When organizations intentionally align employee experience and customer experience, they unlock new ways to deliver on brand purpose, fueling both customer growth & loyalty, and employee satisfaction.
While many companies understand this theoretically, putting it into practice can be hard to do – but worth it. I have seen three benefits emerge over the last few years, as our clients have looked for ways to connect employee experience to customer experience:
Unfortunately, many organizations are focused so heavily on external audiences that it’s easy to downplay or even forget the influence employees can have in delivering a better customer experience. Often marketing, sales, or customer service (with IT as a supporting operational player) claims jurisdiction of customer experience while the notion of employee experience rests with HR, or perhaps a culture committee, with little shared accountability across all departments in an organization to reinforce the priority.
This arrangement creates disconnect in how employees view their roles as part of the larger impact on customers. In fact, employees might receive different signals and messages internally than what a customer does, and worse, be measured on KPIs that run contrary to the attributes that make a customer experience truly amazing.
Brand purpose can be the connective tissue internally and externally for organizations, aligning motivations, expectations and results. When organizations want to evaluate their employee and customer experiences, doing it at the strategic brand level not only demonstrates the significance from management, but also provides a north star that all departments can follow no matter what strategies and tactics are in place at the moment. It’s a common ground.
What does your organization stand for? That’s a big question, and one not to be confused with what the organization sells, or makes, or how the work gets done. Rather this question focuses on why the company exists and what is its promise to customers.
If your employees don’t know your purpose or don't feel connected to it, what do you think that means for the customer experience the business is delivering? Worse, what does it mean if your employees don't think it’s not true and that the business can’t back up those claims?
Some are direct and some are indirect. Often employees with more direct access to customers feel more connected to the brand purpose and believe in it more than their counterparts in other areas of the organization. That said, these same employees may not see some of the problem areas that employees with indirect influence can see.
In some cases, these disconnects might exist simply because the organization hasn’t invested enough in employee relations strategies that tie employee experience and brand purpose. In other cases, organizations may discover that their purpose is far more aspirational than it is reality, which likely is causing issues on the customer experience side too. Either way, knowing the cause of the disconnect is the first step to solving it.
Although ad campaigns, social media campaigns and inbound marketing campaigns might be the most visible manifestations of a brand, these are not the same thing as brand purpose. Campaigns have specific goals, methods of measurement and creative strategy.
A strong brand is one with a clear value-based purpose, backed by a thoughtfully developed persona, tone, archetype and creative parameters that allow it to come to life authentically and consistently no matter the tactic.
When we work with clients at this strategic level, we urge them to think about their brand purpose beyond what they sell and how they do it. To do this well, it’s important to get the right inputs. It’s tempting to have the C-suite work through it or leave it to certain departments whose day-to-day activities are closely aligned with brand efforts like marketing and sales. But this creates blind spots and biases. Quality and accuracy matter, so convene a cross-functional and cross-demographic representation within the company to ensure the tough-but-necessary conversations happen to unlock opportunities to remove friction, add value and strengthen emotional connections.
With the right team in place, evaluate the brand position for several critical factors:
Although direction and supporting materials will help enable them, be careful not to put too many constraints or restrictions on them either. Employees need to be able to adapt it so their interactions are authentic and influential relative to their roles.
Ideally, C-suite and management teams should be aware when there are disconnects between the brand position and employees, and bring the right people together to address it, reinforce the priority and hold teams accountable for making changes.
However, we don’t live in a perfect world, and sometimes management isn’t aligned or doesn’t see the disconnects. If that’s the case, start with what you can influence. How well does your team connect with your organization’s purpose and what that should mean for customers? Below are some key questions for Marketing, Human Resources and CX/Information Technology teams to ask themselves to start the conversation.
Marketing often leads branding and positioning efforts, and therefore, has great influence in how brand purpose comes to life. Instead of keeping these efforts in marketing alone, expand collaboration with other teams to ensure more perspectives. Lead the change to connect with HR, sales, IT, operations and R&D to get better inputs.
When organizations invest in evaluating, understanding and solving disconnects between employees and the brand purpose, they create pathways for all employees to become more connected. Even more importantly, employees become able to internalize how they impact the organization’s ability to deliver for customers.
Employees need the right resources to live out the brand and adapt it to their departments, positions and personalities. Internal processes also need to reinforce the right goals and measurements so employees see how their success creates customer success – directly or indirectly – and vice versa. Creating natural harmony aligns self-interest and customer interest.
If you’re interested in exploring the intersection of employee experience and customer experience, please book a complimentary Ask an Expert session where we can connect you with Disrupt to discuss further.
Known for a steady demeanor and listening before offering counsel, Monica MacKay contributes corporate communications, public relations and issues and reputation management experience to the Disrupt team.
She has an instinct for matching the right message, scenario and timing, whether building positive brand equity with thoughtful, relevant visibility initiatives
or troubleshooting sensitivities and crises with scenario planning and rapid-response efforts. As a client engagement lead, she builds quality public and stakeholder engagement programs to enhance marketing, experiential and digital solutions.
Disrupt Idea Co. transforms businesses by building unforgettable customer experiences using strategy, culture, design, communications and technology. We create strategies that remove friction, add value and strengthen emotional connections to change customer behaviors, driving growth and brand loyalty.