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Strategic Internal Marketing—Delivering Customer Value throughout your Organization
May 28,2022
Strategic Internal Marketing—Delivering Customer Value throughout your Organization


Although much has been written about customer-centered companies and although many have tried to create them, even today few organizations have broken through to become truly customer-centered. 

Often the underlying reason for a company’s inability to put the customer at its center is what appears to be a stand-off between its leaders and employees. 

The key to ending this impasse is to determine what conditions need to exist for employees to embrace the customer-centered way of operating and to each or encourage corporate leaders to create those conditions. 



More than Common Sense 


In consulting sessions and company visits over many years, I have often been asked the same questions. Lower level managers, usually in a service function, ask ‘How can I get senior management to believe in delighting customers as much as I believe in it?’ With executives, the questions flips: ‘How can I get our people to pay attention to our customers?’ These questions mirror the frustration of many organizations trying reorient themselves around customers. Too often, neither leaders nor employees seem to be committed; worse, each side seems to be blaming the other. Managers must create four conditions to help employees feel a genuine passion for serving the customer; happily, there are three best practices that leaders can employ to create this  most desired attitude. 




“Successful organizations understand the importance of implementation, not just strategy, and, moreover, recognize the crucial role of their people in this process.”

——Jeffrey Pfeffer 



Create Conditions for Change 


The complexity, challenge, and time required for an organization to become truly customer-centric are usually underestimated. It is not just about introducing a new program, training customer contact people to smile over the phone, or conducting屏幕快照 2022-07-16 下午9.54.38.png

a few customer focus groups. Rather, it is about changing the culture of the organization, a challenge that may seem as difficult as, say, rewriting your own DNA. Considering the case of British Airways, when in the 1980s, under the leadership of Sir Colin Marshall who delivered one of the most successful and dramatic transformation of an organization’s culture.  

When arrived at the then-government-owned airline BOAC, it was losing money, abusing customers, and not doing well by its employees. Several years after Sir Colin privatized the company, it was cited as having the most improved service in the industry and as being the most profitable airline in the world. By any standard this remains one of the classic cultural turnarounds(similar turnaround also took place in 1990s when Lou Gerstner became the CEO of then-struggling IBM). 

Study the BA and IBM success and other like them and patterns emerge of management actions that help to create conditions that assist each and every employee to commit to the new direction and engage in the personal change that is required to bring the customer into the equation at all levels of the organization. These actions are to 

1.articulate and promote the new direction; 

2.ensure each employee knows what is expected; 

3.ensure each employee has the skill to do what is expected; 

4.motivate each employee to do what is expected. 


Looking at these four conditions, it is clear that they are based in common sense. But you would be amazed how difficult it is to implement them. Common sense, it has been said many times, is unfortunately not common at all. 



Making it Happen


Articulate and promote the new direction

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A study by Bain & Company asked CEOs to rate their level of confidence in their ability to perform various aspects of their job. Of those asked, 85% felt they handled strategy development well; strategy execution, conversely, dropped off dramatically to 40%. When asked about aligning their people with their company’s strategy, the response was 10%. 





Ensure each employee knows what is expected 


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In a long research program that studied 400 organizations, 80,000 managers, and over one million employees,  the Gallup Organization found that one of the factors that correlated highly with an organization’s success was employees knowing what is expected of them. Some key steps are required: 




Ensure each employee has the skills to do what is expected 

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Once people have an idea of what is expected, it is a mistake to assume that they actually have the necessary skills to accomplish the stated goals. How to start? 






“The consumer, so it is said, is the king…each is a voter who uses his money as votes to bet the things done that he wants done.”

—Anthony Sampson 




Motivate each employee to do what is expected

 

Now comes the hard part: getting people to actually use newly developed skills. Assuming that the compensation and reward systems is running smoothly, what are some of the other practices that can create an  organization-wide passion for serving the customer? 


Changing an organization’s culture is always a complex, even daunting, task. In order to become customer-centered the leaders of a company must first be willing change themselves. It is their responsibility to create the four conditions cited above that will support each and every employee in understanding the new direction, knowing what is expected, and having the skills and motivation to do what is expected. 

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