CX Is Hitting A Brick Wall

Originally published by Colin Shaw on LinkedIn: CX Is Hitting A Brick Wall

I appreciate this is a controversial title - but let me explain! Last year, I questioned whether Customer Experience had delivered the goods. This year, I question whether Customer Experience is the problem. This year, I think Customer Experience isn’t failing us; we are failing Customer Experience.

This whole line of thinking started last June with the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI) score. ACSI uses an overall U.S. Customer Satisfaction score to denote the health of the economy. Since 1994, the ACSI score rose from 74.8 to 76.8 in 2013 —and then dropped to 75.2 by the end of 2014. The scores then show a steady decline across all four quarters last year, ending at 73.4. You can see the whole chart here.

This trend is, of course, a tad disappointing.

The idea of Customer Experience is that by improving it, you will increase your emotional engagement with your customers. They will feel positive toward your brand, like you more, form an emotional bond with you, become more loyal to you, and give you more of their business. It isn’t a stretch to assume they will be satisfied by the experience.

Many organizations say they have embraced Customer Experience. They say they have invested time and money into improving their Customer Experience.

But the ASCI continues to drop. Which begs the question, is investing in the Customer Experience worth it?

The answer is YES! We know that improving the CX does pay dividends. Our work with clients shows this to be the case.

Here are two examples:

Maersk Line who have improved their net promoter score by 40 points in 30 months which resulted in a 10% increase in shipping volumes.

Ricoh Canada who improved their Net promoter score by 34 points in 30 months and have subsequently grown revenues by 10% year on year, in a ‘shrinking printer usage market”.


So if this change is possible, why hasn’t the ASCI risen the way we expected with so many people embracing the concept of Customer Experience?

I have a theory, but bear with me; again it’s a bit controversial! Part of the reason Customer Experience hasn’t made the gains for companies that it should is because people are just jumping on the bandwagon, rebranding their jobs Customer Experience, but not doing anything differently.

For example, only the other day I was talking to somebody who had Customer Experience in their job title. During the conversation, this person revealed the fact that he used to be in Customer Service. The rest of the conversation went like this: