A growing concept in popularity these days, is that many organizations make the claim of being customer-centric. That essentially means they are claiming to have transformed a business from one that previously focused primarily on products and services, to one that now values customers and customer experience above all else.
Without a lot of strategic thinking behind it, and not much in the way of changing behavior, some businesses will then begin by promoting their new-found processes and business evolution.
They often begin with aggressive marketing and advertising campaigns, communicating how much they care about customers and how much they are focused on improving the customer experience.
However, many transitions like this or “transformations” remain at the management or executive level. Some organizations may just “talk the talk” to win future business.
Unfortunately, we find the people that typically have the biggest impact on the customer experience, the front-line employees, are usually are not even aware of what their role is in helping the organization’s vision of customer-centricity.
And, even when they are aware, they are not truly empowered to deliver upon it.
Front-line Employees Need the Power to Act Immediately
We’ve come to accept that, based on many research studies, when employees feel empowered, they are better at delivering to customer expectations and, in the process, are more engaged, more satisfied, and become more productive employees.
If people with the right skills and a positive attitude are hired and properly on-boarded and trained in whatever knowledge and skills they may be lacking, that at least establishes a foundation for empowerment.
Think about how many times you’ve encountered a poor or unacceptable customer experience. How empowered was the person you were dealing with to resolve your issue quickly and seamlessly and leave you feeling satisfied with the resolution?
In most cases, they likely needed to escalate the problem to a manager or worse, pass you on to someone else. This lack of empowerment often leads to poor customer experiences.
Effectiveness, Ease, and Emotion
When thinking about empowerment, I’m reminded of Forrester Research’s three core dimensions of Customer Experience—effectiveness, ease, and emotion.
When either transactions take place or when issues arise, you want your customers to achieve and derive value from what they are aiming for (Effectiveness), make the process easy for them to obtain it (Ease), and finally you want them feeling positive about the transaction or resolution (Emotion.)
Without a proper and well-articulated empowerment plan, this would be very difficult to accomplish. Every organization is different and the degree to which employees can be empowered to deliver on this will vary.
But, and perhaps most important, employee empowerment requires that leaders relinquish some power of their own in order to instill some autonomy, responsibility, and accountability within those that report to them.
For authoritarian type leaders, accustomed to making all the decisions on behalf of their team, that can be quite distasteful and outright threatening to them.
Proper Company Leadership is Crucial to Supporting Employee Empowerment
In a Harvard Business Review article from March 2018 entitled, When Empowering Employees Works, and When It Doesn’t, the authors describe how empowering employees is highly dependent upon trust and mentor-ship by their leaders and is largely determined by how they perceive their leader’s behavior.
Their studies and analyses revealed that employees were more likely to trust those leaders who they perceived as more empowering. They had a greater faith and trust in their leaders and were more likely to put in extra effort without feeling that they would be reprimanded for making bad or wrong decisions.
They also felt a greater sense of control within their work. They felt that their job had meaning, that it aligned with their values, that they were competent in their abilities, and that they could make a difference.
That leads to more engaged employees which in turn helps to better deliver on customers’ expectations and, as a result, build more satisfied and loyal customers. However, are there circumstances where this doesn’t work?
The HBR study also found that sometimes more harm than good can come from empowering employees, if they are without the appropriate support and mentoring that goes along with it.
If more responsibility and additional tasks are delegated, unaccompanied by trust and relationship-building, it can indeed backfire. Employees can feel that the leader is simply dumping extra work upon them to circumvent or avoid their own responsibility.
Proper and effective empowerment is achieved when employees’ expectations are met and aligned with the expectations of those they report to and where there is a good relationship and understanding among leaders and their subordinates.
Real-world Example of Employee Empowerment
Empowerment is about proper delegation and about supporting employees. For example, as part of their commitment to providing a great customer experience and developing ambassadors for their brand, Chick-fil-A has put forth considerable efforts in employee training and empowerment.
At a local Massachusetts location, a cashier is empowered to resolve most typical customer issues on their own without needing to speak to a manager.
Without management approval, they’re able to provide restitution for up to twice the value a customer paid for their meal on the spot and provide a “dinner on us” card to ensure a future visit.
While this is just one example, and may not be necessarily relevant to your business, it’s the thinking behind it that’s most important. There’s an intended design at play here with employee expectations aligned with leaders’ expectations. In the end, they both aligned to exceptional customer experiences where that vision is being effectively delivered by front line employees.
There’s power in empowerment. Think about the ways your organization could be more proactive and effective by empowering customer-facing employees, and what kind of impact that may have on your brand, customer experiences, and future business outcomes.
We’d love to hear your stories or ideas around empowerment!
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