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Are You Customer-Centric? Ask Your Customers

Published: February 11, 2014

customerservice3From Business 2 Community: Are you customer-centric?

I was speaking on a panel addressing dig­i­tal expe­ri­ence, Web content man­age­ment, and mar­ket­ing when I real­ized that there was one glar­ing waste of mar­ket­ing dol­lars we still need to talk about: the product-centric mar­ket­ing we con­tinue to do while claim­ing we’re customer-centric. In other words, putting prod­uct first in our mar­ket­ing efforts, rather than respond­ing to the customer’s indi­vid­ual needs and context.

Product-centric mar­ket­ing hap­pens all the time under the guise of customer-centric meth­ods, such as tar­get­ing. Here’s an exam­ple: One con­fer­ence attendee raised his hand and shared an eye-opening story from his own life. He had recently been shop­ping for a drill for a home improve­ment project. He checked out two major home improve­ment retail­ers, both in per­son and online. He went back and forth between the two sites, brows­ing prod­ucts, then nar­rowed his choices and started com­par­ing nitty-gritty drill spec­i­fi­ca­tions and fea­tures. He finally made his deci­sion, went into one store, and bought the drill he wanted.

You’d think that was the end of a pretty uneventful story, but his inter­ac­tions with the home improve­ment stores didn’t stop there. He con­tin­ued to receive emails and retar­geted ads from both stores try­ing to sell him a drill. Many brands would believe this was a customer-centric tac­tic. But one email per­fectly cap­tured the prob­lem: It offered him a dis­count on the very same drill he had just bought.

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