Know the Intent and Motivation Behinds CX Actions

Many companies try to copy the actions that result from beloved companies’ decisions. The fact of the matter is decisions that earn customer love are not easily reached. To achieve the same impact, what enabled the decision must exist. You must get beyond the decision itself and possess what lies beneath it.

  • What is the intent at the core of the decision?
  • What motivated leaders and employees to make their decisions?

It’s the intent (the “what”) and the motivation (the “why”) behind decisions that bond people with companies.

When your intent (what you want to accomplish) and your motivation (the reason why you make your decision) are driven by your awareness of and empathy for the people impacted by your decisions, the outcomes will set you apart. The humanity and empathy of your decisions will connect you emotionally with customers. And those customers will grow your business by telling the story of their experiences to everyone they know.

In uncovering intention and motivation, what becomes clear is that beloved companies defy traditional practices and resist restricting customers and employees with a set of rules and regulations.

With each shipment you make, with each call, with each customer contact, decide what you want your customers to get from you. Decide how you want them to describe you. Choose what story you want them to tell about your products and services. Making it happen begins with how you make decisions. It’s about the intent and motivation that guide your customer experience decisions. Are you ready?

 

1 comment to " Know the Intent and Motivation Behinds CX Actions "

  • Eric Larse

    What we see over an over again in our research are the themes of empathy and reliability/competence. What people want across multiple industries are providers who are empathetic, care about they and their needs and are capable to satisfying those needs. A little empathy goes a long way. The trick is…as delivery and assistance channels become increasing automated , how to build empathy into the system.

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