Archive for July, 2009

Thinking about… Verganti’s “Design-Driven Innovation”

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009

Mentioned in this post:

Customers are talking: Doc Searls runs up against “Simply Everything”’s limits

Monday, July 27th, 2009

I posted earlier today on Sprint’s progress in customer satisfaction. It’s not all good news, though. Internet sage Doc Searls often posts on his experiences with suppliers (perhaps part of his work on Vendor Relationship Management), such as Apple and Cox Cable. Today, he wrote about Sprint and a $500 bill he got from them when he unwittingly exceeded his usage limit on his EVDO wireless card. (You didn’t think there were usage limits on “unlimited” plans? Think again.)

The problem was “resolved,” kind of:

The Sprint person on the “courtesy call” knocked $350 off the bill. That was because she was ready to “work” with me on the matter. I asked her how she arrived at that number. She said she couldn’t say.

Searls is a great observer of the absurdity of large company bureaucracies and the battle between consumer and supplier. He’s also an artful complainer. I’ll be staying tuned to see if there’s any further fallout from his latest experience.

Customers are talking: companies are investing in customer satisfaction, and it shows

Monday, July 27th, 2009

During the downturn, companies have quickly and deeply cut into their headcount, postponed capital investments and otherwise conserved cash. At least some companies, however, have focused on improving their customer satisfaction, with notable results.

According to the Wall Street Journal
today, the University of Michigan American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI) is at its highest level since the index began 12 years ago.

Companies cited in the Journal article include Sprint, which has had a high-profile campaign to improve its customer service since CEO Dan Hesse joined the company in 2007. Comcast, Southwest Airlines and Cheesecake Factory are also mentioned.

Sprint has focused more on customer issue resolution than on minimizing call times, according to the Journal. The result has been a net decrease in calls to customer service and the higher satisfaction level (up 12.5 percent, according to the Journal). Cheesecake Factory has been surveying their customers, analyzing patterns, and implementing changes based on what they learn.

Readers of this blog know that we’ve endorsed both of these actions (though we feel that collecting and evaluating customer narratives is far superior to surveying).

Cheesecake Factory CEO David Overton said this in his statement about the company’s most recent earnings announcement:

Of particular note is our ongoing, steady improvement in guest satisfaction scores at a time when we are streamlining our cost structure. We are carefully balancing our cost containment efforts so as not to reduce the experience that guests have in our restaurants, and we are pleased with the results that we are delivering in both areas. We continue to focus on ways to better align our operations with current sales volumes and identified a second round of cost management initiatives that we are already rolling out. Ultimately, these efforts should aid in our goal of rebuilding margins back toward historical levels over time.

Overton’s statement points to another opportunity with story-gathering. What you take away from a product can be as important for profitability as what you add. Customers don’t value everything a company does, but can’t really articulate what they don’t value. Companies looking to reduce service without impacting customer satisfaction should experiment with removing certain features, then collect stories to see if the removal has a big or small (or no) impact on the customer experience.

Focusing customer service on problem-solving and making small, simple changes to address customer pain points in products or services is a very cheap way to improve results. And that’s good in any economy.

Related posts:
The invaluable stories inside customer-service calls
Customers Are Talking: The Hot Line
Using values: connecting deeply with customers

Be aware of using weird business metaphors

Friday, July 24th, 2009

The word “tsunami” was used a lot in the past to describe a trend or momentum in a market.

Then a real tsunami hit in December 2004. Hundreds of thousands died and more than 1 million people lost their homes. Suddenly we didn’t throw that term around as much anymore (well, except for some people: “[Jim] Cramer…called the latest baseball tech breakthrough a ‘tsunami’ and the ’single best example of the Mobile Internet.’”)

When we speak or write, we use metaphors constantly, without realizing it. They are powerful and insidious. And many have crept into everyday use that upon scrutiny are perhaps not what we really want to say. Such as:

- serial entrepreneur. My favorite weird business metaphor. In what other context does “serial” as a modifier have a positive connotation? Serial killer. Serial rapist. Ugh. Suggestion: how about “entrepreneur” or “successful entrepreneur”?

