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Keeping
Your Offerings Easy to Use (Part 1)
by Adele Sommers, Ph.D.
Whats the real formula
for customer happiness? First, lets review what we know
about customer unhappiness.
We know that consumers expect
our offerings to work exactly as advertised. Yet our products and
services can introduce complex requirements even burdens
of their own.
Those extra requirements can
quickly morph into customer hassles the kinds
of aggravations that make consumers feel mildly annoyed all the
way to really angry or stupid. And unless theyre very
unhappy, customers often leave quietly, without telling us why.
They simply vote with their wallets, taking their business elsewhere.
In contrast, to compete
successfully today, we need to do just the opposite. We need to
create raving fans people who cant
stop telling their friends, family, and colleagues just how wonderful
our products and services are. How should we go about doing this?
Without
easy-to-use products and services, its hard to attract raving
fans. This article, the first in a series, takes a look at two of
the factors simplicity and built-in guidance
that contribute greatly to customer satisfaction.
Can
We Go Down the Up Escalator?
You may have heard results from
marketing surveys in which consumers are asking for simpler products
with fewer features and shorter learning curves. Even if you havent
been aware this particular trend, ask yourself do I
need more complicated appliances? Or even one more feature on
my telephone?
A recent article in US
News and World Report on taming technology bemoaned the
fact that the same electronic gizmos we depend on daily are often
the source of our frustrations. Gadgets are smaller and cost less,
but they don't necessarily work the way we want them to. Why?
Theyre much too complicated!
Ironically, the more manufacturers
feel compelled to add frilly, complex features, the more consumers
feel compelled to buy them. The antidote, the article goes on to
say, is returning to basics by striving for ease of use and dependability.
Similarly, if we all avoid the temptation to heap on fancy features
and functions in our offerings, well have a much better chance
of keeping customers loyal, happy, and returning for more.
Example
1: Simplicity Lost
Enter a telling story about
a hypothetical company called Word Style Leader (or WSL for short).
WSLs troubles followed an all-too-familiar pattern. For nine
years, it successfully made software that customers bought in droves.
During that blissful time, WSLs products reflected simple,
clean features and interfaces. WSL did not push frilly
functionality, but instead offered steady, incremental improvements
that were consistent in appearance and easy for customers to master.
But
because of that success, WSL accelerated the pace of adding enhancements
and options to its star product to stay ahead of the competition.
One day, though, this strategy began to backfire. After a certain
point, WSLs software had become too tricky too complex
for the average consumer to use. Its latest Internet-savvy upgrade
was whizzy; however, the interface was now jumbled with far too
many confusing choices. Even existing customers couldnt recognize
familiar tasks.
Business declined. Yet WSL stayed
oblivious to the symptoms and their causes. Why was that? It
didnt probe its own customer satisfaction, conduct marketing
surveys, or study consumer trends.
Unfortunately, like many companies,
WSL remained committed to a mistaken belief that perpetually adding
deluxe features would increase customer happiness as well as revenue.
Consequently, no one at WSL ever figured out the bottom-line truth:
Its own customer preferences echoed the simpler tastes revealed
by recent consumer studies. In its customers eyes, less
was unquestionably more.
Example
2: Popularity Gained
Wherever simplification leaves
off, built-in guidance can help make the remaining tasks
a breeze. In a software product, for example, such guidance can
come in the form of tightly interwoven tips and hints, overviews,
demonstrations, wizards, and other systematic interactions that
intelligently aid people in achieving their goals.
An
excellent example of customer guidance lives in a certain popular
U.S. income tax preparation software package. Its step-by-step
process leads users through a series of queries that helps them
perform each task correctly, even if they dont know the first
thing about the US tax code. Systems like this can greatly reduce
or eliminate customer training and often avoid the need for professional
tax assistance. Its no wonder that consumers rave about this
product!
So,
What Should We Aim For?
Below are four things to consider
with regard to ease of use in your offerings:
1. Are your products or services
designed as simply as possible?
Have you researched what customers
truly want and need, resisting the pressure or temptation to overload
your offerings with too much stuff? Have the interfaces
been developed and tested with ease of use in mind?
2.
Do your offerings support your customers main objectives?
Assuming that youve removed
hassles and annoying busywork from your offerings, does what remains
help support your customers real-life needs the things
people were trying to accomplish before they ever turned to your
wares for help? Do customers receive just-in-time assistance on
completing each step?
3. Can customers explore
deeper features when theyre ready?
Can they expose additional layers
of information, such as tutorials, at their discretion? Are the
tutorials directly linked to the tasks at hand?
4. Is every element of the
system compatible and complete?
Will customers see the same
terminology, consistent features and naming conventions, and predictable
behavior throughout the system?
In conclusion, keeping
your offerings simple and consistent, while simultaneously supporting
whatever people are really trying to accomplish, should lead to
years of customer gratitude and loyalty.
~~~~~~~~~~~
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 2006 Adele Sommers, The Enterprise Prosperity
Guild, All Rights Reserved.
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