH Interview:

About David Wachs ~Nurturing Customer Relationships At Scale

David Wachs is the Founder and CEO of Handwrytten, a platform for writing and sending handwritten notes at scale. He is a serial entrepreneur and frequent speaker on marketing technology. Previously, David was the Founder and President of Cellit.

Connect with him on LinkedIn + Website

About Stacy Sherman: Founder of Doing CX Right®‬

An award-winning certified marketing and customer experience (CX) corporate executive, speaker, author, and podcaster, known for DoingCXRight®. She created a Heart & Science™ framework that accelerates customer loyalty, referrals, and revenue, fueled by engaged employees and customer service representatives. Stacy’s been in the trenches improving experiences as a brand differentiator for 20+ years, working at companies of all sizes and industries, like Liveops, Schindler elevator, Verizon, Martha Steward Craft, AT&T++.   Stacy is on a mission to help people DOING, not just TALKING about CX, so real human connections & happiness exist. Continue reading bio >here.

Building A Winning Customer-Centric Organization The Right Way

Building A Winning Customer-Centric Organization The Right Way

Doing CX Right podcast show on Spotify with host Stacy Sherman
DoingCXRight-Podcast-on-Amazon-with-host-Stacy-Sherman.
Doing Customer Experience (CX) Right Podcast - Hosted by Stacy Sherman
Doing CX Right podcast show on iHeart Radio with host Stacy Sherman

What does a real customer-centric culture look like that’s built to win?  

Customer-centric companies put the customer at the center of all they do, which means the entire workforce takes the time to understand who customers are and then use that understanding to intentionally design better experiences for them.

Too often, companies believe they know what’s best and create customer experiences based on inside-out thinking, only to end up creating frustration and dissatisfaction.

During this podcast episode, you’ll hear Stacy Sherman and Annette Franz, Founder and CEO of CX Journey Inc. explore customer-centric businesses, examine the ways they implement strategies, and provide actionable advice for you to outperform competitors.

CX Topics:

  • What does “putting the customer in “customer experience” mean?
  • Actionable tips and key principles from her newest book “Build to Win”  
  • Views on linking customer experience metrics to employee bonuses. 
  • Effective tactics to really understand customers.
  • Advice to those who don’t know where to start in journey mapping & the game-changer of doing it right. 
  • Annettes views on CX trends during the up & down economic times 
  • Best leadership advice received.
  • A fun fact people may not know about Annette, before entering the CX field 
  • Advice to her younger 20-year-old self based on what she knows now and says to her two boys.

    Remember:

    Customer experience success does not occur overnight or automatically but rather happens when individuals and teams intentionally put customers first and do so consistently. 

    Join Doing CX Right Conversations On Social Media

    Keep learning and paying it forward.

    Watch Video With Stacy Sherman and Annette Franz on Youtube

    About Annette Franz ~Building a winning customer-centric culture

    Founder and CEO of CX Journey Inc., has spent the last 30 years in the customer experience profession. She started her career at J.D. Power and Associates and spent much of the next 25 years before founding CX Journey Inc. in 2017, leading consulting services for the major voice of the customer (VOC) platforms, and helping clients in a variety of industries. She has also worked on client-side customer experience strategies for Mattel, Fidelity Investments, and Compellon.

    Annette is an internationally recognized customer experience thought leader, coach, keynote speaker, and author of Customer Understanding: Three Ways to Put the “Customer” in Customer Experience (and at the Heart of Your Business). In this book, she outlines the importance of customer understanding through listening (feedback and data), characterizing (personas), and empathizing (journey maps) to developing a customer-centric culture. Her second book, Built to Win: Designing a Customer-Centric Culture that Drives Value for Your Business, which dives into the ten foundational principles of a customer-centric culture, will be published by Advantage|ForbesBooks in Q1 2022. She is a Certified Customer Experience Professional (CCXP) and an official member of the Forbes Coaches Council.

    LinkedIn. Website.

    About Stacy Sherman: Founder of Doing CX Right®‬

    An award-winning certified marketing and customer experience (CX) corporate executive, speaker, author, and podcaster, known for DoingCXRight®. She created a Heart & Science™ framework that accelerates customer loyalty, referrals, and revenue, fueled by engaged employees and customer service representatives. Stacy’s been in the trenches improving experiences as a brand differentiator for 20+ years, working at companies of all sizes and industries, like Liveops, Schindler elevator, Verizon, Martha Steward Craft, AT&T++.   Stacy is on a mission to help people DOING, not just TALKING about CX, so real human connections & happiness exist. Continue reading bio >here.

