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Future of Retail — Customer Engagement
issue 08
take out 10% of costs’ because they still need to improve the experience.”
CUSTOMER EXPERIENCE IS A BIG DIFFERENTIATOR The focus on the experience is absolutely vital at this time, she says, because consumers have more options than ever before and they now shop across channels as well as having high expectations. “It’s a challenge for retailers because people
no longer fit into neat packages. In a world of 24-hour shopping they have more options and so they might sometimes want to deal with a retailer on a purely transactional basis but at other times they might need advice and human interaction,” explains Causon. In a world where it is easy to deal on
the transactional level the creation of real engagement with customers is increasingly valuable. It is this that ultimately creates trust with customers and this is the primary reason why they buy multiple products from a retailer and stay with that organisation as a loyal shopper.
NOT A SOFT FLUFFY THING This human interaction is not a “soft, fluffy, pink thing but is hard economics”, she says adding: “Where an organisation scores above average on customer engagement they also outperform on profitability. Customer service matters and it has hard-nosed benefits,” says Causon. Although the retail industry performs
well in the annual ‘UK Customer Satisfaction Index’ from the ICS, she warns that such is the competitiveness within the sector that there is no room for complacency. “Retailers do not necessarily need to change anything at this time but the reality is that customers have more choice, are more savvy, and less money, so the sector has to continue to work hard,” she says.
TRAINING AND DEVELOPMENT IS CRUCIAL The key place where work should be done is on the combination of training and the ongoing development of employees as this feeds directly through to impacting the customer interaction. This should be aligned with retailers delivering a product that does what it
says and matches customer expectations. The other vital aspect of the customer
experience, according to Causon, is how effectively retailers deal with complaints. Problems have to be fixed and such interactions and resolutions have to be undertaken with timeliness. “Good companies are brilliant at all these things – the hygiene factors and then some. And when things go wrong then they also have to show that they care,” she says.
SHOWING YOU CARE Showing that an organisation cares is very much delivered through a human interaction because empathy is not something that translates through automation and robotics. But there is no doubt that robotics and Artificial Intelligence (AI) are going to play a major role in the area of customer engagement in the future. To this end the ICS is undertaking a research
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