Customer Dynamics is an emerging theory on customer-business relationships that describes the ongoing interchange of information and transactions between customers and organizations. These exchanges occur over a wide range of communication channels, such as phone, email, Web and text, including those outside of organizational control like social media. Similar to the scientific disciplines of family and social dynamics, Customer Dynamics looks at the relationships between organizations and customers from an interpersonal viewpoint. It goes beyond the transactional nature of the interaction to look at emotions, intent and desires. It views interactions as a chain of events rather than single point occurrences.
Customer Dynamics is a subset of Organizational Dynamics[1], which describes how people function together to accomplish a task. The level of operational success is said to be determined by the behavioral nature of organizations—individuals' roles, interpersonal relations, and group dynamics, and how they all react when brought together.
Customer Dynamics is a specific dimension of Customer Experience Management and Customer Relationship Management. It is distinct from these disciplines in its focus on the actual interaction Interaction that occur between the customer and the organization, and its consideration of implications for both the customer and the business.
According to 2009 benchmark research[2] of global contact center leaders by NICE Systems and Ventana Research, 44% of respondents expect increases in the volume of customer interactions. Initially driven by consumer concerns regarding the economy, investment performance and mortgage refinancing for example, the availability and maturation of alternate communication channels, such as instant and text messaging and Web self-service, are seen as long-term drivers of this growth. This expected increase in interaction volumes places additional importance on increasing operational efficiency without sacrificing customer service.
Customer Dynamics addresses how the growing volume and diversity of interactions impacts the customer-business relationship in the areas of operational efficiency, customer experience, and revenue generation. The theory suggests that businesses can create significant competitive differentiation by understanding the customer’s true intent and meeting that in a way that also supports the business’s intents.
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Customer Dynamics optimization refers to the people, process and technology initiatives focused on deriving maximum value from Customer Dynamics for both businesses and customers. It is built upon the principles of Workforce Optimization, expanding on contact center agent-oriented quality management, coaching, and scheduling to include the customer side of the dynamic.
A central concept to Customer Dynamics optimization is the ability to fully understand both customer and business intent. To adequately gauge intent, interactions are captured across all contact channels, and in a way that enables them to be correlated, analyzed, and readily retrieved. Business intent is captured in the type of performance metrics established, tracked and managed to.
Comprehensive analysis of intent reveals insight that may not be apparent when looking at individual interactions. What appears to be a successful outcome—a customer getting the right answer to a question—may have been preceded by failures to get that information through self-service or other contact channels. Or that outcome may have addressed the surface need, but missed opportunities to sell additional products or services. Insight is provided on how to optimize individual customer relationships as well as overall business processes
These detailed insights enable decisive actions that impact results. Like improving self-service,showcasing best-practices, providing real-time guidance for agents, aligning workforce resources with demand, and fine-tuning back office processes.[4]
Sophisticated analytics tools are what enable organizations to extract insight from intent. "There is considerable evidence that decisions based on analytics are more likely to be correct than those based on intuition. It's better to know -- at least within the limits of data and analysis -- than to believe or think or feel, and most companies can benefit from more analytical decision making."
Real-time decisioning systems are helping companies improve results by providing agents with information about a specific customer's interactions with an organization across all channels, not just a specific interaction, such as a phone call. These solutions provide companies with a fuller picture of what is happening with a client, enabling them to respond in a more satisfactory manner.[3]