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How a Bad Decision Process Ruins Customer Experience

Blog: Enterprise Decision Management Blog

Hand holding equations

Communications Service Providers are competing on customer experience powered by data, advanced analytics and connected decisions. In this second article of my series, we’ll look at customer experience scenarios that can be improved by advanced analytics and how CSPs could and should take a more customer-led approach.

The landscape has shifted for CSPs, and identifying competitors is more difficult than it used to be.  Looking at direct businesses is no longer the whole story, as a number of companies in other sectors provide exceptional customer experiences that drive consumer expectation. When a consumer gets used to technology, interface and journey that makes their life easier, it raises their expectation of how their interactions with all companies should be.

So, not only are CSPs competing with one another, they are competing with the over-the-top (OTT) services that use their infrastructure, and also competing with Amazon, Neflix, Spotify and other businesses that their customers love.

The math for investing in customer-based decisions is straightforward: Satisfied customers spend more and stay with you for longer.  Recent research from Analysis Mason shows that for every 1% increase in Net Promoter Score (NPS) there was a 4% decrease in churn.  AT&T’s research shows Customer Satisfaction (CSAT) ratings of 90% have around $10 higher ARPU and longer tenure compared to CSAT of 75%

Yet we know CSPs’ aspiration doesn’t always match the operational ability to achieve this.

What’s Going Wrong

Here’s an example of where customer experience begins to unravel because decisions are not connected and the CSP is not proactive:

Here we have a customer with a long tenure who feels let down by the lack of proactivity to offer an upgrade, is out of contract so has the ability to switch provider with short notice, who is then seemingly punished by having services removed with no communication and then told that they have to pay a deposit to have this reinstated. And then it is up to the customer to get back in the touch with the CSP to have this deposit refunded! The subsequent timing of the upgrade offer reveals an impersonal and disjointed decision management process, which lacks the context of current data

This type of scenario is not unusual and is a classic case of user experience being designed around existing system limitations, rather than truly being designed around the customer.

It exposes the lack of consistency between different channels, teams and departments, and reveals that the CSP is not using real-time data to drive the right offers at the right time with the right context. The decisions made are not connected to one another, they are not optimized and there is little to suggest that any analytics undertaken are at an advanced level. In short, a more personalized and joined-up approach is more likely to foster a strong and enduring relationship.

In my third and final article in this series, we will discuss how embedding analytics into the operation enables CSPs to improve their customer experience capabilities.

The post How a Bad Decision Process Ruins Customer Experience appeared first on FICO.

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