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What is customer experience management (CXM)? Ultimate guide

By Don Fluckinger

Customer experience management (CXM) is the collection of processes a company uses to track, oversee and organize every interaction between a customer and the organization throughout the customer lifecycle.

While many consider them synonymous, customer experience and customer service have key differences CX leaders must understand to achieve precision in their takeaways and best practices. Focusing on customer service to the detriment of the overall customer experience is a short-sighted view of the customer journey.

Why is CXM important?

Customer experience with a brand contributes to customer perceptions and sales. It can be positive when done well and negative when some elements of CXM are left unattended.

There are several benefits to implementing a CXM strategy:

What's the difference between CRM and CXM

While CXM may look similar to customer relationship management (CRM) strategy and software, there are key differences when comparing CRM vs. CXM, one being perspective: CRM shows what a customer looks like to the company, and CXM defines what a company looks like to the customer. CXM is a strategy that puts business customers at the center of marketing, sales and customer support to drive brand loyalty and repeat business.

CXM programs heavily rely on VoC programs that quantify customer sentiment about their experiences with a company. Over time, a CX management program will adjust elements of the customer experience that generate negative feedback to correct those perceptions.

CRM strategy, however, focuses on sales and outreach to customers from the company's perspective of capturing more revenue. Typically, this sales-oriented system -- which sometimes integrates with customer service and support -- requires major digital transformation to support an overall CXM program.

How to create a good customer experience

CXM requires companies to have a 360-degree view of customers, with integrated, up-to-date data on customer accounts. There are four critical steps to creating a successful customer experience strategy:

Brands must assemble a CX team to execute those steps. CX teams include several roles, some new to many companies. These roles may include a chief customer officer, a chief experience officer and several CX managers. Analysts often report to the CX managers or executives to manage the data projects involved and act as a liaison between the CXM team and other departments -- such as marketing, customer service, sales and IT. Together, this team should monitor and develop a consistently improving customer experience.

What are some CXM challenges?

Eight main obstacles get in the way of good customer experience:

The customer experience journey

Chief experience officers are accountable for customer experience at every customer touchpoint with a company. Understanding why customer touchpoints matter is essential to boost satisfaction and drive growth. To find those touchpoints, draw a customer journey map, which reveals customers' many interactions with a brand. At a minimum, the map will have four sections:

  1. Research. The customer discovers a company, often on the web, via advertising or through third parties, such as consultants, colleagues or social media acquaintances.
  2. Comparison. Customers discover a brand's competitors and research user perception, functions, capabilities, cost and other attributes of all the competing products.
  3. Purchase. This part of the journey is the big business win, but it's just the beginning of customer retention and loyalty building.
  4. Support. The customer service and support teams that come into play after a sale are where loyalty and repeat sales begin. If these teams are poorly conceived, they can break the customer experience and send customers to competitors.

A key component of building effective customer journey maps is the development of customer personas. Once a company knows the main archetypes of its customer base from developing smart market segments, it can plug the typical personas into the journey map to show how to personalize content and the customer experience for each persona.

While businesses can build their customer journey map, several customer journey mapping tools can help streamline the process. These tools can help track key customer journey KPIs so CX leaders can identify what isn't working and adjust.

Customer experience management techniques and strategies

Understanding and managing customer experience requires CX professionals to become experts in skills like honing their strategic outlook or working in a data-driven mindset. Anyone looking to start a career in customer experience or learn about the latest CX trends should consider attaining a customer experience certification to get recognition for their expertise.

Managing customer experience along the entire customer journey requires the following:

Customer data privacy and security

Security breaches continue to grow in frequency and severity, and high-profile cybersecurity attacks keep customer privacy prominent in the minds of everyone who shares their personal information. As organizations gather and store more customer data, they must ensure that data remains protected and comply with privacy policies and laws.

CX teams can start by making CX security core to their overall strategy. It's up to every member of a CX team to mitigate the threat of data breaches by following best practices for customer data privacy. These practices include but aren't limited to deploying a data governance strategy, establishing and implementing cybersecurity policies, ensuring data is encrypted and protected, and continuously training employees.

How to choose the right CXM software

A customer experience management strategy isn't complete without the appropriate technologies to support it. Many cloud software vendors, such as Salesforce, Microsoft, Oracle and SAP, have platforms to manage the customer experience from end to end. These platforms center around four major components:

Other customer experience management platforms -- from vendors such as Adobe, Pegasystems, Episerver and Acquia -- offer integrated parts of the customer experience stack. These vendors are often adept in one or a few parts of the digital experience -- Adobe for marketing, customer analytics and e-commerce; Pegasystems for process management, customer service and more -- but weak or incomplete in other areas. Using these platforms often requires a mixed-vendor environment to complete the customer experience technology stack. Incidentally, that's a more common configuration than the single-vendor shop.

Some companies may benefit from building their customer experience technologies from a foundation of software they're already using. For example, a manufacturing company that tracks its international supply chain and distributors with an SAP ERP system may find integrating SAP customer experience tools more straightforward than starting from scratch with another vendor.

Other important customer experience tools include the following:

10 Aug 2023

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