Understanding Your Customers’ Needs and Wants Three steps to elevate your Customer Experience

Alicia Freites
5 min readMar 9, 2020

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As a consultant understanding clients’ needs and wants is at the center of my practice. To connect with clients, I need to know what they want, their aspirations, and deliver what they need, providing the best solution for their problems.

I am a service provider to B2B and a Customer Experience (CX) practitioner. My motto is the “360 view” of my customers — meaning — that I need to understand my clients and, subsequently, my clients’ customers.

My clients want to stay relevant and innovative and often look at other successful companies, hot industry trends, or new shiny products for inspiration. Perhaps, the motivation is staring at them all the time. A vital component of growth is customers.

“Listening to customers is essential and understanding their aspirations and behaviors.” Alicia Freites

Although the importance of being a customer-centric company is not a new concept, the right steps to achieve a customer service focus are still hazy. Most of the companies will try to look for solutions without taking into account their customers’ needs and wants.

A CX practitioner will help you apply frameworks and tools and simplify the customer feedback loop, to incorporate the knowledge into your organization processes. As Steve Jobs notably stated, “You’ve got to start with the customer experience and work backward to the technology, you cannot start with the technology and try to figure out where you are going to sell it.”

CX has evolved recently, with technology, organizations that are leaders in the market understand that they need to create products and services that are customer-centric.

With this philosophy in mind, Oliver Kipp, Chief Customer Officer, Maritz stated, “Failing to engage customers on more than just a rational level is more than a lost opportunity for a brand. It’s a failure to recognize that even the most basic choices people make are informed — both consciously and unconsciously — by their emotions.”

Those organizations that understand the emotional relationship between their brand, technology, and CX strategy are those that developed a competitive advantage. The leaders in the market are those companies that listen to customers and implement changes to meet customers’ expectations and mainly adapt their people, process, and technology to meet customers’ demands.

How can successful companies understand their customers’ needs and wants and, most importantly, get value from it using technology?

Well, as I mentioned before, there are many frameworks and tools in the market that will help organizations become CX and compete, and all start understanding your customers.

Leading companies spend a lot of money and resources to understand customers, but I have three simple steps process for you to get you started in the right direction.

What is the level of maturity of your organization? Ignore, no customer strategy at all, Novice, include some level of customer issues in their strategy, Competent, your organization makes some real effort of addressing customer’s issues, Mature, these are leaders in the market they embedded customer experience in every aspect of the business.

Understanding where you need to start, do your research is the first step. Do as your customers do. Use google to get industry reports on your business industry, select a benchmark that you think you could achieve within the next six months. For example: Do your customers expect real-time interactions? Are your competitors responding in real-time? Is that a benchmark that you could achieve in the next six months?

Example of Industry Benchmark

The second step is to analyze. Go back and compare how you are doing, is there a gap or you are outperforming the competition or providing those real-time interactions to your customers, or are you failing? Ask your customers how you are doing. Prioritize possible solutions to address the difference between your delivery of the service and your customer’s expectations. Do you have the budget to deliver real-time communications, maybe you are providing it already, find out if you are giving what your customers expect? Once you collect the data, use a simple prioritization matrix to analyze your options, and determine where to start.

Prioritization Matrix

Finally, design the solution. From the prioritization list, choose one option that you could do today — “Quick Win” — that will ease the pain for your customers. And choose a second option, “Major Project,” that will take you at least six months.

CX Desing
Digital and Analog

In conclusion, you don’t need to spend a lot of resources and look beyond to find shiny or expensive solutions. Most of the time, the answers are staring at you. When you align your products and services with your customers at heart, you are on the right path to becoming a CX leader.

If you want to learn more about how I could help you, I would love to hear from you, leave a comment or connect with me on Linkedin

https://www.linkedin.com/in/afreites/

Sources:

CX University Online CCXP training.

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Alicia Freites

Helping entrepreneurs that believe in a balance between profits and human connections. Visit my blog at aliciafreites5.net