    Propel Your Business Into Action by Being ‘Hooked On Customers’

    Propel Your Business Into Action by Being ‘Hooked On Customers’

    What does it mean to be ‘hooked on customers’, and what are practical ways to create enduring customer relationships?

     I recently interviewed Bob Thompson, CEO of Customer Think Corp, about these topics on my Doing CX Right podcast (episode 54) to help you understand the importance of being “hooked on customers, based on Bob’s best-selling book.

    During the podcast episode, we explore customer-centric businesses, examine the ways they implement strategies, and provide actionable advice for you to outperform your competitors. CX success does not occur overnight or automatically but rather happens when individuals and teams intentionally put customers first and on a consistent basis.

    Bob explains that “learning to let your actions do the talking can be revolutionary to a company that struggles to create enduring customer relationships. People who own, operate, manage, or otherwise lead a company always look for ways to improve productivity, beat the competition, and ensure long-term success.”

    Talking is cheap. Leading legendary customer-centric business leaders do not just sit around the decision-making table and discuss ideas. Best-in-class brands are what I call Doing CX Right®. And implementing key actions that Bob outlines as follows:

    • LISTEN to customers’ values and feedback.
    • THINK about the implications of fact-based decisions on customers
    • EMPOWER employees with the freedom they need to please customers
    • CREATE new value for customers without being asked
    • DELIGHT customers by exceeding their expectations

    There are no quick fixes.  Customer-centricity takes time, determination, and company-wide commitment.

    It must be maintained and constantly pursued to ensure that CX becomes part of the fabric of a business. You can have an altruistic company that’s profitable too. One doesn’t replace the other.

    In fact, Wendy Smith, a professor at the University of Delaware Business School, educates about the power of “Both/And” thinking. Our brains love to make either-or choices, we choose one option over the other. Yet, there’s a better way through Both/And thinking. We can express our individuality and be a team player. We can manage the core business while also innovating for the future. These competing and interwoven demands don’t need to be a source of conflict.

    Check out Wendy’s extensive research on strategic paradoxes and how leaders and senior teams can effectively respond to contradictory yet interdependent demands >here.

    I hope you’ll listen to my interview with Bob Thompson, which is also available to watch on YouTube too. There are a lot of valuable gems discussed to help you gain a competitive advantage, so take notes. 

    Kudos to brands transforming customer experiences mentioned in my podcast, including Trader Joe’s, Southwest Airlines and others.

    More places you can listen and subscribe for updates:  SpotifyAudible. Apple. Stitcher

    Bob and I welcome your feedback.

    Tell us if you do anything differently as a result of our information shared. Curious to know which companies you think are hooked on customers and customers are hooked on those brands? My immediate answer is Trader Joes, a national chain of neighborhood grocery stores who has been transforming grocery shopping since 1967. Trader Joes motto is “simply put, every time a customer shops with us, we want them to be able to say, “Wow! That was enjoyable, and I got a great deal. I look forward to coming back!”

    That is precisely how I feel every time I visit the store. I’m forever hooked!

    Check out my interview with Trader Joes staff member, and learn what it’s like from the inside as an employee who are hooked on customers.

    4 Strategic Approaches to Customer Journey Mapping

    4 Strategic Approaches to Customer Journey Mapping

    Customer satisfaction and NPS are useful measurements of business success, just as much as revenue and profitability. (And, now there’s NPS 3.0, as the creator Fred Reichert explains on my podcast). While there are many ways to gather customer insights, how does a company increase the chances that customers will rate their interactions highly and remain brand loyal? The answer is by creating customer experiences leveraging the power of journey mapping. If you are unfamiliar with this important CX practice, read my other article: WHAT Is A Journey Map and WHY Create One?

    As a refresher, the purpose of creating a customer journey map is to help design better products and services and overall great experiences. It is a valuable method to identify problems and areas of success as customers become aware, learn, buy, get, use, etc. While Journey Maps typically look visually different from one organization to another, they consistently enable you to empathize with how customers feel when interacting with a brand.

     

    CMS wire recently published an article by Jennifer Torres about strategic approaches to journey mapping. Below is a summary with contributors including CX expert Jeanne Bliss and me.

    The original article can be found here.

    What’s in your abandoned cart?

    From a tube of mascara to a jade bracelet or water pump, retailers are paying the price for the items left behind. And the price tag? $260 billion in lost revenue over 10 years (in the US and EU) due to preventable cart abandonment, according to the Baymard Institute. 

    The Importance of Customer Journey Mapping

    As CEO of MaxxoMedia, a boutique digital customer experience consultancy, Levy previously served as Vice President of Digital Experience at Comcast and recently debuted a newsletter focused on the digital customer experience.

