Customer vs. Employee
When
it’s all said and done, all you’re truly left with at
the end of the day is your company’s brand and what your
brand stands for in the minds of both your customers and
employees. Do
you manage your company brand for the benefit of both
constituencies: customers and employees?
Most companies that I consult with focus their
brand management efforts solely on the customer.
If you’re really serious about differentiating
your brand from your competitors, I suggest you begin to
manage your brand from a dual, point of view: customers
and employees.
Your
brand, be it appliances, electronics, automobiles,
clothing, etc. serves as a powerful magnet that attracts
both customers and employees to your door, while serving
as an anchor to hold them.
The best companies manage their brands from both
perspectives. And
why not, after all isn’t it your front-line employees
who are the face and personality of your brand to your
customers?
Customer
Perspective:
Great
brands connect with their customers on an emotional level
vs. logical. It
terms of emotion, what does it feel like to do business
with you? Brand
positioning starts with a frame of reference that
communicates to your customers an expectation they can
achieve when doing business with you.
However, you have to know who you are before you
can convince others.
Many
companies often promote attributes of their products and
services that consumers don’t care about.
It’s important to assess not only product
benefits and features but also the customers buying
experience. Every point of contact, commonly referred to
as “moments of truth” or “touch points.”
From the moment your customers approach your stores
to the moment they leave, what was the experience like?
From exterior, to store design, to product
offering, to service - is your customer buying experience
fast, friendly, and helpful?
It’s the overall experience that customers recall
when it’s time for them to purchase again. Make it
positive and memorable.
While
careful consideration of your brands point of
differentiation is important, just as important are your
points of parity with your other products and services. Be sure to assess on a continual basis your points of parity
otherwise brand attributes that were once differentiators
may become minimum requirements, also know as “price of
entry.”
Employee
Perspective:
If
providing your customers with a fast, friendly, helpful
and memorable buying experience is key to success, then I
think we’d all agree that the folks serving your
customers are the critical link.
Not technology, products, or store design; but
people!
Technology,
products, and hard assets are indeed important to your
business, however, successful branding is all about
connecting with your customers on an emotional level, and
that can only be achieved on the human level.
Technology is a great enabler, however your brands
real moment of truth is when your customers are standing
at the transaction counter looking into the face of your
sales associate. It
is at this moment that all your branding promises are
either fulfilled or broken (*).
Managing
the employee dimension of your brand involves: recruiting,
interviewing and selection, training, career development
and business culture, which includes: motivation,
teamwork, reward and recognition, and leadership.
It’s the people side of the business that
represents your brand to your customers that create the
emotional link for brand loyalty.