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CX Education for Employees: Why it Matters & How to Develop Your Program

Why does Customer Experience Training Matter?

Customer Experience (CX) is commonly misunderstood as reactive customer service, support, or even just ‘being nice to customers.’

CX is much more than these, though. I like to define Customer Experience as:

  • A mindset
  • A strategy
  • A business discipline

Customer experience is more than one area, product, service, or person. This means customer experience success requires everyone in an organization to understand what CX success is at this organization, what expectations customers have, and how best to deliver on them. It starts with a universal mindset. And no, you can’t just say “be customer-obsessed” and hope for the best.

And customer experience management requires a thorough approach to training and educating all employees.

Yet in some organizations, customer experience training is reserved for those who are in customer service roles only. And that training can feel tactical and task-driven, like explaining how to track customer records in a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) platform.

Many organizations have an opportunity to supercharge their customer experience efforts—and ensure every team member’s actions reflect the Customer Experience Mission—by prioritizing ongoing, organization-wide CX training. Let us show you how to build this program.

The Common Method of Customer Experience Training

Let’s consider how Customer Experience is often introduced at many organizations using an imaginary employee — we’ll call them Sam.

  1. Sam is hired and congratulated. They attend onboarding training and hear about their company’s big customer experience focus and goals. The training leader enthusiastically explains why customer experience is so important. The company is even going to use artificial intelligence (AI) to up their personalization game! Sam feels great about working at such a place.
  2. Several months later, Sam attends an all-hands meeting. The CEO gets on stage and announces a new mantra: We love customers! There are posters and screensavers repeating this mantra. Leaders occasionally echo these messages and remind their team to be customer-centric.
  3. After a year at the company, Sam has settled into a nice, predictable routine. Day-to-day life consists of small challenges, regular meetings, and the usual work stuff we all encounter. But when Sam thinks back on the year since their onboarding training, they reflect that…
    • They’ve never seen actual customer feedback. Some reports and numbers are reported company-wide, but since Sam doesn’t interact directly with customers, they’ve never actually heard the customer’s “voice” or followed their stories. (There’s a high likelihood they’ve never interacted with a customer!)
    • Training has been focused on what tools to use, processes, and procedures. Sam remembers their first training including education about how each employee makes a difference to customers, but subsequent training hasn’t touched on that at all.
    • The importance of customer experience has rarely come up in conversations about product development, marketing, or project management.

After a while, it’s easy for Sam to think a culture focused on customer experience was an aspirational idea at best. Those early onboarding experiences are pushed further and further from reality.

Let’s consider a different approach.

 

5 Elements of a Successful Customer Experience Employee Education Program

1. Set customer-centric expectations in the first interview.

That’s right, before a candidate even becomes an employee, it’s important to share that putting the customer first is expected.

This is especially true if your new hire isn’t in a customer-facing role. It’s far too easy for “behind-the-scenes” employees to feel like their work does not or cannot impact the customer experience, which makes it easy to be demotivated or even apathetic.

Reflect your Customer Experience Mission and language in all job postings. During the interview process, expand on your language and make it clear that employees are expected to…

  • Consider the customer in the decisions they make.
  • Dedicate themselves to ongoing learning — both about how to improve the customer experience and in listening and incorporating customer feedback.
  • Recognize the impact they have on the customer experience, even if indirect.

Establishing this expectation from the start will help you find new hires who feel aligned personally with the vision and values of the company, as well as the explicitly stated Customer Experience Mission.

 

2. Make sure onboarding programs include customer experience training specifically.

Every employee, regardless of their role, should feel empowered to shape the customer experience. Onboarding training needs to call this out specifically.

  • Give employees tools to share feedback about the customer journey.
  • Provide any background you can around the current understanding of your customers.
  • Make sure your definition of Customer Experience (and related terms) is clearly communicated and agreed upon.

Onboarding training is important to lay the foundation, but if CX training is only shared once, it’s easy for employees to move on and assume customer experience is not really their job.

We recommend training on the basics, like:

It’s also important to highlight what successful customer experiences provide for the organization. Customer Experience doesn’t exist in a vacuum — Help employees understand the power of referrals, retention, renewals, and reducing service costs on the bigger picture.