    “Journey mapping can help provide insights into every part of a customer’s experience,” said Levy, “and to evaluate why a particular part of the journey isn’t working, the investigation needs to go deeper into the micro-steps.” When it comes to abandoned carts, Levy explained, journey maps, combined with web and journey analytics tools, can expose friction and assist in optimization.

    Data from the Baymard Institute revealed that, on average, nearly 70% of online carts are abandoned. And while some customers are just browsing, research revealed more than 40% of shoppers discard their cart for “fixable” reasons, like:

    • Extra costs for shipping, tax, and other fees
    • Security concerns about sharing credit card information
    • A long or complicated check-out process
    • Website errors
    • Being required to create an account

    Anytime you define new — or optimize existing — customer experiences, Levy says you should take the time to build a journey map. “A journey map is a tool that helps you understand the entire customer journey and identify areas for improvement.”

    “This,” he continued, “becomes the blueprint for your experience and creates a common view and language for the business to identify opportunities and moments of friction. It’s a powerful way to define your strategy, align everyone around the same goals and create an actionable plan for improvement.”

    6 Steps for Creating a Customer Journey Map

    Levy’s strategy for journey map creation includes several steps.

    1. Start With a General Map

    One that accounts for the major journey moments or “moments of truth” (MOTs) — regardless of the type of customer. MOTs are the intersections where customers have an opportunity to evaluate their experiences and decide about their relationship with your brand.

    2. Map Major Journey Moments

    How does the customer learn about, then purchase, receive, activate/set up and enjoy the product or service?

    3. Overlay Customer Expectations and Outcomes

    Identify what the customer learns, does, and feels in each moment. For example, after making a purchase, they may feel excited about receiving an item in the mail or disappointed if there’s an issue with their order.

    4. Create Sub-Journeys

    Once you know what the major moments are, it’s time to break them down into smaller steps so that you can see how they work together as part of an overall experience. For example, after a purchase, send an email confirmation and direct the customer to download the app to get ready for activation.

    5. Identify Channel-Specific Support Moments

    Identify and overlay key moments by channel — web, app, social media, email, SMS, etc. For example, manage expectations about delivery by sending an SMS that links to a real-time tracking webpage.

    6. Think About Personas

    Personas are an overlay to the master journey map. Usually generated by the marketing department, personas paint a picture of audience segments through quantitative and qualitative research. Examine the map again based on details from these target market personas to determine if journey changes need to be made.

    According to Levy, when it comes to supporting journey mapping, nothing is better than talking directly with customers to get firsthand insights. “To add further color and detail to the journey map,” Levy continued, “gather and synthesize data through surveys and ethnographic studies, third-party research as well as existing company journey analytics — escalations, text analytics from chats, calls, social media posts and forums.”

    How to Keep Emotion in Customer Journey Mapping

    Stacy Sherman, VP of Marketing, Agent & Customer Experience for Liveops, and founder and host of the DoingCXRight podcast and blog, said one of the main goals of a customer journey map is to better understand how customers feel when interacting with a brand.

    “You want to put yourself in the ‘customer shoes’ and identify the emotions they feel along the journey,” Sherman said. You can do this, she said, in three steps:

    1. Define Personas

    The first step is to get an accurate understanding of who the target audience is. You’ll want to ask questions about age, income, and education. But equally important is discovering the needs and obstacles your audience faces and where they go to find information that informs their decisions.

    2. Identify Touchpoints

    Touchpoints are the moments a customer engages with a brand. They can include advertising, social media posts, a website, online search results, and much more. According to Sherman, it’s important to find out what emotions customers feel at various points along the journey.

    For retailers with both online and brick-and-mortar stores, they must consider digital and “on-site” touchpoints, such as in-store signage that promotes social media pages, text opt-ins or newsletter signups.

    3. Dig Up Data

    Once you’ve completed steps one and two, it’s time to start digging into your customer data. You should incorporate quantitative and qualitative insights from both internal and external sources.

    You’ll also want to stay on top of ongoing data trends — like web browsers doing away with third-party cookies — to better understand what type of data you should collect and what to do with it.

    Applying Neuroscience to Journey Mapping

    Ed Powers is principal consultant for Service Excellence Partners. Listed as one of the Top 25 Customer Success Influencers, he has an approach to journey mapping that combines neuroscience with data analytics and enterprise-wide improvement.

    “The customer experience is a human experience, and if we understand this process, then we can influence it,” Powers said.

    His “brain friendly” journey mapping approach incorporates the following steps: CONTINUE READING →