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I**W
Great customer experience
It’s a good book. Does a good job of explaining why and how it is important to have an easy customer experience. It’s discussion about least amount of effort really does mean a lot with the current world environment.
S**N
Great customer service book
Great read. Study of what customers currently need from a business through customer service interactions. Results from actually studies of call centers supervisors, reps, and the customers themselves. Actual practical advise on how to use the information in this book in real business settings.
A**R
The Effortless Experience
Great read. Simple, concise, and chock full of examples and anecdotal evidence. A practical explanation for customer behavior. A pleasant excursion from theory and opinion. Yes these principles are evolutionary and may take significant time and energy, but they are borne out by data.
D**K
Too Often We're Solving The Wrong Problem
Too often, we're solving the wrong problem! We think customers want a delightful customer service experience. We design our processes, train our people, measure them on delighting the customer. We implement self service tools, web conferencing, provide the latest in technology all in the spirit of serving the customer.At the same time, we are trying to make our customer service organizations as cost effective and efficient as possible. So our customer service strategies are constrained, rightfully so, by our business strategies.But is this really the right problem to be solving? Is this what customers really want. Yes, they absolutely want to be treated well, by skilled and polite people. But more then anything else, they want their problem solved---as quickly and effortlessly as possible.And that's where we go wrong in so many cases. We are solving for the wrong problem. If we started focusing on effortless customer service experience, we would probably change everything we do. We would possibly reduce the cost of service delivery, more effectively drive customer loyalty, and so on.This book turns much of our traditional thinking about customer service upside down. It provides data challenging old thoughts about a "delighted customer" is a loyal customer--both spending more and recommending you more.This is a must read and think book for anyone in Customer Service. It's a must read book for every sales and marketing executive. It should stimulate everyone to question their assumptions, reframing what they do to create effortless experiences.
J**M
Next customer experience book. And I have read many
One of the best books on customer experience. I’m in the industry and have read a number of them but this one is well researched and helps you understand plus gives you ways to implement. Awesome!
T**R
Pretty good read
Overal, this is a good book on the customer experience. It focuses on how to improve that experience in a mostly call center environment. My only real issue is that it the author takes an inside out approach to improving the customer experience.In our modern day and with our technology, we should be looking to take an outside in approach to improving the customer experience. Meaning, let us go through what the customer goes through to get to a person to help, so we can see where we need to make improvements that our customers will appreciate.
M**Y
There's some good stuff in here!
My manager "recommended" (ahem!) that I read this before my first meeting with the new "director". I went into it with a so-so attitude. I'm always happy to learn and I am really and truly invested in improving our customer experience but I get so tired of corporate games. I'm only halfway through but there's actually some good stuff in here! I've said for years that customers don't want to be "delighted"...they just want one less hassle in their day. Make their lives easier somehow and they don't care about rainbows and unicorns. You can "wow" one customer in a hundred or you can satisfy 90 in a hundred. If the opportunity to "wow" arises, great, jump on it, but there are so many things we can do every day to reduce customer effort and we need to! (I'm the QR lead at a startup software company...reviewing our CS interactions and TRYING to train agents and improve the customer experience)
A**.
Good read, I'd recommend.
I bought this book after realizing myself that there seemed to be a lot of correlation between a customer's effort level. This book does a good job expanding on it and breaking down with actual research and real world examples why this is the case and what can be done to decrease customer effort.The message behind this book is useful for anyone looking different ways to improve the overall customer experience.
L**A
Must read for founders and Investors.
If looking for a book that will help you better understand how to enhance your client experience, this one is definitely a must.
D**E
you must read this book if you are going down the CX journey
There are so many books around about CX nowadays. Depending which one you read and follow go into delighting, wowing, creating fans, super satisfying etc etc. But at the end of the day what a lot of customers want is an effortless experience done right first time. this book is exactly that, about ease of doing business backed up by overwhelming statistics and research.yes the book is rather focused on the customer service side of the customer journey, but you can't avoid or neglect the importance of being easy to do business with.if you read around the CX topic you will find this book is referenced time and time again and for very good reason
D**S
Le CES, le nouvel indicateur
Excellent livre, qui remets en question la manière de juger de la loyauté d'un client.
R**O
Muy obvio pero bien
El libro es bastante obvio en muchas de sus afirmaciones. La lectura es rápida y sencilla pero no esperes grandes descubrimientos.
G**S
Valuable
Their assertions are supported by quality data, which I appreciated. Wasn't as relevant to my small business as I had hoped though, but still a worthwhile read.
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