- viral marketing. Sometimes the metaphors we develop reflect our deep unease with the subject. “Viral marketing” suggests something silent, hard to trace, and… bad for us.

- death march. I used this term a lot when I managed software projects, like, “Let’s keep on our deliverable schedule so this project doesn’t turn into a death march.” With the recent release of the book, “Tears in the Darkness: The Story of the Bataan Death March and Its Aftermath,” it brought home again the stark difference between a casual reference to the Bataan Death March and the real thing.

- nuclear option. Do we really want to compare a political tactic with our worst nightmares of the Cold War?

[Are there other weird metaphors out there? Post them in the comments. Thanks!]

There are countless other metaphors comparing business with warfare. Now that we are more than five years into the Iraq war, people are more aware of the costs and sacrifices of actual fighting, and so these metaphors seem to be in decline. But the war will end someday, and soon thereafter, they’ll start coming back.

It’s a dead certainty.

Creative Destruction? #6

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Another in a series of posts tracing the evolution of two vacated business sites.

The opening up of new markets, foreign or domestic, and the organizational development from the craft shop and factory to such concerns as U.S. Steel illustrate the same process of industrial mutation–if I may use that biological term–that incessantly revolutionizes the economic structure from within, incessantly destroying the old one, incessantly creating a new one. This process of Creative Destruction is the essential fact about capitalism. It is what capitalism consists in and what every capitalist concern has got to live in. . . .

Joseph Schumpeter

32nd and Market Streets, Camp Hill, PA, 21 July 2009

The new Rite Aid is rising quickly. On the other hand…

Carlisle Pike, Silver Spring Township, PA, 13 June 2009

No activity at all at the old auto dealer’s property.

Prior posts in this series:
Creative Destruction?
Creative Destruction? #2
Creative Destruction? #3
Creative Destruction? #4
Creative Destruction? #5

Customers are talking: retailer Zara relies on ground-level “specific knowledge” to forecast sales

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Andrew McAfee’s blog is a great place to learn about how businesses can gain competitive advantage by their use of IT. But yesterday he took a left turn and discussed business situations where data crunching is not helpful to decisionmaking, and I loved it.

In “When Information is NOT the Answer,” McAfee takes issue with Don Sull’s assessment of fashion retailer Zara’s “fast fashion” approach, at least when it comes to data-driven decisionmaking. Writes McAfee:

Sull stresses that “Zara’s business model demands good information,” which is certainly true. But my work with the company (see this Sloan Management Review article and this case study) revealed something I found fascinating: Zara succeeds in large part because the company makes comparatively light use of market data and sales information, at least as these terms are commonly understood in the retailing industry.

McAfee further explains the difference he sees between Zara and other retailers’ use of information:

The decisions about which clothes should to go which stores at what time(s) are probably the most important decisions made by any large apparel retailer. Most chains make them by collecting large amounts of daily sales data from stores, combining it with other hopefully relevant information, then applying a variety of statistical techniques to generate a forecast – a quantitative prediction about what will sell. This forecast is used to push the ‘right’ items – the ones predicted to sell — over time to each store.

Each retailer forecasts differently, of course, but I find their techniques broadly similar: they all gather lots of data, analyze it centrally, then use the resulting predictions to determine shipments to stores. In this model, the stores themselves have fairly limited roles: they are expected to record data accurately and send it promptly, then do their best to sell whatever headquarters decides to send them.

This seems sensible enough, and it also seems logical that as the business world gets more and more turbulent more and more supporting data will be required. This data will need to be acquired, analyzed, shared, and interpreted with ever-greater velocity, requiring ever-bigger computers, ever-faster networks, and ever-more-quantitative decision makers.

