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alignment with the company’s availability of resources for execution. Marketing undertakings will not work if the finances and human resources to deliver are absent. This exact same script may be lifted and placed at the center of the customer experience plan of action. Service excellence activities must be well planned and aligned with the ‘state’ in which the customer is currently or is anticipated to be. This will be determined by environmental factors both internal and external. If the customer communication plan that includes messaging out to the customer, to nurture an emotional connection towards relationship building does not factor in seasons and the mental state of the customer as determined by what’s happening around them, then it will fall on deaf ears. Putting an ear to the ground and planning for customer experience activities that align to the nation’s frame of mind, will go a long way to confirm to customers that you have them at heart and are in alignment with their needs. And as with all good plans, one cannot disregard the strategic importance of allying activity scheduling with budget and team resource availability for execution. If different departments have their antennae signaling directionally towards factors affecting the customer from a time, trends, and season perspective, would it not make more sense Putting an ear to the ground and planning for customer experience activities that align to the nation’s frame of mind, will go a long way to confirm to customers that you have them at heart and are in alignment with their needs. 20 MAL23/18 ISSUE It is important to know and understand the cus- tomer before any attempts can be made to design activities and initiatives to provide delightful ser- vice to them. To elicit customer appreciation, one must absolutely know who the customer is, where they are from, what their preferences are, what environmental triggers they respond to, what in- fluences their decision making, and whether or not they are sensitive to brand changes. for the strategic themes on marketing and customer experience to be aligned? A great marketing strategy must have a core functionality in place to listen to the voice of the customer. Market research derives results from the outcomes of customer feedback. Innovation must lie at the heart of marketing in order to continuously re-invigorate products and services. Innovation is fed from market research results as the fodder for creative application. This plugs into whatever direction that the organization would like to pursue, be it expansion, new distribution channels, new markets, or introduction of new or enhanced products. To have effectively informed strategies the customers must speak up and customer data must be gathered for decision making. Awareness of the market and the market desires, will serve to have a responsive brand that communicates effectively and whose marketing messages are well received. It is needless to say that any customer experience strategy that does not take into account this same philosophy of listening to the voice of the customer, is bound to fail from the word go. Listening to customers using whatever listening device that best suits the parties at hand, involves proactively seeking their feedback to ascertain where the brand is meeting or failing to deliver on the brand promise. Listening also requires that responsiveness is in place to effectively reach out and quell any discontent that may have arisen or is threatening to arise, and provide solutions. Customers must be listened to, and the customer experience strategy needs to be deliberate and certain about this. Congruence between the marketing and customer experience strategy can be found where marketing will be seeking insights into product and service performance, communication channels and customer preferences, and customer experience will be seeking the same but from the lens of listening out for customer satisfaction, tapping into proposals for improvement and soliciting idea generation. Should the two strategies as such not be harmonized with one plan of action that generates the desired results to be used by the different departments as they deem fit? A great marketing strategy must have in place measurement tools to assess performance against marketing strategy. The return on investment for marketing efforts is often a very tricky affair as marketing campaigns targeted at influencing buyer decision, cannot be activity per activity mapped directly onto purchase per purchase. It is the result of consistent marketing efforts that buyers shift from ‘thoughts-to-boughts’. Marketing metrics therefore, are best enumerated activity wise with the number of customer communication reach outs recorded, activities planned and executed, attendance reached and secondary markets served. In pretty much the same format, customer experience being an emotional affair, is extremely complicated to report in terms of direct return on investment. Customer sentiment is not wholly attributed to one customer service activity, but a series