In an age where communication reigns supreme, understanding your customers through the convergence of communication is paramount. Yet, many organizations grapple with disconnections between various departments, hindering a holistic grasp of the customer experience. It's time to recognize that CX is everyone's responsibility, and identifying the roadblocks is the first step towards overcoming them.
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all right welcome everybody we're excited to get going here you got Gabe Larson
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I'm the chief
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marketing officer at customer and then I have a special guest somebody I've
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known for Justin how
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long is it it's been like seven sass years isn't it that I think which seven s
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ass years is like 49
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real years so it's been a long time Gave yeah I've come across Justin multiple
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times but in his
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current role he's the evangelist at eight by eight what a cool role what a
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great opportunity when he
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moved into the role I ping them and said man it's just like there's certain
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roles that just fit
0:39
certain people so much and this is like perfect for Justin so he'll talk about
0:43
that more in just a
0:43
minute but today we're gonna be talking about the impact of communication on
0:48
companies overall
0:49
success and some of the great things I think Justin's been experiencing it
0:53
eight by eight and in his
0:54
previous roles all things communication so with that Justin maybe just take
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just a minute tell us a
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little bit about the role and some of the cool things you've been doing cool
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Gabe thanks for having me
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it is always a pleasure to connect with you gosh it's still funny when you're
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like certain roles just
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like seemed to be the thing when I saw eight by eight post about this I you
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know I connected with a
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couple folks there and I was like you know I'm like doing my own thing right
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now but like I had this
1:22
rule that there were certain opportunities that if they came up I just like
1:25
would have to go after
1:26
it and and this was definitely one of them look for those of us like if we
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haven't met before I
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know each other my background I always think myself gave us a bit of a CX mutt
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I started in the
1:37
contact center you know was an agent to the supervisor thing to quality
1:40
training all that kind of
1:41
stuff eventually found my way into consulting and like larger training programs
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and then as you
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mentioned I think around the time we met started working inside of technology
1:51
companies and it was
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interesting for me just I've always been in customer experience I love the work
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I love the
1:58
people that do the work and I think what what's always been most important to
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me through for my
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entire career but especially in this role is like just a deep desire to
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understand where are people
2:10
who who are responsible for understanding and serving customers like where do
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they struggle today
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and what is what does it look like to to enable them to move forward in
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meaningful ways because I
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know at least for my own experience like there were so many times that I was
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just like hitting my
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head against the wall because I was trying all these different things and
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nothing seemed to make
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a difference yeah so if I think about like how does that show up in my work at
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eight by eight
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you know I think it's a couple things the biggest part of it is just being out
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in the industry
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trying to do what I can to understand and educate people like where is CX today
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where is it going
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how do we move forward in real ways and moving forward I mean changes to people
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it means process
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and it means technology and you know that that I think at the biggest level
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like that's what it
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is I can bore anybody who wants to know more about it like let's talk he is the
2:57
walking CX master so
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those words rain true but let's get into some of that you know you hit on a
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couple themes I think
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we wanted to touch on today but communication I just it is when they talk about
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CX we can talk
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about customer service I mean communication reigns supreme but it does kind of
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seem like it's broken
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it's talking to me about what you're seeing in the market why is it broken and
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then we can talk a
