Implementing a Customer Experience (CX) Strategy Best Practice Guide
This report offers practical and pragmatic advice for developing and implementing a successful customer experience strategy.
Personalisation is key in providing outstanding customer experiences, making customers’ lives easier and increasing customer lifetime value.
Getting personalisation right, however, requires organisations to have
a deep understanding of customer needs and to place those at the
centre of all that they do.
With 88% of respondents to Econsultancy’s Future of Marketing survey
sharing that customer-centric skills are vital to delivering against CX expectations, putting the customer at the heart of an organisation is now
seen as a strategic priority.
This 60-minute session will draw on insights from Econsultancy research
and will cover:
This report offers practical and pragmatic advice for developing and implementing a successful customer experience strategy.
A report uncovering best practice principles and considerations for developing a personalisation strategy, also providing supporting evidence for why companies should be placing personalisation high on their agenda and explores ways to develop personalisation capabilities.
A best practice guide providing marketers with an understanding of product strategy and marketing fundamentals, enabling them to successfully navigate where marketing and product disciplines cross over, and drive business benefit.
A best practice guide exploring the benefits and challenges of segmentation and personas, explaining why and how to use market segmentation, communication segmentation, customer segmentation and personas.
A best practice guide providing marketers with a pragmatic guide to data-driven marketing, covering the essential areas and setting out key strategies, methods and guidance that can support best-in-class execution.
A best practice guide for marketers looking to understand how to leverage AI, machine learning and predictive analytics to derive value from their data and gain a competitive edge.