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Home » CX: An Effortless Experience Isn’t Enough

CX: An Effortless Experience Isn’t Enough

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In CX, we all focus on making the experience easier on our customers. (We even made it the title of our book.) But building loyalty isn’t as simple as removing friction.

Don’t get me wrong. It’s definitely worthwhile to simplify your customer experience. Friction is a key driver behind loyalty destruction, and your organization will benefit from streamlining processes and making it easier for customers to resolve issues.

But it won’t build fans who will go out of their way to order from you. That takes something bigger.

Experts weigh in

I realize not every agrees with me. In their book The Effortless Experiencethe CEB (now part of Gartner) showed that focusing on making it easier to resolve issues improved loyalty more than focusing on creating “wow” experiences. Similarly, Beyond Philosophy reported in Customer Complaints X-Ray that reducing effort is the most important outcome for improving loyalty.

So what’s my problem?

addressed this issue a couple of years back, contrasting these reports with Forrester’s finding (from The Power of Moments) that

The critical limitation of the CEB and Beyond Philosophy reports was that they were analyzing a customer service effort. When you restrict your analysis to resolving a service issue, you alter the critical outcome. Because in that unique situation, customers don’t want to be wowed – they just want to be done. So reducing effort makes perfect sense there, and will have a bigger impact.

But despite the myth of the service recovery paradox – which has largely been debunked – you don’t build loyalty from resolving issues. You only prevent disloyalty. Those are not the same thing, and they don’t have the effect on your bottom line.

Effortless < Preferred

Loyalty occurs when customers can choose another provider but don’t. Game-changing loyalty happens when customers have a cheaper or easier alternative yet still choose to do business with you. In that scenario, it’s emotional connection, not ease, that tips the scales.

Both Forrester and the XM Institute have found…

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