Looking for a tool to help you define this? Our CX Success Statement Workbook can help.

 

3. Break out the themes.

All employees can benefit from repeated, ongoing training on ways to deliver a successful customer experience, and ongoing education cadences can be achieved and optimized by understanding the employee’s journey.

Consistency in education sends a message. CX is not a “fad” or something to just mention in passing. CX is a true part of the culture of the organization, and it’s a business strategy to achieve organizational success for everyone.

We recommend partnering with your internal communications team, if possible, to incorporate consistent messaging throughout the organization.

One approach to take is tackling a small part of the customer experience each month. Help everyone in the organization connect how their role contributes to the customer experience.

For example, you might create an educational and communications calendar cycle to reinforce themes:

  • Dashboards – what they mean, how to understand them
  • How we gather feedback
  • Empathy – how we show up for each other and our customers
  • Our customer’s journey today
  • Our customer’s journey tomorrow
  • How to use CX best practices like journey mapping and service blueprints to develop better experiences
  • CX tools – how to use them and how they leverage customer data to deliver personalized experiences
  • CX Calculations – how great CX reduces costs and improves profitability
  • Our CX Mission and how it applies to every role

The list can go on and on. The point is to reinforce specific overall ideas (this is how we do business) with individual learning opportunities.

 

4. Get into individual roles and responsibilities.

While the themes above can apply to everyone, each role has unique opportunities to influence the customer experience.

Work with departmental leaders to zero in on what’s needed for each group. Customer-facing teams are the most obvious here, but challenge others to develop specific education around their roles.

For example, Customer Service and Customer Success might have training plans around service-specific situations, like dealing with unhappy customers or having renewal conversations. These should fit into the bigger themes and still be seen as connected to the CX training, not just generic “service training.”

But what about your technology team? What do they need to know about the customer experience, and what education needs to be ongoing?

They would benefit from education about the customer journey, as well as how customer expectations are shifting based on the overall marketplace. They often welcome conversations about aspirational customer journeys and how to better align technology goals with those journeys.

The restaurant delivery service DoorDash uses a “WeDash” corporate program to help everyone in the organization understand their impact on the customer. This program requires each employee, regardless of their department or role, to make one customer delivery per month or shadow a customer service representative.

The goal is to ensure there is understanding throughout the organization of the driver and customer experience.

Other organizations have similar programs asking employees to “walk in the shoes” of the service delivery part of the organization. These can be very successful training programs — just make sure you’re also supplying a way to act on the learnings as part of the strategy.

 

5. Offer a customer day more than once a year.

Some organizations are committed to CX Day or other important days to provide events, trainings, or celebrations on behalf of their customers. Turning these into more consistent and ongoing events can be a very positive way to encourage CX education.

There are many ways to do this, and they can be combined or rotated to make things fresh for the learners:

  • Create a book club focused on CX and invite authors to discuss customer-focused ideas.
  • Develop a “customer room” either in-person or virtually. This room is where employees can literally walk through the journey and see the communications, experience the challenges, and receive delivery of the product or service just as a customer would.
  • Ask leaders who are committed to the customer experience to present to the entire organization and share what they’re doing.
  • Provide customer experience coaching for leaders throughout the organization to support their professional development.
  • Offer “lunch and learns” where different employees can share their experiences, showcase successes, and share their experiences as a customer with other organizations.

 

Customer Experience Training Uplifts Your Entire Organization

There is always so much to learn when it comes to customer experience! Let’s not relegate the education about and for our customers to just those employees who have the “right” roles in the organization.

Customer experience is a mindset, strategy, and business discipline. By treating it that way throughout the organization and providing the resources and support employees need to be educated and empowered we all reap the benefits — our customers, our employees, and our organization.

Need help building your CX training program? Let’s talk .

 

About Jeannie Walters, CCXP, CSP

Jeannie Walters CCXP CSP small square photoJeannie is an award-winning customer experience expert, international keynote speaker, and sought-after business coach who is trailblazing the movement from “Reactive Customer Service” to “Proactive Customer and Employee Experience.” More than 500,000 people have learned from her CX courses on LinkedIn Learning, and her insights have been featured in Forbes, The Chicago Tribune, The Wall Street Journal and NPR

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