Exceptional Experiences Create Satisfaction & Power Revenue
Do you know how your customers are experiencing your company? Do you understand how their experience relates to your future revenue?
As this school year was winding down, with summer peering over the horizon, my oldest daughter approached a major teenage milestone, driving. Ready to get her license and hit the open road, my wife and I still faced a big hurdle, getting my wife a new car.
Following a bit of research and discovery, we’d selected a couple potential vehicles for my wife to test drive. With the search field narrowed, dealer appointment set, and confirmation received, my wife and I were off. (In fact, I received multiple calls and text messages confirming the appointment)
We arrived a few minutes early and were greeted by a salesperson who offered to take us to the vehicle, which was sitting on another lot. But, when we arrived at the lot, the vehicle wasn’t there. Interesting. We were notified an hour earlier that it was ready for our appointment. Apparently, an hour or two prior to that they had sold it. Sigh.
Because we were already there, we decided to test drive another vehicle. (Which we ended up purchasing) This led to a multitude of interesting experiences.
- While completing the paperwork, they left my wife off the title paperwork and accidentally put another customer on it.
- They called 10+ times over the next 2 weeks to check in, have us rate our experience, and attempt to sell vehicle maintenance. (Despite requests to remove us from the call list.)
- Upon attempting to register the vehicle with the DMV, we discovered some of the required paperwork was missing or incomplete.
- Multiple unanswered/unresponsive calls to the dealer over the next week finally gave way to a conversation with a manager who scheduled time for us to come back so they could correct it. When I arrived, I was informed they would need to redo the emissions testing and, because they were busy and hadn’t scheduled it with their team, I would need to wait until they could fit it in.
This wasn’t a great experience and we won’t be repeat customers.
I don’t think the dealer had any intention of delivering a bad experience. In fact, I think the majority of the individuals I interacted with had a deep desire to make me a customer for life. But something was missing that left the experience feeling a bit disjointed. While they seemed to care, the experience appeared to be something that ‘just happens’ instead of an intentionally defined experience they are on mission to deliver.
What is your customer experience like? Is it benefiting you or, like this dealer, jeopardizing future business? Here are a few basic practices you can use in your business to ensure you deliver the experience you want your customers to have.
- Define your ideal customer experience - Definition matters, and the clarity derived becomes your organization's north star. Once you define the experience you want, you’re able to communicate and assign ownership to your teams.
- Set clear expectations and do what you say you’re going to do when you say you’re going to do it. - Whether good or bad, clearly communicate what a customer should expect from you and when they should expect it. When they know what to expect, they can plan accordingly. Even better, a set expectation can be exceeded!
- Regularly measure and review the experience - Measurement and review provide insight into how your customers are experiencing you. With visibility, you have insight into opportunities that enhance the experience. Where is the experience excellent? Where lies confusion or lack of clarity? Where do customers tend to get frustrated?
- Don’t just let the customer experience happen to you. Define it, communicate it, measure it, and improve it to grow customers for life.






