For many years, CX and Customer Feedback has found a firm place within the B2C environment, with many B2B organisations eschewing formalised feedback programmes. For the most part, the reason for the lower uptake within B2B industries was that there was a long-held assumption that retention and customer relationships happened organically thanks to account management and the like. In recent years, however, it has become clear, that particularly in large, complex B2B organisations, there is a definite need to formalise the understanding of customer feedback. The adoption of both structured customer departments, CX strategy and indeed, technology-driven mechanisms to gather feedback from customers is ever increasing.
Why is B2B CX so complex?
Creating B2B moments of truth
Within a B2B environment, both the sales and retention processes are far longer and more complex than in a B2C relationship. Consider for a moment an individual making a shoe purchase from a store as opposed to a corporate entering into a 36-month contract. The processes may both look relatively linear and straightforward, but within the B2B environment, the number of interactions, stakeholders, value and processes involved make it challenging.
From a CX point of view, the last to stages within this process can get really messy. The usage stage may span years and involve multiple levels within a client organisation - where people change roles, strategy shifts and the relative value offered to the client is continually evaluated. More often than not, the highest risk within a B2B customer relationship is during the renewal phase. During this stage, particularly with high-value contracts, the decision-makers are often very far removed from the Day-to-Day usage of a service. More often than not, this dynamic comes into play when B2B organisations have adopted transactional feedback mechanisms to understand the functional value. Still, by lagging on relational feedback, there are either weaker relationships with decision-makers or missing value for the less obvious players in the buyer's pool.
Managing the buyer pool
One's garbage is another's treasure
Decision-making buyers, however, tend to start at the individual value tier. If they move upward to inspirational value, they begin to have a personal affinity to the brand, which creates real stickiness. The danger here is if decision-makers are only receiving functional value or table stakes. This is when a B2B relationship considered to be that of a service provider and buyer, not partnership. These levels of value can be understood through mechanisms such as relational studies, where definitions of value can be tested.
Many to many
The last, and perhaps most crucial driver of complexity within B2B CX, is linked to the fact that a B2B relationship is not one to one, but many to many. Essentially, this means that customer satisfaction is wholly driven by teams of people employed within the B2B environment. This additional element of complexity means that in much the same way as customers, employees follow an "employment journey" and have different value expectations from their employer. Not only do successful organisations need to create a cultural affinity between themselves and their employees, but they also need to understand their employee experience in conjunction with their customer experience. Furthermore, every customer experience is often the result of the internal value chain, with vital value-creating interactions happening along the chain, long before the end product is delivered to the customer. Such interactions need to be understood through an experience lens to ensure that the when feedback is ultimately gathered from the customers – these interactions have been value-creating, not eroding.
B2B involved people, Afterall….
According to a recent Mckinsey study "B2B customer-experience index ratings significantly lag behind those of retail customers. B2C companies typically score in the 65 to 85 percent range, while B2B companies average less than 50 percent. What is changing is the realisation that while B2B relationships are complex, they involve individual people, who require great experiences to remain satisfied."
Ideally, B2B organisations should adopt a 3-pronged approach – measuring satisfaction on a transactional level, understanding the customer on a relational level and measuring employee experience. For those just beginning to understand their B2B relationships, periodic relational feedback from key buyer persona's is a good starting point.
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