In the dynamic realm of Customer Experience, it's time to shift our mindset from competing with AI to leveraging its potential for something truly remarkable – a thriving brand community. Leading brands are already embracing this approach, and for Customer Experience professionals, this is a call to action. We possess the unique mindset, skills, and influence to redefine the landscape. Join us in this interview as we lay the foundation for this transformative journey.
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(upbeat music)
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- Welcome everybody, we're excited to get going.
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Got a great guest today, we got Nate Brown.
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- The Leibels.
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- The Leibels.
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- He is the co-founder of CX Accelerator,
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a real brilliant mind when it comes to all things CX.
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It was funny when I first, Nate,
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I think when I first joined customer,
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you gotta be like one of the first person.
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You know, you're like Google.
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I remember that conversation.
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- It's like Googling, what do I do in CX?
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(laughing)
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I was like, Nate Brown, Nate Brown,
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I was like, I should probably talk to these guys though.
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I've known him now for coming up on like five years.
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And he is just everywhere.
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You'll see him on LinkedIn, you see him at events.
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He was just recently speaking,
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doing a keynote at a university in the Midwest.
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So it's like the guy is,
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you might be in the Million Mile Club.
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- There's four of me.
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I cloned myself.
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I'm the good looking one.
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You got the best one, Gabe.
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- I was gonna say, there does seem to be,
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I'm always on LinkedIn, I'm like,
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where is he doing this?
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You know, he just told me he was at a university
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in the Midwest, I'm like, I don't know.
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Okay, that didn't look like where you normally are.
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- Anyways, Nate, thanks so much for joining Matt
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on how the heck are you?
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- Doing super good.
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Love that additional conversation Gabe that I have.
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And that's what I'm about.
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I love welcoming people into this customer experience space
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and in this community that we have, it's so special.
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It's just awesome this work that we get to do.
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The way we get to cultivate meaningful connections
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inside the organizations that we serve
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and the added bonus of just the larger royal community
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that we have of people doing that work
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across the entire world,
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it's just awesome what we get to do, Gabe.
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Welcome.
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- Yeah, well you get to do the rest of us fake it a little bit.
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- Yeah.
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- Tell us just, I mean, I gave a little bit of an hit,
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but tell us just a little more about your background
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before we kind of jump in, if that's okay.
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- Woo, let's go back.
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So coming out to Coa Falls College,
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move more.
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- Oh, I meant even further back,
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like nine, you born nine pounds, five ounces.
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- Yeah, yeah.
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Wasn't that big of a baby?
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I'm a big baby now though.
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I came out of school and started trying to sell postage meters
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on the streets of Jacksonville, Florida.
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- Okay.
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- Turns out I wasn't not good at that.
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I got kicked out of a lot of strip malls in Jacksonville.
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But then ultimately did realize I love the customer service
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element of my account manager role.
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And so as I navigated, there was a short stint
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of selling vacuum parts out of a storage unit,
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but we'll skip over that part.
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And we'll go to my first entry level customer service role
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at a safety science company.
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And I just loved it.
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I just came alive in that customer service role,
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just getting to help so many people in an accelerated format.
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The day just went poof, like a hundred tickets a day.
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And it was just helping so many people
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with challenges around adult learning.
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It was safety science and making sure
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that they were staying safe in their jobs.
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And I just loved it, Gabe.
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- I love it.
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Yeah, man.
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- So there started the journey.
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And then they ended up bringing this
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a hundred years later to where we are, right?
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- So then kind of took ownership of that team
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and grew into more of that leadership mentality
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of how can I equip others that are doing customer service
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work to embrace it, to love it, to come alive
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the way that I was able to.
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And then really grew into more of that CX capacity
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became a CX director inside of that organization.
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So it went from really, really kind of that,
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and it was on me to be thinking this way,
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but kind of that reactive mode of taking a lot of tickets
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and doing that on behalf of our department
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to then morphing to, whoa, how can we embrace
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the customer journey and reduce friction upstream
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and think about it through their lens and their eyes
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and really do something special here
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with the overall experience that we're creating
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and get myself out of this customer service box
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that I was thinking about.
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And that's still what I'm thinking about Gabe.
