by Bernhard Schindlholzer, follow me on Twitter
When we talk about remarkable customer experiences, we usually think about creating something that is "bigger, better, more". I often argue in conversations about customer experience that “you don’t need fireworks to deliver remarkable customer experiences". Bigger, better, more is not the only way to deliver great customer experiences.
It might be the most fashionable approach to improve customer experience (everybody wants to work on projects that make a brand more "premium" and "exclusive") but this is not the only possible path. Let’s look at two different philosophies for creating remarkable customer experiences.
The Ritz-Carlton Philosophy
The Ritz-Carlton Hotels are famous for their exclusive interior, world-class service and the extraordinary customer experiences that are delivered by each-and-every employee. The biggest challenge with this “Ritz-Carlton Customer Experience Philosophy" is that in order to provide more benefits to the customer, organizations are confronted with additional costs to provide them. More employees, better technology, more exclusive interior require higher prices if profit margins want to be sustained.
The effect of higher prices is that customer-perceived value, the ratio between perceived benefits and perceived sacrifice, is only slightly improved. Perceived sacrifice includes all the costs a buyer faces when making a purchase while the perceived benefits are the combination of physical attributes, service attributes and technical support.
This "premium" strategy only works when you target a price-insensitive customer segments that is willing to pay more for these additional benefits. The remarkable experience comes from the accumulation of these benefits into "peak experiences".
The "Ritz-Carlton Customer Experience Philosophy" creates remarkable customer experiences through extraordinary benefits at extraordinary prices.
The IKEA Philosophy
Another approach, which I call "The IKEA Philosophy", is to deliver extraordinary customer experiences by increasing customer perceived value through reducing perceived sacrifice for the customer.
IKEA creates remarkable experiences through its modern, utilitarian furniture and store design while at the same time ensuring lowest-prices through reduced shipping and inventory costs and self-assembly.
The IKEA approach increases customer perceived value primarily by decreasing sacrifice (the same benefits at a lower price) and secondarily by increasing benefits with constant sacrifice (more benefits at the same price).
When following such an approach, the focus shifts from "bigger, better, more" to "easier, cheaper, faster". The necessary tactics to realize this are well known: process optimization and cost-cutting. Usually we only think of these tactics when we are facing a recession, serious competitive pressure or when profit margins are sinking.
Organizations that can leverage process-optimization and cost-cutting to increase customer perceived value have a powerful tool to create remarkable customer experiences.
The "IKEA Customer Experience Philosophy" creates remarkable customer experiences by reducing the sacrifice and costs that customers incur to experience a company’s products and services.
What does this mean for your organization?
Instead of pursuing a "Ritz-Carlton" customer experience strategy that focuses on "bigger, better, more", think about what you could achieve in your organization if you pursue an IKEA "easier, cheaper, faster" philosophy to deliver remarkable customer experiences?
Which processes could be improved to reduce perceived sacrifice? Instead of lowering prices, could you deliver more benefits to the customer through operational efficiency?
While this is not an either/or decision, it is necessary to understand these two different options for designing remarkable customer experiences. The Ritz-Carlton philosophy might be more “fun” to work on, you can probably have a bigger impact on the bottom-line by following the IKEA philosophy for customer experience design.
Further Links:
Examples of companies, products and services that follow the "Ritz-Carlton experience philosophy" can be found in the trend report "ÜBERPREMIUM".
Examples of companies, products and services that follow the "IKEA experience philosophy" can be found in the trend report NO FRILLS CHIC.


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10 Comments, Comment or Ping
Drew Stevens
Many people do not understand the customer experience this is the embodiment of all interactions with the consumer from the moment they open dialogue with an organization. However while emphasis is placed in sales and marketing the true experience comes from all “touchpoint” within organization. All employees from reception to shipping to whatever need to understand the value they provide. Exemplars such as Disney and FedEx constantly conduct programs such as this. All work toward the proper ways to treat customers.
Drew Stevens
Drew Stevens Consulting.
Aug 22nd, 2008
Gerard
The comparison between IKEA and The Ritz is more a comparison regarding the service value delivered by the two firms (Benefit vs sacrifices) but it is not about customer experiences. In the hotel industry usually hotel deliver more for the same price or More for more. Ikea gives more for less. This is about service value. Customer experience is about delivering emotions when customers interact with the brand. Both the Ritz or Ikea can deliver memorable emotions…
Best regards
Gerard
Mahidol University
Feb 5th, 2009
Bernhard Schindlholzer
Gerard,
yes, you are right that the “emotional perspective” is one approach to look at Customer Experiences and it is indeed the most commonly thought of approach.
Nevertheless I am not satisfied with this perspective, mostly for the following reasons:
- It is not possible to design AN experience, you can only design FOR an experience, therefore it is from my perspective not possible to “deliver emotions” but you have to create products, services and interactions that lead to these emotions.
- What I am refering to in this model is indeed the concept of customer value. Current state of research also includes hedonic and symbolic (besides functional and cost) dimensions of customer value (see the category “customer value” for more). This would cover also emotional aspects.
- When people talk about customer experience management they often refer to the Book “The experience economy” saying that you have to stage experiences and not just deliver products. I don’t fully agree, in my way of thinking it is essential that you focus on the core value of the product or service you are offering, and only then about how you stage and present it.
I am currently working on a white paper about my understanding and the relationship between “customer value” and “customer experiences” which will definitely clarify a lot of things. I hope to finish it end of April 2009, stay tuned for more.
Thanks for stopping by,
Bernhard
Feb 5th, 2009
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