On the relative nature of customer experience

On the relative nature of customer experience

A ferry trip from Indonesian Batam Island to Harbour Front in Singapore takes about 50 minutes. Last week, I had to make a last-minute ticket change to catch an earlier sailing on that route. It was that or over two hours wait time. I barely made it – thanks to the kindness of the ferry crew who were willing to wait that extra few minutes at the berth.

On board, happy to be on my way home, I complained to a work colleague about how inefficient the process at the ticketing office was: it took three staff, two phone calls, and endless tapping on computer keyboard to issue a new ticket. Ridiculous!

The said teammate (less than half my age) made me realise I was too quick passing (wrong) judgement. After all, he pointed, I was crossing an international border. As such, travellers on that route were subject to adequate scrutiny, and the ferry operator had to follow strict protocols in that respect – not unlike any airline operating international routes. And, since I was changing my ticket less than 10 minutes before the ferry’s scheduled departure, a special security protocol likely kicked in.

Living on islands for the past nine years, I consider ferry rides indistinguishable from other forms of urban public transport: buses, trams, metro trains, taxis… Getting on and off should be easy; paying the fare should be simple; who would have ever thought about security protocols, right? Well, not quite.

As consumers, not only we are creatures of habit, but also quick to reset our expectations – upwards. We also tend to adopt a peculiar tunnel vision, and fail to recognise the only true king of #CX land: His Majesty, the Context.

The travel sector is full of examples of how operational complexity gets in the way of delivering seamless experiences. For example, in-airport functions such as baggage handling are not controlled by airlines, but airlines are understandably held accountable by passengers for all aspects of their journey. In the UK, trains have become a byword for poor experiences, yet there are many factors outside of the train operators’ ability to directly control. Does that mean that customers should calibrate expectations? Absolutely not…rather, the onus is on providers to continue to find ways to overcome silos.

Loving the caption and the picture 😁!! And very, very good call out on relativity and expectation.  Always enjoy reading your posts.

Jim Eccleston

Managing Partner at 56 Degree Insight

4y

I recognise the occasion in the photo - a certain Trabant tour of Berlin during a CEX conference no less 😊 Hope you’re well Piotr

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