Three Clarities of Running a Customer-Centric IT

It is important to capture customer insight, not just getting information and understand it partially: Customer-facing applications are critical as at the end of the day they generate revenue for the business. If there is an outage it normally has a direct impact on revenue and consequently attention of the top management. But how to build and launch a successful team to provide first level support of an external customer facing application? How to frame the right questions to get the best feedback from customers. It's tricky to find the right mix between open-ended questions to get feedback we wouldn't have thought about and more precise questions to actually get the customer to think of something he/she wouldn't have thought about. Shall you ask broader questions or shall you initiate more narrow questions, every company just has to take a good look at which information would be the most valuable to them and tailor their questions accordingly.The value of customer feedback is in transforming it from information to insight and using this to interpret customer needs.
Customer-centricity is not equal to perfection, but about “Fit-for-Purpose”: The focus on perfection is indeed flawed, both as a practical matter and for the environment that is created. If you communicate your stance that you expect perfection as opposed to strive for it, then you will create timid underlings who will fear errors as oppose to reach for success. The next practice is to live as "customers." Digital is the age of empathy. The more difficult challenge is not just launching a successful team, but maintaining their motivation and focus. Point out that customer inquiries are not just support related, but can foster new and better ways the application can perform and optimize every touch point of customer experience. It is also important to building a culture of risk tolerance inspires the exercise of people's natural initiative and curiosity while fear of failure chokes it off. The customers and client generally want is a no-nonsense, fit-for-purpose, and hassle free solution to their needs, combined with as little interaction with the seller as possible. Fit-for-purpose" - is equally true for human relationships as for solutions to other needs. Improvement and achieving the right balance in any truly customer-centric organization requires all team members to believe that things can be improved.

When you really understand or attempt to capture the insight about what the customer actually want, that is when you can really develop an experience that fits them and their needs or desires. Running a customer-centric IT would follow the same principle to gain customer empathy. Building customer facing applications is both strategic to delight customer with new solutions, and also tactical to improve project success rate via building the mature team and experiment the best practices or the next practice, with the goal to run a customer-centric IT organization.Follow us at: @Pearl_Zhu
Published on February 20, 2016 23:06
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