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little bit about some maybe how you guys are thinking about solving some of
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these challenges
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yeah so to me this is like a compounding problem the first is just like the
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nature of people
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and our relationship with communicating with each other you know I won't like
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there are lots of
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one-to-one relationships that I have and know that like just alone
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communication can break down there
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so let's just talk about the natural compounding factor we've got a bunch of
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people and anytime
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people are involved it's going to be volatile it's going to be messy where I
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think I think about
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this from an internal like problem for organizations and an external and
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serving our customers or
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patients or constituents whoever it might be I think the external problem right
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that we're facing
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Gabe is the ways that we've communicated have changed and accelerated so fast
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that keeping up
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from a process and technology like all that standpoint we fell behind and so I
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think that's
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part of it just like the way we communicate change so fast as it becomes so
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diversified that makes
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it really complex and I think internally gosh you know we have I think
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everything everything is
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available for us today to have no problems with communication and so me asking
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the question of
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why do we do this you know I think part of it is just like it takes work to do
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to do communication
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well clearly right now it's taking work for me to communicate well it takes
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work for us to communicate
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well and and I think part of it is it's really easy to fall into like we
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believe that what we
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know everyone knows yeah that to me I think is is an underlying factor to like
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how do we get
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ourselves out of that and recognize how much others don't know and how valuable
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it would be if only
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they knew what we knew yeah it does seem like the that just the channel stuff
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you know if it's not
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you know Facebook's new threads or Twitter or something's going on with Twitter
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or you know what's
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up I don't know what's up seems to be like people are using it more around my
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friend group all that
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debate you know iPhone versus Android user I don't know what's up come if it's
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not channel stuff then
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it's just typical communication barriers time zones you know challenges between
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the way that maybe
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you are here there but it does seem like it's there's always a new way to
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communicate there's always
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something going on with the communication challenges that as customer service
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continues to evolve and
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evolve it just becomes it just I feel like sometimes it's on it's daunting you
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know it's like how do I
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master this idea of communicating effectively with my customers when every day
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it feels like
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there's something new or something that ultimately changes so I feel the pain
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in my own experience
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but I know customers feel it as well so how do you guys start to think about
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the idea of breaking
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this down then and saying hey if communication is so key how can organizations
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start to think
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about it differently in a way that actually drives the results we want which is
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you know
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happy customers more revenue top line bottom line etc yeah Gabe this question
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all questions like
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I think there's there's four big factors it's people process technology and
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strategy
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those those four things are always going to be factors in this and you can move
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one and not
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move another and you're not like you might see incremental ones but it won't be
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sustainable