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In the last four years, I've been doing quite a bit
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of fun consulting and other projects
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and just helping, mentoring CX professionals in this space.
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And I've loved it.
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- Yeah, tell us real quick just about CX accelerator.
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What's the mission and what are some of the fun things
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you guys are doing over there?
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- The mission of it is to equip CX professionals
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on every stage of their career journey.
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But our absolute sweet spot is people
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like you Gabe five years ago coming into this field,
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coming into this work and looking for that launching pad
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to be able to just feel good about what they're doing
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and to have a community around them of people
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that are wrestling with the same stuff
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and that can support them and embrace them
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and be able to ask some of those more vulnerable questions
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where you might want to not put that
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on the amplification of LinkedIn,
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like how exactly am I doing my job?
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(laughing)
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- I'm gonna do it.
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- Good to have a private community for that.
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And right now we're really focused on
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bringing some of that campfire field back
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because I mean we're over 4,000 people now,
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which is awesome.
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And you get that amplification of perspectives
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and worldwide input of what's going on
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in the customer experience.
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So I love that, but you're kind of missing
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that more intimate community feel of where we started.
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So we're gonna do both, right?
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We're gonna have those giant mega threads
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of just all the things you get to learn and see
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and refresh yourself on in terms
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of the big perspective, but be able to dive deeper
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with a smaller group of people
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who are looking to achieve that next milestone
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in their CX career similar to what you're doing.
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And embrace those folks, resource them,
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encourage them, and just again,
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accelerate them to that next milestone
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and do that in the context of community.
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So we're super excited about what's going on.
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- Well, congrats, man.
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It's definitely on the note.
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- Thank you.
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- For a lot of people and you've obviously
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done a lot of good in the world.
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That's not a bad thing to say,
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put on the old CV.
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Awesome, I appreciate the overview.
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Want to dive into the topic at hand here.
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You know, you and I have gone back and forth
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and certainly AI is, yeah,
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it's a little bit overused.
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I mean, and I think everyone agrees.
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There's obviously something there
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and we're all rushing towards it,
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but there are other ways to define, optimize,
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you know, and really bring your CX strategy
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to the next level.
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One of the things you and I have been talking about
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is this concept of community.
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Maybe start big picture, you know,
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"Why community?
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"Why are you passionate about it
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"and why do you think it can make a difference?"
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- Yeah, and I'll pause for a quick second
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'cause I do want to bridge the gap here.
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I mean, we don't want to skip over the AI elephant.
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It is so good and helpful and relevant.
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And I mean, I love how Bill Stechos talks about this.
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I mean, so the way AI is impacting CX
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is really in three acts.
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So it started as contributor, agent assist.
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It's helping us to facilitate a better interaction
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with customers.
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But now it's a composer.
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It's actually in those interactions
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and in composing them itself.
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And we're witnessing the music that's taking place there
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and it's exciting, it's wonderful.
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But then the third act,
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the one we're moving towards, is that of character.
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It's like a character in our lives.
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It's a friend of ours.
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Think about Jarvis to Iron Man.
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- Right, I'll have to make that example.
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- And what Jarvis, it's just there.
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It's proactively taking care of all these things.
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But we also, as CX professionals,
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we get to be pepper pots,
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which is the true guide to Iron Man.
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I mean, it's the heart, it's the conscience, right?
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It's why he wanted to sacrifice himself to save humanity.
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So when you combine Jarvis and Pepper
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around our customer, the hero of this story, Iron Man,
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we get to do some really killer stuff, Gabe.
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So I'm excited for that.
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But the community element is there.
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And I heard CK recently talk about how she's a brilliant
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AI analyst in the space.
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She's like, hey, everybody's asking me,
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how do you compete against AI?
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Don't, don't.
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Let's do the things that we should do.
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Let AI do the things that it's great at.
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Let's do the things that we're great at as people.
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And what we're great at, it should be great at,
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is cultivating meaningful community.
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But we've been struggling here, Gabe,
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because right now, and you might've saw
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the US Surgeon General come out
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with the epidemic of loneliness report a few months ago.
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- Oh, I didn't, oh, I didn't see that.
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- It's scary.
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It's hard to digest.
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It'll tear you up a little bit.
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It's just the state of where we are as a society right now.
