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How to Ace Customer Experience Leadership in Year 1

Avatar MoodGuru
May 10, 2022
35 views




PHOTO:
wideonet

Customer experience is on a tear, with the market for CX products expected to increase by more than 12% annually over the next five years. This bodes well for customer experience professionals, but how does a new CX leader maximize their opportunity when they’re newly hired to kickstart or revamp a customer experience program?

Even within the B2B sector, approaches to CX vary significantly depending on company size, culture, maturity of existing CX programs, leadership preferences and numerous other factors. So how do you win over hearts and minds in your first year? How do you get from day one, when some people may not even fully understand what you’ve been hired to do, to 12 months later, when they’re offering you additional staff and more budget?

I’ve been fortunate to have had a great experience in my first year as head of CX at enterprise automation company Workato. The leadership has been appreciative of my efforts, and I’m now setting expanded priorities for my second year. But it took some strategizing to get here, so I wanted to share what I’ve learned from this and my previous CX roles in the hope others can learn from it, too.

Who Holds Keys to Customer Experience Leadership Success?

To build a successful program, step one is knowing who makes the investment decisions. The people who are most directly impacted by CX from a functional perspective often are not the ones who can unlock the resources that will move the needle for your program. Identify who holds the purse strings early in your engagement. This won’t be the same at every company, so don’t be misled by past experiences. 

You must then figure out what that person values in a CX program. In my case it was the CEO, who was interested in making immediate improvements for customers by understanding their journey, mapping out their experience and better meeting their needs at strategic moments. That’s a bit different from traditional CX programs, which often begin by establishing an NPS baseline before addressing customer improvements. Both can be effective, but you should understand what’s important to the person who primarily sponsors your efforts.

From there, I was able to build an initial program that provided exactly the right mix of qualitative and quantitative information for which our CEO was looking. After that, the conversation quickly turned to: “That’s very powerful, now here are three more issues I’d like you to look at.”

Related Article: Do You Have the Traits of a CX Leader?

Leave Your CX Preconceptions at the Door

Don’t come into the job with preconceived notions of how a CX program should be structured. Be inquisitive and open minded, because you need to understand how your new employer works and what it needs to be successful. Does it need quantitative or qualitative information? A new metric or anecdotal customer comments? Are there specific forums where that information needs to be surfaced?

In short, determine how CX can most effectively make an impact on your particular business.