How to Align Your Strategy to a Customer-First Approach

Today’s consumers prefer businesses that take the time to understand them and care about their needs. A customer-first approach focuses on customers and offers a range of services, products, and experiences that impress, build loyalty, and increase lifetime value. Research by Deloitte and Touche showed that customer-focused companies were 60% more profitable than those that weren’t. However, even though brands see the value in prioritizing customers, many struggle to achieve this.

So what is holding brands back?

First, brands need to know their customers well. Not just in general, but by looking closely at each customer’s journey. This is where many marketers find it challenging. With the huge amounts of data generated quickly across different channels, gathering and combining this information to understand it requires the right technology, data insights, and analysis methods working together effectively.

Know Your Customers

You can’t be a customer-centric business without knowing your customers. In today’s age, this means adopting a data-driven mindset to capture customer information at every touchpoint. Customers are producing mounds of information – marketers just need to know where to look and how to collect it.

Marketers collect a range of data including first party data such as contact data, demographics, customer service, digital marketing interactions, customer satisfaction, social media interactions and transactions. They are also supplementing it with third party assets such as lifestyle, behavioral information, life event data and purchase intent.

Implement a Customer Data Platform

Many marketers have adopted a customer data platform (CDP) to quickly integrate multiple data sources. Through a range of system connectors, many CDPs continuously collect data from around the marketing ecosystem and consolidate it into a 360 single customer view by merging identities from multiple devices into one and deduping customer records.

In a survey by The Relevancy Group, the most popular data type that marketers are integrating into their CDP is their CRM data. This is true for both B2C and B2B marketers. Other types of data includes customer profiles and demographics, customer online spending, customer service and support, and website behavior.

Customer Data Platform CDP

Deploy Personalized Experiences Across Channels

Omnichannel marketing enables a customer-first approach. By adopting an omnichannel mindset, marketers are able to align with consumers as they move from channel to channel.

One of the most crucial elements of an omnichannel strategy is integrated technology and data. In research by Econsultancy, “92% of survey respondents agreed with this statement, again proving that knowledge is not the problem. Rather, it is the execution, with just 37% of advertisers agreeing that their marketing and advertising systems are highly integrated.”

Similar results were found in a study by Evergage. Only 3% of US companies said they had true omnichannel personalization. Additionally, respondents stated:

  • 9% – Have most channels connected
  • 14% – Have about half of our channels connected
  • 53% – Have a few channels connected
  • 21% – Don’t have any channels connected

Omnichannel Personalization

When channels are connected and data is integrated to know customers across these channels, customer-first strategies can pay off big. First, consumers expect personalized communications and interactions with brands. According to research by The Harris Poll, 63% of consumers in North America and the UK agreed that they expect personalization from brands and retailers. Additionally, 43% of respondents said that brands made them feel like an individual when they were reaching the same customer across all touchpoints.

Omnichannel Personalization

Many consumers (73%) feel that brands struggle to deliver personalized experiences. Some of the biggest areas of frustration included receiving an offer for something they already bought (37%) and not being recognized as an existing customer (33%). However, only 37% of consumers surveyed said that they would stop doing business with a brand for these reasons.

Foster a Customer-Centric Culture Across the Organization

Building a successful customer-first strategy is in many ways dependent on the company as a whole. Many departments interact with customers and there must be a shared mindset of focusing on customer experiences. When the entire team is on board, processes can be put in place to integrate systems, collaborate on messaging, and ultimately breaking down silos to focus on the customer.