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and it certainly won't be scalable yeah so let's talk about um I think strategy
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often is going to
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like if we're doing it right drives everything else strategy shouldn't be a by
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product of what we
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have it should be like what we're choosing and making decisions off of so the
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first thing I think
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that that like how do we move move forward is we have to recognize an own where
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communication is
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is preventing our success today and and I think sometimes that can be buried
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and I give examples
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of um I know from my own research Gabe that if it's not for a bad boss the
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number one reason why
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contact center employees leave their job is because they feel like they don't
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have the tools the
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knowledge of the resources to do what they need right there's a lack of if
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communication or a
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uh prohibiting of them to communicate the way that they need to so I think that
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's part one like
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we've got to recognize like how do you quantify that how do you quantify the
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impact of bad
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communication um so if I were part of an organization I'd be trying to to think
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they're like can we
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can we put some real numbers and facts and figures around how our failure to
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communicate
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effectively is is impacting our business so that's and where do you go I'm at
7:41
one click down I
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mean is that typically um just in in in the numbers in the way that the the
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contact center
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operates is it more in like a survey based approach you know kind of as you
7:52
were saying with
7:53
sometimes reps just saying it's not working how do you go get get there yeah so
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so depending on
7:59
your role so let's let's say you are responsible with the contact center um so
8:03
now part goes to
8:04
that idea of like first always always um question what you know I'm going to
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give the example of a
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buddy of mine who worked for company and uh they they offered drones and he he
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realized one day like
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he knew the number one reason why people called his company is because of a fly
8:18
away drone he assumed
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everyone else in his business knew that until he was in a meeting and people
8:22
were like why aren't
8:23
customers buying more consumables so like blades and batteries and things like
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that it's like
8:27
probably because the drone is missing or damaged before they would ever need
8:30
them and they're like
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what do you mean oh she's like well this this is the case so so part of it I
8:35
think is how do we
8:36
create mechanisms to share what we know in the contact center outside in the
8:40
organization that
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that is part of how we can discover like some of those communication challenges
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um because to the
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contact center that was just the number one contact driver and they just
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accepted it they
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didn't challenge it and then they challenged it they then discovered hey if we
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have a better way of
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communicating and helping our customers be successful with piloting their
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drones right and that that
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to me is like this this communication way of it's it's communication
9:04
communicating to the customer
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but it had to happen because you had to communicate inside the organization
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right that's that's
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that's and that's what we're talking about this is called the communication con
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undrum
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well and so so Gabe then like if you think about like the real big part of this
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is like how do I
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ruthlessly prioritized where I'm going to go after first in my business yeah
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and in that case like I
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actually think the number one reason why people contact you or the number one
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reason why they
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go to your portal or the number one reason why they set whatever like I think
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that can be a
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really great place to start and understanding like do we have gaps in how we
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communicate today yeah
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a great yeah and that's your turn so one of those things that fills maybe a
9:44
little obvious but um
9:46
great example because it's the assumptions that often kill the communication
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like wait you guys
9:52
