Monday, November 28, 2011

Best Internet Trends Presentation - Web 2.0 Summit

KPCB Internet Trends 2011
View more presentations from Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers

As usual, Mary Meeker delivered this presentation during Web 2.0 summit and summarizes important trends in our industry with a lot of meaningful data.

Internet Trends 

  1. Globality – We Aren’t In Kansas Anymore… 
  2. Mobile – Early Innings Growth, Still… 
  3. User Interface – Text -> Graphical -> Touch / Sound / Move 
  4. Commerce – Fast / Easy / Fun / Savings = More Important Than Ever… 
  5. Advertising – Lookin’ Good… 
  6. Content Creation – Changed Forever 
  7. Technology / Mobile Leadership – Americans Should Be Proud 
  8. Mega-Trend of 21st Century = Empowerment of People via Connected Mobile Devices 
  9. Authentic Identity – The Good / Bad / Ugly. But Mostly Good? 
  10. Economy – Lots of Uncertainty 
  11. USA Inc. – Pay Attention!

Monday, November 21, 2011

Productivity Future Vision: do you like this future world?



You should take the time to review this video -- produced by Microsoft -- and immerse you in this future world we are presented here.  In the beginning I was attracted but after a while I felt a bit oppressed and I guess the absence of true emotions is the reason why. You never hear anyone speak truly and the visuals are very clean, so cold.

Some ideas are very interesting but companies putting together such tentatively inspirational videos should pay attention to emotions as this is fully part of the customer experience... more, it is center stage.

Reactions?

You can see more of videos I've noticed about the future ergonomics in my future playlist on youtube.

Monday, November 07, 2011

Managing Customer Experience: the next big thing?

I am a big believer in management guru Peter Drucker saying "What gets measured gets managed". When it gets down to tracking a company's success, too many businesses tend to rely on market share, profitability, EPS growth or repeat purchases only. Don't take me wrong, you still need to track these down, but as one brilliant Berkeley Marketing guru asked: "Do you think your partner is loyal only because he's having diner every night at home? So, does the number of repeat sales indicates that your customer is loyal?" At least for the first one you must admit he's got a point.

Nowadays, customer experience is one if not the main ingredient of customer loyalty which translates into market share -- as loyal customers are the best brand advocates, profitability and EPS growth i.e. the way most businesses would define success. Then what are you doing about it?

If you're still in doubt, take the coffee business as an example. Who has been insanely successful in this business? Starbucks and Nespresso success stories -- follow the links for more -- can attest about it.

As Shaun Smith, author of Managing Customer Experience, details in his post, there are 10 best practices to create real business value:

  1. Successful deployment requires the active and continuing involvement of leadership
  2. Ensuring cross-functional ownership is vital
  3. Focusing on your most strategically important customers
  4. Finding out what these customers truly value
  5. Being clear about what you stand for
  6. Delivering the promise at every touch point
  7. Providing branded training to ensure that employees understand the brand story
  8. Designing CEM before installing CRM systems
  9. Measuring the customer experience
  10. Aligning KPIs with the customer experience
This is heavy duty, but social media -- as you can see in the Starbucks video in the link above -- is becoming instrumental in that regard.

I'll leave you with the five barriers to measuring customer experience, from mycustomer.com:
"Customer experience isn’t just about giving customers a good time. It’s about understanding just how good a time (or not) you are giving – and making adjustments"

  1. We rely on magic numbers
  2. We don’t really listen
  3. Measuring word of mouth is hard
  4. We have too much functional data – too little insight
  5. We don’t look beyond the obvious and the superficial