Saturday, August 22, 2015

The future of customer service (Forrester trends 2015): "...valuing their time is the most important thing a company can do..."

In Forrester Research "Trends 2015: The Future of Customer Service", 10 key customer service trends were listed based on a lifecycle technographics survey of North American consumers.

One of the key takeaways was "Customer service requires a focus beyond operational efficiencies". In my perspective, this focus on outside-in preference and loyalty building requires more in-depth customer understanding and its utilization across the organization to differentiate sales, offering, delivery, marketing etc, based on identified customer parameters such as need, value, industry, location etc.

The report also discussed "customer service must be increasingly pain-free". Selection of service and communications channel is of utmost relevancy to a customer. A customer may want to self-serve over service. I believe in the future more people don´t want to "talk", rather chat or simply do things themselves because they already know what they want.

In addition to the key takeaways, some of the most interesting findings in my view was that, according to the report, for the first time web self-service was the most widely used communications channel for customer service, surpassing use of voice. Thus new communications channels are being explored. In my own company for example, sales is already used to communicating with customers over phone conferences or video conference. Even customers appreciate the savings in regards to time and money, and the effortless way of communicating once all parties are already familiar to each other.

From the respondents, three quarters stated that valuing their time is the most important thing a company can do to provide them with good service. Service excellence does not only include superb products and the service experience itself, but making things easy for the customer to buy.



Sunday, August 2, 2015

Finnish industrial companies´ services business development


Looking at 2014 reports of nine Finnish “big companies focusing on industrial products and services”, as listed in the Helsinki stock exchange, ie Cargotec, Huhtamäki, Kone, Konecranes, Metso, Outotec, Valmet, Wärtsilä and YIT, there is a positive and interesting development of what services business bring to the companies´ overall strategy and future outlook.
Services business is not systematically reported by all companies in their financial statements, yet clear development and focus of services business is found. For example, Konecranes splits its business clearly in two areas: equipment and services, and reports 2014 services as maintenance and modernizations business, with a 0,7% improvement from previous year. Metso reports services as part of their annual net sales and gives a share of 55% of last year total turnover, increase from previous year though down from record results in 2012. Outotec reports a 9% increase in its service business of net sales in 2014 (including comparable currency fluctuations) and continues to have higher share of services of its net sales.
Based on the financial information, it seems that services business may account for approximately 23-55% of these companies´ total net sales, yet in some cases the profitability of the services business may be better than that of equipment sales. I do not see any of the companies taking steps to fully servicizing the business, à la former IBM, ie equipment still seems to be a strong foothold of any industrial company today, though services is clearly giving a buffer to possibly weaker equipment sales.
Where is the future focus of these companies in regards to their services? According to financial reports and CEO overviews, it looks like there is a lot of expectation on growth. And how do the companies plan to grow their services business? Several companies are heavily focusing on future trends like industrial internet and mobility (Wärtsilä, Cargotec, Valmet). Almost all companies have mentions or a full strategy focusing on improved customer understanding. Huhtamäki talks about “increased sharing of customer know-how and knowledge”, and “…focus on higher consistency in managing customer interfaces”. Kone discusses “understanding customer needs, refining promise and offering…”, “…better use of data (eg remote monitoring) …optimizing maintenance schedules, routes, tasks…” and in general focusing on increased share of planned maintenance and repairs ie looking into better productivity. Konecranes, too, talks about improved focus on customer understanding and even a member of a senior management team is responsible for “Customer experience and service offering”. Some companies are linking the customer performance targets to sustainability, like Valmet, who is clearly listing “customer sustainability needs”.
The market continues being challenging for all companies. This puts additional pressure in sharpening the strategies and considering key values to customers. Metso strategy summarizes well targets of more or less any industrial company in Finland today: “…we are focusing on being close to customers, listening to their needs, renewing our offering to meet their changing needs…”
And my learning of the quick analysis? Finnish industrial companies have built their foundation on products, but services business is there to stay, and helps companies grow. Finnish companies are learning how to better understand customer needs and serve them, improving their services offering, and providing efficiency or even business improvements. This requires learning, customer focus and new commercial competences, complementing technical and engineering skills. There is a new demand also in company management, looking holistically across trends, even on the consumer side, to learn about how digitalization and data changes our way of working and provides more predictability and opportunities.