all thought what um shoot we probably need to communicate better ourselves so
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okay so you kind
9:59
of start big picture um where do you go next yeah so so then I think like okay
10:03
so what is like
10:04
preventing our visibility and and if I think about customer experience broadly
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yeah often my
10:11
experience with a number of people that that I run into in CX circles or
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contact center circles
10:17
like they immediately equate hey most of the customer experience happens in the
10:20
contact center
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that's where most of the communication with customers happens and that couldn't
10:24
be further
10:24
from the truth because you've got customers who are communicating with
10:28
marketing and they may not
10:29
know it they're communicating with field services or they're communicating with
10:32
sales or they're
10:32
communicating with a front office employee right there's all of these places
10:37
where communication
10:39
not just happens to customers but then there's internal dependencies on the
10:43
contact center needs
10:44
to better understand when marketing is launching their next campaign and what
10:48
is it going to say
10:49
and what are going to be the terms and conditions that that convergence of
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communication I think is
10:55
so important as organizations really try to understand customer experience they
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have to recognize
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first off it's not a contact center problem it's it's an enterprise wide
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problem yeah and part of
11:04
what's fueling it is just a lack of visibility and ability to communicate on
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who your customers are
11:10
what they they were doing or what they want to do and what are the things
11:14
preventing that from
11:15
happening that to me is that that I think is one of the biggest places to look
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because
11:20
what's happening right now for a lot of organizations is the way the contact
11:25
center is communicating
11:26
is one way and then the way the company communicates internally is another way
11:30
and then you might have
11:31
then different departments that then they also have additional ways of
11:34
communicating and it's
11:35
fractured and it's not cohesive so that that that for me is both like a
11:40
personal like how do we
11:42
how do we converge more of how we can communicate not just through people in a
11:47
process standpoint
11:48
but you have to think about hey the ways that you're documenting or or sending
11:52
communication both
11:53
your customers and inside your organization like how do we how do we get that
11:56
more in one place
11:58
yeah it's the silos I mean I experience it in my own life but I know our
12:01
customers do too and it
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I love that idea like marketing is communicating one way to the customer and
12:08
then like the customer
12:09
service entity is kind of communicating a different way in the two same
12:13
customer but the two never
12:15
never talk and it seems obvious but dang it it's hard is there certain things
12:21
you've found is
12:22
is it is it better technology is it just hanging out together more is it is it
12:27
some of the basics
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you know what are they called the ABCs of communication or where do you go to
12:31
break down some of those
12:33
things silos yeah so I'm gonna I'm gonna use a kind of example from from my own
12:39
past so
12:40
as you know gave and for those of you that unless I spent a few years in Hers
12:45
hey Pennsylvania
12:46
so we just place on earth and you have to say it by the way when you say Hers
12:50
hey Pennsylvania
12:51
you have to say say it's on earth and then I remember that you know I we took
12:55
my kids out there man
12:56
I loved it and that little park of it's a beautiful place street lamps shaped
13:00
like Hershey kisses
13:00
wrapped and unwrapped alternating down chocolate and cocoa avenue this is real
13:04
life people
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uh look my my contact center was on the same floor of the same building as the
13:10
marketing department
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and there were a number of times where you know we were on the front page of
13:16
the USA today and
13:17
didn't know about a promotion or customers were calling in because they heard
13:20
something on the
13:21
radio and we didn't know about it and and so there were a couple things that
13:24
would have
13:25
helped us then and and can help organizations now um and again people process
13:31
technology strategy
13:32
gave this is like I'm gonna be this so from let's let's get the technology
13:35
stuff out of the way
13:36
I do think it is meaningful and and there is real value of bringing the way
13:42
that we communicate
13:43
into one or as few tools as possible um like what's the the long and the short
13:49
of like why did I
13:50
decide to step into eight by eight because that's how they were thinking and
13:53
that's how they've
13:53
been building a solution right so to me that was important um from a process
13:58
standpoint you have
13:59
to create mechanisms to to not just share out what you're learning and
14:04
experiencing these might be
14:05
voice of the customer programs they might be hey I'm gonna take my peer in
14:09
marketing to grab coffee
14:11
once a month or if we've got our our media bias planning session how can I be a
14:16
part of that to
14:17
understand how I might need to forecast for my contact center differently that
14:21
that to me is
14:22
a big and we could probably have an entire session gave on like how do you
14:26
build those
14:26
relationships with those stakeholders but that to me it's intentionality it's
14:30
intentionality
14:30
around understanding how do I create those mechanisms to to not just share out
14:35
but also learn from
14:36
I think from a people standpoint it's creating a culture of curiosity that to
14:43
me is is something
14:44
I try to ingrain in in anyone I'm ever a part of a team with is like hey part
14:48
of how we
14:48
communicate better is to be naturally curious naturally curious about what the
14:53
other person has
14:53
to say naturally curious about how what we know might help others that that
14:58
just kind of creates
14:59
inside of us this desire to say how to connect and share as much as possible
15:04
and then look from a
15:06
process standpoint there are a lot of like there are a lot of organizations
15:11
that like have process
15:12
for process sake and what it does is it creates friction for customers it
15:15
creates frustration
