As a brand, you’re only as good as your last customer interaction.


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Before Covid, a lot could be intuited about future behavior by analyzing the past. If you gave me someone’s credit card statement, I could, with some confidence, layout your plan. But a year into the pandemic, one thing has become clear: The course of the customer journey has changed in some very profound and permanent ways.

We now live in a world where, each week, there is a shift in how people feel about their personal safety, the economy, their job or finances. There has also been a seismic shift in how consumers interact with brands. McKinsey estimates that Covid pushed 10 years of ecommerce adoption into the span of 90 days (the first three months of the pandemic). And according to new research from our sister company Reach3 Insights, 36% of Americans plan to stick to new brands and products they’ve tried recently.  

With loyalties up for grabs, brands are forced to invest in the digital transformation of their operations. According to a 2020 report, 87% of service professionals said that customers were using digital channels more during Covid. And the days of looking at customer service, marketing and research as distinct and separate business activities is over. That same survey found that 79% of service reps believed it “impossible to provide great service without full customer context.” That means that service metrics, objectives and technology have to be fully integrated with everything that’s happening down the hall.

Related: 3 Ways to Build Customer Loyalty and Trust

Covid is leading toward the end of marketing silos

That sort of cross-department integration was once heresy, remember. If you said to a researcher in 1986, “Hey, that woman we talked to for the survey? We should also market to her” — well, that researcher would have hit you over the head and told you to get lost. “There’s no way! You’re biasing people!” Today, we know the importance of customer closeness, especially in an age of fractured loyalty. When you can facilitate an ongoing conversation and learn more about your customer, you can also communicate with them more effectively — and ultimately, give them more of what they want.

As a , you’re only as good as your last customer interaction — whether that was an ad they saw while browsing , their online chat with your website’s  or the survey they just completed on . For certain brands — especially those that consumers interact with regularly — the need for constant engagement is critical. The mobile revolution provides the opportunity to speak to a more diverse group of your customers, including those who are outside of traditional access panels. But the only way to have that level of closeness is with an ongoing, two-way dialogue.

Related: Building a Business on Ownership Mentality and Meaningful Customer Relationships

I was thinking about this the other day while on my Peloton bike. My thought: 25,000 people have taken this class, so how does a company like this go from a “one-to-many” relationship — which, via its digital classes, describes a lot of Peloton’s relationships — to more one-to-one connections? The fact is that, like most Peloton customers, I’m not going to shell out several thousands of dollars for another bike anytime soon. For Peloton, it’s vital to keep customers like me engaged —and keep me subscribed to their Digital Peloton Membership.  

ultimately is not about how good your product is — or how well you respond to complaints when it’s not — but how well you anticipate consumer needs. The past 12 months have forced brands to ditch the rearview mirror as their guidepost to consumer behavior — and rely on the (much bigger) windshield revealing the road ahead.

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