Franchise Update Magazine Issue IV, 2012 | Page 32
Grow Market Lead
Connecting
with
customers
By Jack Mackey
Maps and Legends
Using customer journey mapping to manage
the customer experience
C
ustomer journey mapping
is a hot topic for the leaders of franchise organizations. Why now? For one
reason, because customers connect with
us and we connect with them in ways
that were not imagined 10 years ago:
through Groupon, social networking,
smartphones, and online reservations
and ordering. We must manage these
new developments in addition to providing a superior customer experience
inside the four walls, which is more
important than ever before.
Customer point of view
There are so many customer touchpoints
through various channels and at different stages in the customer lifecycle that
you almost have to see what’s happening
to really wrap your mind around all the
ways customers perceive your brand today. Thus the rise of customer journey
mapping. The purpose of developing a
customer journey map is to help franchi-
sors document visually all the possible
ways customers are engaged with your
brand at each stage of your customer
development process: 1) attraction, 2)
interaction, and 3) cultivation.
When you break the customer journey down this way, it is crucial to “walk
a mile” in your customer’s shoes. By
taking the customer’s point of view you
can more accurately understand your
true competitive position—the same
way successful franchise brands now
use Voice of the Customer systems to
understand reality, which is the customer perception.
Customer journey mapping expands
this approach of looking at your business through the eyes of the customer
to discover new ways to build brand
equity and drive sales growth.
and behavior patterns. A 16-year-old
boy with his high school basketball
team out for a pizza celebration at
CiCi’s wants something different
from his experience than a single
mom out for dinner with her young
children at CiCi’s. Customer journey
mapping includes the development
of different customer personas and
customer experience scenarios. That
leads to improved customer experience design for the types of customers
being sought.
On stage and back stage
In considering the customer journey
from end to end, how do you ensure
execution, both on stage and back
stage? Most companies develop service expectations for employees and
performance standards that enable
consistent on-stage processes; that’s
what customers see happening. By
mapping back-stage processes, franchise systems can identify the crucial
enablers that influence the customer
experience—processes like employee
selection, applications for scheduling
labor, integrated ordering/inventory
management systems, and real-time
access to customer satisfaction data
and authentic customer comments.
Customer personas
There are multiple versions of “the”
customer, depending on their goals and
skills, as well as their circumstances
Sample customer journey map
The graphic incorporates the customer
point of view, customer personas, and
on-stage and back-stage enablers.
The customer experience is more
complex than ever. There are considerably more touchpoints we are just
learning how to manage. (A cynic
might say more chances to fail the
customer.)
Without a clear understanding of
the customer journey, you can be left
flying blind. A customer journey map
adds clarity by creating a comprehensive
and illustrated model that can unlock
hidden insights that inform a winning
strategy. n
SMG Chief Evangelist, Jack Mackey, CFE,
helps companies transform the customer experience. To request more information on
Customer Journey Mapping, contact him
at [email protected].
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