15:16
for the employees and that's like that's not an easy problem to solve because
15:21
it can be
15:22
political and it can be messy and it can be territorial but honestly Gabe like
15:28
if we took a better
15:30
look at ourselves and like understood like how do we how do we actually make
15:33
sure that we eliminate
15:35
points of friction and and we reduce the likelihood of something is going to
15:39
fail on us
15:40
gosh it would be so much better I mean yeah it's it's some of those points you
15:44
know it's
15:44
I love the curiosity point but you know there is some of these ideas if you can
15:49
just take a step
15:50
back and understand the importance of it and you got to reach across the border
15:53
sometimes and shake
15:54
a hand and see if you can really partner with those different organizations the
15:58
example of a
15:59
marketing promotion and the service team didn't know about her you know that
16:03
just is happening
16:04
too often and it obviously causes so much friction with customers that it's
16:08
messy one one arm doesn't
16:09
know what the other arm is doing okay so customers and employees right because
16:12
that's the other part
16:13
of it that's fair that that's fair okay so you got kind of this strategy piece
16:17
identifying the
16:18
problem I love the idea of breaking down silos and finding a way to do that
16:21
with people process
16:22
technology let's see if we can hit one more one more piece you go to to kind of
16:26
help solve this
16:27
problem yeah um looks we talked people process technology strategy I think the
16:37
the other part of this is recognizing that hey look our our employees they want
16:43
us to win
16:44
yeah our customers or however we serve want us to win um and there are probably
16:51
lots of
16:52
opportunities for us to better get feedback on where we're falling short on
16:56
this today
16:56
um so so when you ask the question gabe of like where else do I go uh I go to
17:02
my employees and I
17:03
do things like start stop continues I to me it's like I don't I don't need to
17:07
do like
17:07
customer survey day to like pick up the phone and call customers or schedule
17:12
time with them and
17:14
like just genuinely approach it's like hey we we want to get better at this and
17:19
we are pro
17:19
actively coming to you to understand where are we falling short today what's
17:24
been frustrating
17:25
like to me like the simple start stop continue exercises like go get like get
17:30
feedback from your
17:31
customers from your employees from other people in other parts of the
17:33
organization like just
17:35
you know I'm a I'm a cubby seven habits person it's like seek to understand
17:39
that that I think is
17:41
the other part of a game like just don't assume like hey I know I know that we
17:44
would if we had
17:45
this tool we could communicate better I know that if I had this meeting I would
17:48
have been able to
17:49
to get this information out better like don't just operate off of assumption
17:52
that would to me
17:53
would be the last piece and it kind of goes into curiosity but but go out and
17:57
ask and even if you
17:58
don't act on everything the the fact that you went out and asked in solicitive
18:01
feedback is
18:02
going to get greater buy-in for whatever change or initiative you need to drive
18:05
drive as a result
18:06
of what you learned yeah it does seem like it's organizations get bigger it's
18:10
funny you lose that
18:12
idea of like why don't you just go talk to the customer why don't you just go
18:15
talk to the employee
18:16
you know you like feel like you got to like set up this big survey or something
18:19
and it's like
18:20
nothing better than a skip level meeting nothing better than just calling a
18:23
customer and being
18:23
like hey why did you buy why did you not buy what do you how do you what's your
18:26
experience and
18:27
you lose some of that is organizations get bigger and it's not that difficult I
18:31
think you can still
18:31
pull some of that off that's a good one yeah this to be gave it falls under the
18:34
category of
18:35
stuff it's like sometimes I'm you know having these conversations or giving
18:38
these presentations
18:38
and after the fact I was like gosh you know like I know this but why don't we
18:48
do it
18:48
and I'm convinced like there's there's two things that I'll say here you know
18:53
one is like
18:54
our our natural like tendency is is to be risk adverse and to like fall into
19:00
status quo
19:01
and so and so like I get that's part of our like natural tendency but I think
19:06
the bigger thing and
19:07
you know we talked about a couple examples it's like we know it's we know it's
19:10
going to be
19:10
difficult and we know it's going to take hard work and not that none of us like
19:15
are avoiding
19:16
hard work but but I think for a lot of especially contacts under CX leaders
19:19
like we're operating
19:20
this MOVE where we're just trying to survive and some of this stuff is like g
19:25
osh I would love
19:27
to think about some of this other stuff that would help us thrive but like
19:30
before I worry
19:31
about my communication with marketing like how do I get my people to stop not
19:34
showing up to work
19:35
and right and here's how it starts to come full circle well maybe maybe part of
19:41
why they're
19:41
not showing up to work is because you haven't gone and taken that first step
19:44
with marketing
19:45
and and we've got to be willing to take some risk and to hedge some bets on you
19:50
know sometimes
19:50
the the things that feel like they're going to help us in the short term are
19:53
hurting us long term
19:54
because we haven't gone after it yet yeah yeah well that's part of that but it
19:57
is get a little
19:58
bit back to that curiosity I mean you've got kind of step out in the the box
20:01
and get a little curious
20:02
and maybe start you know get out there a little bit um love it Justin it's so
20:07
fun to catch up with
20:08
you again it's been a while love that you're in the role I think you're going
20:11
to make a great
20:12
impact for all of us in the CX space so again congrats on you and the role here
20:17
at A by 8
20:19
as we drop here is we we finish up for those that we want to dive a little bit
20:23
deeper either with
20:24
you or with A by 8 what's kind of the the call to action you recommend here
20:28
yeah look Gabe uh
20:29
first off thanks for having me I always love my conversations uh with you uh
20:33
hey we can connect
20:34
LinkedIn uh Justin Robbins look for the bow tie and uh I'll be there and I'd
20:39
love look if you want
20:40
to talk about contact center stuff CX stuff or A by A happy to start there if
20:44
you don't learn
20:45
more about A by A for yourself it's 8x8.com uh and that's a great place to get
20:49
started
20:50
awesome awesome well again appreciate you joining Justin and for the audience I
20:54
hope you have a
20:54
fantastic day thanks cool thank you
20:56
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