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I just finished up co-teaching a two day seminar on customer experience management (CEM) in Hong Kong. I found the experience fascinating on several levels.
To start with, it was my first time to Hong Kong. I loved the people. The city, though dense and cluttered and hazy, still somehow conveys a strong sense of order and safety. I was in Kowloon near one of the biggest shopping centers in the world -- I took the opportunity to study global and local branding strategies in the stores and environmental signage, while buying a few things ...
In attendance at the seminar were retail strategists, several representatives from a "gentleman gambler club", one of Sri Lanka's biggest telecom providers -- an impressive crowd, many of whom were extremely sophisticated. A couple of companies sent multiple representatives pulled from several silos, which was actually exciting to see. It shows that companies acknowledge that CEM must be multi-disciplinary and matrixed, something that has been strangely hard to convince companies of with regards to CRM (which is often just thought of as an IT initiative).
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The other two instructors, including the founder of Greater China CRM, Sampson Lee, delivered their material with their own unique styles. I especially enjoyed Sampson's ability to bring the students into discussion, as well as his command of the content regarding irrational decision-making and latent knowlege in customer choices.
A couple of topics seemed especially interesting to the audience: choosing an experience opportunity based on a unique brand concept, and the peak-end rule. You can go here to see the Wikipedia slug for peak-end. Sampson has done a nice job of applying peak-end to customer experiences in more-or-less sequential customer interactions in a retail environment.
Rafael Rodriguez' material, pulled from his vast library of management science slides from his Focused Management company, along with new materials, provided a speedy overview of Six Sigma, performance indicator hierarchies, and process optimization. I think his most interesting material was his TESCO case study, pulled in part from Patricia Seybold's recent articles on CEM.
Overall it was a great experience -- especially nice to see Sampson's wife, Alice -- but I am totally exhausted. Now, for reasons too intricate to explain right now, I'm heading to Moscow.
More news later ...
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