But Zara, operating in an intensely turbulent environment, does something totally different. The company doesn’t really generate a store-level sales forecast at all. Instead, it relies on its store managers to tell headquarters what they think they could sell immediately at their locations. Headquarters then gets as many of these clothes as possible to the stores as quickly as possible.

What’s more, the store managers are given very few quantitative or analytical tools to help them make their short-term predictions. They rely largely on intuition and experience, on walking the floor and talking to customers and employees.

I think this distinction between high-level numbers (what McAfee calls “general knowledge”) and the ground-level view of the customer needs (”specific knowledge”) is very important. In order to gather and understand specific knowledge, it’s necessary to be very close to the customer, “walking the floor and talking to customers and employees.”

Small retailers have always worked this way. When I worked at the local hardware store during high school, each department had a buyer who looked at stock levels, assessed what was selling, took the season into account, and placed orders weekly.

For large retailers, the fashion has been, as McAfee writes, to gather scads of information “Numerati“-style and make central purchasing and stocking decisions. Overreliance on this had a negative effect on one large store: Home Depot.

So it’s good to learn that at least one mega-retailer is using high-level number crunching judiciously, and relying on the folks closest to the customer to set ordering levels at each store. However, I think even they can do better.

As McAfee describes it, Zara “relies on its store managers to tell headquarters what they think they could sell immediately at their locations. Headquarters then gets as many of these clothes as possible to the stores as quickly as possible.” In other words, headquarters’ visibility into the “specific knowledge” in the store is limited to the managers’ forecasts.

I wouldn’t propose changing the ordering process, but I do think Enterprise 2.0 has a role here in sharing specific knowledge more widely. Information in the form of customer or employee narratives (generated by a simple prompt–”what was the most interesting thing that happened today?” or “tell me about your experience today” for example) could be captured at the store level and uploaded to a story-bank accessible to all Zara employees–especially those at a remove from the direct customer experience.

Through tools like commenting, scoring, nudging, sharing, etc., those narratives can inform a much broader base of employees what customers are doing and how they’re reacting to the products on the shelves. [I have been trying out a very cool open-source story-banking tool currently in alpha test that would fit this need perfectly.] This would provide a great service to the company by “bringing the outside in” (John Kotter’s phrase) and enabling all employees to make decisions with much deeper customer insight than they now possess.

This narrative data can supplement the high-level numbers, essentially combining McAfee’s general and specific knowledge to provide better insight into customers–for product, marketing and customer service purposes.

Related posts:
John Kotter on corporate change and “bringing the outside in”
A competitive advantage: employees who talk to customers
Time to listen to front-line employees

From the Mistake Bank: NYT on “A Creature of Bad Habit: Why (Athletic) Mistakes Are Repeated”

Monday, July 20th, 2009

From The Mistake Bank:

This article in the Sunday Times takes up one of my favorite topics–repeating mistakes.

The situation described is not one of failing to learn (which we often talk about), but instead that narrow class of athletic mistakes seemingly caused by hyper-awareness, fear of failure, and its resulting tension, cov

ering well-known cases like Chuck Knoblauch’s inability to throw the ball accurately from second base to first (something my 8-yr-old son does easily). This season, Mets pitcher Mike Pelfrey committed a rare balk three times in one inning, and is the only major leaguer to commit six balks in a season since 2001.

The Times story was particularly timely given the unexpected appearance of 59-year-old Tom Watson on the British Open leaderboard over the weekend. Watson’s youthful brilliance (eight major championships) had given way to a middle-aged inconsistency, fueled by that demon of older golfers everywhere, the yips. Sadly, while Watson played like a 40-year-old and had magically avoided situations where the yips come on (notably, short putts), he couldn’t avoid an eight-foot putt on the 18th hole to win. As you might expect, he left the putt short–he yipped it.

It’s a bizarre and fascinating story to read about world-class athletes struggling with some of the easier parts of the game. However, there are situations where “getting in your own way” can have an effect on normal people like us. I’ll confess one. I have a very strong memory, but I am terrible at remembering people’s names when I first meet them.

