|
Aim
Your Sights at Your Customers' Downstream Success
by Adele Sommers, Ph.D.
Do you strive to ensure that your customers enjoy
downstream success? Are you mostly concerned with your own financial
gain, or do you also express a desire to see that your customers
will succeed? If its the latter, are you consciously considering
the success of your customers customers, or even of
your customers customers customers?
Without a plan for ensuring an ongoing chain of satisfaction,
you can run the risk of developing products, services, or customized
solutions that might fill your coffers but not provide any significant
or lasting benefits to others.
The way we approach our projects can influence
our customers success. Too often, we myopically limit
ourselves to deliver only the first-line requirements.
In so doing, we think primarily about what our customers or clients
asked for, even if its not the most suitable fit for their
own or their customers intended needs.
And although its commendable to listen to what
our customers want, and to try hard to fulfill their stated desires
to a T, its also possible to generate an incomplete
or incompatible result based on superficial information. This article
offers three ways to adjust our project vision from 20:20
hindsight to 20:20 foresight in this regard.
1. Consult Your
Clients or Customers Crystal Ball
This
method involves more types of questions than you might normally
ask about the downstream benefits your product, service, or solution
will deliver. It entails querying your clients or customers about
the results they envision from the product, service, system, training
program, or whatever your project will produce for them, as follows:
- Imagine the project results six months to a year
after completion. What payoffs do you see for people in
your organization? Describe the benefits in detail, and any limitations
they may still be experiencing after everything is delivered.
- Now imagine how your customers or clients will
benefit in the same period. What improvements in your
products and services do you believe you will pass along to them
from this project? Will those improvements significantly enhance
your clients' or customers situations? If not, where are
the gaps in the picture?
2. Conduct Interviews at Your
Customers or Even Their Customers Sites
In
some situations, a customer or client may agree to have you interview
people at their site or possibly at one of their customers' sites.
This process can be considered part of an initial needs assessment.
If you are providing an estimate for the project, you might even
want to separate information-gathering into its own distinct phase.
When the possibility of onsite interviewing presents itself, the
purpose would be to learn from as many different sources as possible
how people perceive the situation that has led to the request for
a solution.
Using the information gathered in this phase, you might acquire
insights that will reshape the initial set of requirements the client
had requested. This could be the case if you and your client ultimately
determine that the requirements do not seem to address the clients
or the clients customers needs in the
best possible way.
3. Use the Persona Interview
Approach
This method is especially useful if your project entails developing
offerings for mass consumption where there is no specific
client or customer to please. It can also, however, work extremely
well when you are working with a client, to help pinpoint specific
kinds of concerns and options that would not have been readily apparent.
With
this technique, you begin by identifying a few imaginary characters
known as personas. These characters embody typical
customers of your products or services. Regardless of what youll
be creating, youll want to make your personas as realistic
as possible. Give them names, ages, genders, professional or personal
roles, families and friends, hobbies, educational backgrounds, and
major challenges, for example.
If the project involves creating a financial planning Web site,
for instance, you might conclude that one representative visitor
is a retired electrician with limited computer skills. In contrast,
another frequent visitor is a computer specialist who likes access
to power user shortcuts. The solution you design will
need to satisfy each personas preferred way of using the Web
site, without complicating life for the others.
After Ive identified two or three personas, I like to interview
each one about how they are using my offerings, as well as the benefits
they are receiving. (Note that I do this before doing any development.)
I let them tell an entire story about their circumstances, company
situation, personal concerns, or whatever else comes up.
These interviews often reveal new ideas and angles
to consider. Once, I used this technique to find out
how people might respond to a new information product I was planning
to create. To my astonishment, one of my personas disclosed that
she was taking advantage of the licensing program I had developed
to allow others to teach the material an idea I had not even
considered! ! This is a great example of how a downstream customer
benefit can emerge in a persona interview.
Yes, these exercises do take some imagination. Once
you start the process, however, youll be surprised at how
much you can learn about the benefits and any potential shortcomings
of a product, service, or made-to-order solution as defined
by your initial assumptions.
The point is that by using a variety of techniques to expose more
of your clients and customers needs, you can pinpoint
more completely the project, product, or service requirements. And
by consistently emphasizing the downstream chain of successes
that your customers and their customers will enjoy, youll
create perpetual value for all who use your offerings or your final
project results.
~~~~~~~~~~~
About the Author
Adele Sommers, Ph.D. is author of Straight Talk
on Boosting Business Performance: 12 Ways to Profit from Hidden
Potential. To learn more about her book and sign up for more
free tips like these, visit her site at www.LearnShareProsper.com
This article may be distributed freely on your Web
site, as long as this entire article, including the links and full
About the Author section, are unchanged. Please send
a copy of, or link to, your reprint to Adele@LearnShareProsper.com.
Copyright 2005 Business Performance Inc., Adele Sommers, All Rights Reserved.
939 words
Return to the Free Articles
index
|