Why treating customers right requires constant collaboration
Steve HemsleyAs members of Marketing Week’s CX50 list demonstrate, companies can only deliver what the customer wants and needs if the whole organisation is aligned.
As members of Marketing Week’s CX50 list demonstrate, companies can only deliver what the customer wants and needs if the whole organisation is aligned.
Online auction giant eBay is extending its customer-centric approach to help SMEs in Wolverhampton revive the struggling high street.
Most businesses try to put consumers at the heart of what they do, but many fall short because actually being customer-centric often means making business decisions that seem counter-intuitive.
As the members of the CX50 list demonstrate, a great customer experience doesn’t just make people feel good, it translates into tangible business results – but the field is getting more competitive all the time.
Creativity and storytelling were previously seen as a luxury afforded to B2C brands but B2B marketers are waking up to the effectiveness opportunity investment can bring.
Being made redundant can knock your confidence and make you doubt your abilities. But the advice from those who have experienced it is to start networking, reassess you career direction and come back stronger.
If a new political party established by The Independent Group is to succeed, it will need to build a strong and consistent brand, which is focused on key policies rather than individual faces and speaks to voters beyond London.
Fewer than half of marketers provide an experience that meets what customers expect, new data shows, but the highest performers are leading cross-functional efforts to improve personalisation and real-time response.
Artificial intelligence is a fast-developing field whose impact on the customer experience has until recently seemed largely theoretical, but now the real-life uses of AI by brands are ramping up.
From discovery of new products to customer care, today’s customer journey is more complex than ever. In this competitive landscape, brand success is centred on meaningful, one-to-one interactions.
Black Friday is one of only two sales a year for fitness brand Gymshark, and for last November’s promotion its finely tuned timing and stand-out creative led to a huge influx of sales via Instagram.
Brands are breaking free from one-category products that limit growth and innovation and are taking advantage of consumers’ eagerness to experiment.
M&M’s saw the benefits of taking an unfamiliar approach to mobile advertising, in a Facebook campaign that boosted sales by more than a third.
With consumers demanding ever more immediate communication from brands, Facebook’s Messenger is now one of the customers’ favoured methods for interacting with the Dutch airline.
The most successful brands in a future of increasing connectivity will be those that give people a reason to engage and make every channel work to improve the customer experience.