Years ago during my single days I met a girl at a party. We talked and talked. She told me her name. I promptly forgot it. I said, “I’m so sorry, but I forgot your name, can you tell me it again?” And she did, and I forgot it again. Needless to say, I didn’t see her again after that party.

I’ve struggled with this over the years, puzzled on it, tried to fix it, to no avail. There’s no logical reason why, once I finally remember someone’s name, I can recall it 20 years later, but can’t remember the name of someone who has just introduced himself. Now it’s a gigantic mental block, in which I view meeting someone new a bit like Watson viewed that 8-foot putt.

Thank God for business cards!

[If anyone else would like to share their personal yips, please respond in the comments.]

Jeff Jarvis with two great posts on the importance of tolerating failure

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

From The Mistake Bank:

Jarvis is the author of “”What Would Google Do?” and author of the Buzzmachine blog. This week, he posted on “The License to Fail” and wrote, among other things, “government must be granted the license to fail…so it can have the courage to innovate. The culture of government doesn’t allow failure, which means it won’t tolerate risk.”

Jeff followed it up with “The Failure System,” discussing some of the great comments received on the prior post.

If you’re feeling risk-averse, read these posts and get reoriented to the necessity of trying and tolerating failure, in order to innovate.

The invaluable stories inside customer-service calls

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Much of the story work I’m familiar with involves asking people to tell stories about their experiences on a particular topic. I do some of this myself. But I’ve also done work with a completely different class of story. This story is created out of the spontaneous meeting of two people – a customer and a customer-service rep – over the telephone.

A customer-service call is less an anecdote than it is like a play unfurling in real time. There’s nothing but dialogue, yet there’s conflict, emotion, suspense (will she get the credit she’s demanding for the series of dropped calls? Or will she have to escalate to the supervisor?). Listening to these recordings gives you an intimate view into the relationship customers have with their products and with their service providers.

And within these calls there are almost always sub-stories–the sequence of events that led to the person calling in the first place. There are also moments of human connection… and of estrangement.

Compared to elicited stories, contact-center calls have advantages and disadvantages:

Advantages:

  • Spontaneity
  • Authenticity
  • Freely given
  • Lack of self-consciousness or self-censoring
  • Highly inclusive (everyone has a telephone and most people call customer service eventually)
  • Easy to access


Disadvantages:

  • Noisy–lots of pro forma dialogue which is not story-related
  • Undirected–if you’re interested in one scenario, you’ll have to spend time narrowing down the calls
  • Voluminous and redundant (which is not always a problem)

Listening to series of customer-service calls reminded me of reading the work of William Gaddis. His books (especially “JR” and “A Frolic of His Own“), continuous dialogues with few bits of exposition, are not easy to read. But they are full of meaning and insight. This insight isn’t presented in headlines, but accrues, organically, as you’re immersed in the conversations. Similarly, searching through call recordings and finding patterns reveals true customer insight that’s hard to gather any other way.

If you think you lack customer intelligence, and you have a call center, you couldn’t be more wrong. You have terabytes of it sitting in your call-recording databases. Start using it.

Related post:
Turning points in telephone sales calls

(Photo by benthecube via Flickr Creative Commons)

A plea for feedback on the webinar

Monday, July 13th, 2009

Hi, all,

I did a very fun webinar a couple of weeks ago (”Customer Insight From The Ground Up“) and now am looking for feedback on it. I like the presentation subject matter and would like to continue to refine it for future talks. But… I really need people to tell me what they think. Is it completely incoherent? When do I start losing your interest? What’s extraneous? What do I need to change for the next time – or do you think I should cut my losses and make sure there’s not a next time? Give me details!

You can listen to the webinar, as well as download slides & notes, from Listrak’s site here.

Any and all feedback is welcome, in the comments, or via email (john@caddellinsightgroup.com).

Thanks a lot.