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{"id":5181,"date":"2022-07-11T08:57:50","date_gmt":"2022-07-11T08:57:50","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/nileharvest.us\/cookie-cut-approaches-in-cx-customer-experience-lionesses-of-africa\/"},"modified":"2022-07-11T08:57:50","modified_gmt":"2022-07-11T08:57:50","slug":"cookie-cut-approaches-in-cx-customer-experience-lionesses-of-africa","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/nileharvest.us\/cookie-cut-approaches-in-cx-customer-experience-lionesses-of-africa\/","title":{"rendered":"Cookie-Cut Approaches in CX (Customer Experience) \u2014 Lionesses of Africa"},"content":{"rendered":"


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by Mandisa Makubalo<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n

Ever heard of the word \u2018cookie-cut?\u2019 By definition, to cookie-cut is to indicate that each one is the same, like a guaranteed formula for something that works. It also means that the same approach or style is always used and not enough attention is paid to individual differences. Have you ever found yourself saying \u201cI\u2019m struggling to get the buy in of the C-Suite for my CX (Customer Experience) project\u201d? Have you recently taken on a CX project as an independent consultant or entrepreneur? If your answer is yes, I invite to look as I discuss some of the reasons you might be experiencing the resistance and ways to overcome it.<\/strong><\/h3>\n

Top 7 Reasons for Cookie-cut approaches<\/p>\n

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  1. \n

    Coming in with the right answer or a pre-defined way of doing things<\/p>\n<\/li>\n

  2. \n

    Predictability<\/p>\n<\/li>\n

  3. \n

    Lack of questioning<\/p>\n<\/li>\n

  4. \n

    Lack of understanding<\/p>\n<\/li>\n

  5. \n

    Lack of knowledge capital<\/p>\n<\/li>\n

  6. \n

    Getting involved in organizational politics<\/p>\n<\/li>\n

  7. \n

    Inability to be adaptable<\/p>\n<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n

    Let us look at each of these common mistakes:<\/p>\n

    1. Coming in with the right answer<\/strong><\/h3>\n

    Many CX leaders\/professionals lack the ability to tailor their knowledge and methodologies to fit a specific situation. Just because your current client challenge sounds similar to your previous client challenge doesn\u2019t mean that you stop listening to really understand. Organizations are looking for your advice and direction, at most times they are stressed, they really need your help but in order to deliver business value you are required to suspend your pre-defined way of doing things. Best practice is not always right, every organization and project is different, therefore the solution needs to look different to fit the organization.<\/p>\n

    2. Predictability<\/strong><\/h3>\n

    The COVID-19 pandemic has tested everything to do with predictability. We have seen how unpredictable life can be even for those who think they know it all. As a CX practitioner, consultant, leader etc. predictability is a recipe for failure, it leads to great frustration and missed opportunities. If solutions were as predictable as many would love to think, organizations would not require the external expertise of CX practitioners and CX wouldn\u2019t be a key differentiator. The fact that organizations choose to make investment in CX teams and on expert skills of outside practitioners is evidence to the unpredictability of your work.<\/p>\n

    3. Lack of questioning<\/strong><\/h3>\n

    As professionals there is a combination of hard and soft skills required in order to solve the complex problems and challenges facing organizations. In order to respond to the different situations like a \u201cchameleon\u201d it is important to develop a number of soft skills especially the ability to question as this will allows you to read the client or your organization, build relationships, avoid cookie-cut approaches which could result in a number of implications from a cost and reputation perspective. You can never fully know everything and asking questions doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re incompetent in fact most clients and organizations applaud this level of maturity.<\/p>\n

    4. Lack of understanding<\/strong><\/h3>\n

    This is the major cause of the frustrations experienced by most organizations which has led to decisions being made in terms of investments in CX. When customers don\u2019t feel understood by brands this results in a number of frustrations which impact on the employee\u2019s ability to execute their roles efficiently and the build-up of these frustrations calls for interventions from either internal CX teams or external CX skills. When organizations do not understand the value of CX investments this results in reluctance and great push back from key decision makers. The ability to listen fiercely and question allows both the organization and the CX practitioner to develop deep understanding of the challenges facing the organization and allows you as the CX practitioner to direct and give advice to the business.<\/p>\n

    5. Lack of knowledge capital<\/strong><\/h3>\n

    The knowledge capital of CX practitioners is not only limited to CX knowledge, yes this is very important and CX wouldn\u2019t be CX without the related industry knowledge. Demonstrating your expertise and speciality is determined by how well you add to the knowledge capital of others through knowledge share. The key to developing the needed knowledge capital is by stretching your brain, it\u2019s an ongoing process of continuous improvement. CX solutions cannot be designed and delivered in isolation of broader business knowledge, be committed to learning about new technologies, AI, business processes, project management, change management, strategy, machine learning, new business industries, different types of cultures and operating models. The ability to tailor this knowledge capital and your methodologies to fit a specific organizational situation allows you to pay attention to individual organizational differences.<\/p>\n

    6. Getting involved in organizational politics<\/strong><\/h3>\n

    Your role as a CX practitioner \/ leader is to give guidance, direction and advice to organizations. Being clear on your role and always reminding yourself why the organization has brought you onboard will prevent you from getting involved in organizational politics. By definition organizations are stressed, they need your help from all the internal politics and other complex business challenges, your ability to listen the best and understand the best allows you identify the internal politics and come up with ways to enable business value.<\/p>\n

    7. Inability to be adaptable<\/strong><\/h3>\n

    Being an adaptive CX leader means you\u2019re able to change your behaviour in response to changes in situations. You demonstrate resilience when things don\u2019t go as planned and you\u2019re able to bounce back from failure seeing it as an opportunity to learn. Cookie-cut approaches go against being an adaptive CX leader in that they are not flexible in nature, they are rigid, there is no room to access different ways of thinking and they inhibit you from shifting and experimenting as things change. Being an adaptable CX practitioner comes with a great amount of emotional intelligence and organizational justice which stretches you to respond to different organizational demands and pressure.<\/p>\n

    Closing Words<\/strong><\/p>\n

    Non cookie-cut approaches require CX leaders who know how to:<\/p>\n