Interested in finding out how to distance yourself from your competitors? Studies show that companies who prioritize customer experience are outperforming the competition.
A recent study by Gartner reveals that over 80% of organizations expect to compete mainly based on customer experience.
So why is customer experience so important?
Buyers continue to evolve. The lines between sales, marketing and customer service have disappeared. Customers won’t distinguish between the marketing department, the customer service team or the sales department. Any contact they make with your organization is part of their experience with the brand as a whole.
Today’s customers have heightened expectations for companies they choose to interact with. The question now becomes: How can their entire experience—from being courted as a prospect to being onboarded as a new customer to being delighted as an existing customer—align with your brand and their evolving expectations?
We recently hosted a webinar presented by Mike McDonald, EVP of sales and marketing at SyncShow, Greg Lukach, content strategy manager at SyncShow, and Jasz Rae Joseph, senior associate, account manager at SyncShow. They discussed the top three marketing trends driving customer experience in 2020. Here is a recap of the webinar presentation.
Moving into 2020, trust is more important than ever. Users are worried about their data—and they are not going to give it to just anyone. People want to do business with people they trust.
Your company’s website is your storefront. If the awning is tattered, the “O” on your “OPEN” sign is burnt out and your front stoop is dusty, then potential customers are going to keep right on walking to the next establishment. Building trust from a digital perspective is more important than ever. Here are just a few ways you can look trustworthy online:
Real-Life Example of Building Trust: Chewy.com
We consider Chewy.com an experience disruptor. Even though Chewy.com is a B2C organization, this is still relevant in the B2B space. Why? Because once your expectations are set very high, it’s hard to lower them. Buyers begin to expect those experiences in every interaction they have with a business.
I know what you might be thinking—"storytelling has been around for over 35,000 years, how is this a new trend?"
Well, it is something that marketers are now talking a lot about. At the INBOUND conference this year, Greg Lukach, our content strategy manager, learned about how storytelling can be used to make marketing efforts that much more effective.
Gabriela Pereira, the founder of DIY MFA, a company that offers a do-it-yourself alternative to receiving a Master's degree in writing, spoke about this topic at INBOUND.
Gabriela says storytelling and marketing go together for several reasons:
So, why storytelling right now?
According to Gabriela, there's a lot of research that's happening right now in psychology and neuroscience that's discovering the impact that storytelling has on how our brains function and how storytelling creates empathy.
Donald Miller, author of the book "Building a StoryBrand," lays out a framework for how to build a simple script that tells your brand's story in a compelling way that will resonate with your ideal customers. The release of this book got a lot of people and marketers talking about storytelling.
This takes us to the next logical question—how can we use storytelling in marketing?
In the context of marketing, we can use storytelling to build out buyers’ journeys that customers and prospects actually want to go on. You can use storytelling to entice prospects, convert them into customers and then get those customers to become brand evangelists.
There are multiple frameworks people are now using to organize information and create content plans that incorporate stories.
Here are some of those frameworks:
Donald Miller pioneered this framework. What this framework does is help you keep your brand messaging on point. The idea is to create a simple script that will keep prospects and customers engaged with your message and reduce any friction caused by lack of clarity.
Read more about the story script here.
This is the framework that Gabriela Pereira talked about at INBOUND. Gabriela created this framework after doing a lot of research, which she noted many parallels between a traditional story structure and a buyer's journey.
Unlike the story script framework, which is one simple script that you would build content pieces around to craft buyers’ journeys, this framework can be applied to create very specific buyers’ journeys.
Read more about the three-act story structure here.
The flywheel framework is essentially a different way of looking at what was once referred to as a buyer's funnel. The funnel included the attract and engage stages of a buyer's journey.
With the flywheel, you create buyers’ journeys that also focus on what happens post conversion—so, it makes you question what you're going to do to continue to nurture prospects and customers.
Here are the three stages of the flywheel:
And, finally, we have the fourth framework—the playground. Ashley Faus, senior manager of integrated strategy, spoke about this at INBOUND. During this session, she talked about the importance of building content for each stage of this new “playground” journey so that customers have something to engage with even if they enter the “wrong way.”
Marketers are starting to use the playground analogy because, like on playgrounds, users or buyers don't take linear paths, even if you create them. Also, even when you have these pieces for people to interact with—various forms, offers and videos—they are going to consume them in the “wrong” order, just as people climb up slides.
Moreover, here are some things to keep in mind for creating content that provides your customers with the best experiences possible.
Customers and prospects want to be lead, and they’re looking for you to do the leading. They have needs, both internal and external, that they’re looking to address and they’re looking for your expertise to solve them. Enter one unified revenue team comprised of marketing and sales experts to the rescue. Leading organizations have shifted the paradigm from two siloed departments with little collaboration to the concept of a revenue team owning different stages of the buyers journey.
Before making this important shift, it’s important to understand the current obstacles in place that keep marketing and sales disjointed:
If any of these scenarios resonate with your organization, don’t despair. Marketing and sales will always have different roles, but aligning those roles toward common goals isn’t as difficult as it sounds. Once you’re able to shift the paradigm, you start to see efficiencies and goals attained at a greater scale.
While there’s a lot that goes into aligning marketing and sales into one revenue team, below are a few ways you can get started:
2020 will be a significant year for customer experience. As competition rises due to new entrants in the marketplace, it will be important to understand what matters most to today's buyer.
Here is a recap of the top trends:
Watch the webinar presentation and Q&A session below:
You can access the slide deck here.