The Digital Transformation Playbook: Rethink Your Business for the Digital Age
Download 1.53 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
The-Digital-Transformation-Playbook-Rethink-Your-Business-for-the-Digital-Age-PDFDrive.com-
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- Customer network behaviors Five customer network strategies
Access Strategy
The access strategy for business is to be faster, be easier, be everywhere, and be always on for your customers. We know that standards of speed, ease, and ubiquity may shift over time: where an access strategy might have once meant offering e-commerce for the first time, today it might mean provid- ing a mobile-optimized website, more rapid delivery, or order tracking. My research on mobile showrooming with Matt Quint and Rick Ferguson found that the same customers may, at different times, choose to buy a product online or in a store (even choosing the more expensive option), depending on which method gives them greater convenience. And that convenience depends on context: Am I buying something I want to use right now? Is it something heavy that is easier to have shipped to my home? Can I afford to wait a day or two for delivery? 9 The use of cloud computing, mobile devices, and location-based geo-targeting has brought a wave of new innovations that grant greater access to consumers and business customers alike. Figure 2.4 Five Customer Network Behaviors and Customer Network Strategies. Customer network behaviors Five customer network strategies Access Be faster, be easier, be everywhere, be always on Engage Become a source of valued content Customize Make your offering adaptable to your customers’ needs Connect Become a part of your customers’ conversations Collaborate Invite your customers to help build your enterprise 32 H A R N E S S C U S T O M E R N E T W O R K S An access strategy may therefore take a variety of approaches, including mobile commerce, omni-channel experiences, working in the cloud, and on-demand service. r Mobile commerce: Travelers are already accustomed to using QR codes on their phone screens as tickets to board planes and trains. Hotel chains like Starwood are developing room doors that guests can unlock with a swipe of their smartphone. Tesco launched its stores in South Korea by putting up posters of popular grocery items on subway plat- forms and allowing customers to order home delivery right from their phone just by scanning the item they wanted (milk, biscuits, 32 oz. Snapple). With mobile payment systems and in-store targeting, cus- tomers can receive discounts, redeem coupons, purchase, and recom- mend, all from their small screen. r Omni-channel experiences: Increasingly, businesses are recognizing that customers are looking for an integrated experience across all digi- tal and physical touchpoints. Walmart, for example, has developed a mobile shopping app with different features designed for when cus- tomers are in a Walmart store versus using the same app at home. An additional feature auto-detects when a customer opens the app while in one of its four thousand North American stores, to provide the right version. After implementing this enhanced mobile app, Walmart found that 12 percent of its online sales came from customers who purchased from Walmart.com while in the store aisle. r Working in the cloud: With the shift from downloaded MP3s on iTunes to streaming music services like Spotify, consumers are quickly becom- ing accustomed to paying for products that reside entirely in the cloud. Likewise, businesses are shifting more and more of their work pro- cesses to the cloud with software-as-a-service (SaaS) providers like Google Apps, Salesforce, Dropbox, and Evernote. The result is much lower IT costs for businesses and greater flexibility for an increasingly mobile and collaborative workforce. r On-demand services: Increasingly, services that used to require the cus- tomer to be in a specific location at a specific time are now accessible to customers anywhere at any time. Retail banks that used to advertise the number of local ATMs they had are now touting all the banking services customers can manage via their phone (including scanning a paper check to deposit it). Start-ups like the Khan Academy, Coursera, and EdX are pushing the limits of on-demand education. Health care is just beginning to take advantage of telemedicine, where customers H A R N E S S C U S T O M E R N E T W O R K S 33 receive nonurgent care and consultation remotely by text, e-mail, and live videoconferencing with a physician. The keys to an access strategy are simplicity, convenience, ubiquity, and flexibility. Offering a product or service one step closer, easier, or faster helps your business to continuously create additional value for customers and win their loyalty. Download 1.53 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling