You’ve heard the old adage “a champion team will always beat a team of champions” and of course we can see the truth in this every week following our favourite team sport. When the blood, sweat and tears have been exhausted and the flag is won, inevitably the conversation goes to how well the team ‘came together’, or how well the leadership group inspired everyone to ‘play for each other’. And for sure, how hard they practised and how well this ‘all came together on the field’.
This is alignment and we love to hear it, especially when it's our team. We love the beauty of it, the simplicity of it, pureness and the humanity of it. We see ordinary players doing extraordinary things and we soar with them.
Why then does this not translate into many businesses and their customer experience? Why is there a difference to what can happen in the sporting arena as to what happens in providing an exceptional customer experience?
The answer – there is no difference it is just how we view the absolutes and non-negotiables of sport as against the mediocrity we accept in our business.
When alignment fails, very quickly, any curiosity, belief, trust or positive emotion customers have for the brand or the business goes straight in the bin. The likelihood of these customers being customers for life diminishes greatly.
Alignment is the fourth of the six keys to a successful, customer-centric sales culture.
Vision
Clarity
Activities
Alignment
Accountability
Reinforcement
Alignment is the glue that holds the business together. It's where the baton changes hands between departments, facilitating an exceptional and seamless customer experience.
Recently I purchased a new car. The manufacturer has spent decades, through both good and bad times, building a brand that represents luxury, performance, status and position. I’d already decided before I went to a dealer this was the car I was going to buy. I was an easy customer. All they had to do was provide an experience that met with my belief of the brand and what it promised. From the outset, the whole sales experience was one-sided. It was all about the salesperson selling a car and getting a commission. In fact, his approach pushed me to negotiate harder than I had intended. When the experience doesn’t match the expectation, then the value starts to diminish and once this happens then the price becomes a determining factor. For less time, effort and cost they could’ve had me at hello! All they needed was alignment across the whole business on what the brand stands for and how each individual brings this to life.
In a world of disruption, the motor industry is, and will continue to, go through major disruption. This is their time to get even closer to the customer, change their outdated ways of doing business and align around a shared purpose.
So, what does your customer experience feel like to your customers?
Do you know the moments of truth – those touch-points between you and your customer? Does every one of these meet the promise you have worked so hard on developing?
Does each one of these feel exceptional?
More than ever we need to get closer to our customers and make sure our whole business is aligned to the customer experience.
Andrew Nisbet