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But who, in the workforce,
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is gifted to offer a solution here?
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CX professionals.
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- Yeah.
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- We've got that servant heart, we've got that empathy,
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we've got that desire to connect
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and cultivate meaningful community,
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which is literally one of the bullet points
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in that report as the solution
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is cultivating meaningful community.
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And people are turning to the workforce, Gabe,
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more than ever before,
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to gain their sense of identity
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and to find their community and their lives, big life.
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Where it used to be that some of those forces
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are diminishing in our lives.
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I'm not saying it's right,
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but community associations, family ties,
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religious associates, a lot of these things
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have diminished in their impact in our overall identity.
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And people are turning to their work family,
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(laughs)
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looking for that community.
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So we get to be there to help cultivate that
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and make it something really special.
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- Wow, wow, yeah.
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I mean, I love the segue from AI.
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That's a great kind of three part talk track.
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(laughs)
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I like that, I like that.
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So as you think about in the loneliness,
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sorry, one more click on that.
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It's just was, basically we were saying
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this report, the surgeon, Jim,
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people are just as you'd expect,
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I mean, with potentially some of the stuff coming out of
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COVID and whatnot and just all kind of lonely.
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I mean, I'm almost on a Googler right now,
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but that's the general overview, or does it go deeper?
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I mean, I gotta read that, that sounds fascinating.
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- Well, I mean, it talks about how deadly
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that loneliness is to us.
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I mean, how much the mind is connected to the body.
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And when we have that psychological void
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that forms without that meaningful connection in our lives,
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it impacts us physically, greatly,
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which is why the US surgeon general is jumping in
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and saying loneliness is killing you.
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- Epidemic, aren't you?
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- It is, truly.
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I mean, that connection between our mind and our,
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it happens, it overflows in all these ways
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and that stress, that cortisol is manifest
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in all these physical ways.
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So if you wanna think about folks
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that are not able to engage in the workplace
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the way that you want them to,
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us as CX professionals, we're asking for a lot.
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(laughs)
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Go make the magic with these customers.
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You know, go do all these things,
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represent the brand as an ambassador, innovate for us.
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We're asking people to do so much.
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And if they're in a place where they're isolated,
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if the circle of psychological safety
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has been broken for them,
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all they can think about is themselves,
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in that self-preservation mode,
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until we restore them to that place of health,
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they can't physically, mentally,
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focus outward towards the customer.
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So we've gotta do this as CX pros.
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- Yeah, I love it.
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Well, this is probably then the question,
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then the follow-ups, how do you get started?
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You know, I mean, if we laid the foundation,
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I think for a compelling reason to consider this
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is something that maybe we needed.
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And I think a lot of us feel this,
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but maybe you put some words
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to the thought, how do companies,
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how do people start to get down,
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how do they dirty on this, how do we get started?
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- I think that answer is emerging.
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And I've been endorsing myself inside
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of a lot of research here,
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and just learning, learning a lot.
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And my current response to this very complicated question,
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to summarize it as best as I can,
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I've been thinking and talking about a community
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in three layers, as it is relevant to the workplace.
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And that starts with servant leaders.
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So you've got a group of senior leaders
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who are, they understand the true brand core
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of the organization.
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There's a reason the business got started.
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There's a mission, a promise that was made,
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outward to the community, to the customers that were serving
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about why this organization exists.
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Is that group of senior leaders committed
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to the defense of that promise,
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to extending that and maximizing the value of that promise,
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beyond shareholder value, which is obviously important.
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And that is a core reason why the business exists,
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but that's not why the business exists.
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And do you have leaders that care enough about each other
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and care enough about the organization and its promise
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to where they're gonna serve each other in that?
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And they're not looking to just extend their own legacy
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or put themselves up on a pedestal,
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or focus too, too, too much on the revenue generation portion.
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- Yeah, I just don't know if,
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I can't think of that many companies who do it.
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And I think it's because of that last reason.
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It's, you know, so, maybe it's the why and the what.
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It's like, you know, what we need to,
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we certainly need to be profitable.
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We need to generate revenue.
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That is what we, like, you know, it's capitalism
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or, you know, businesses can't serve off right now
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on just being quote unquote, nice, right?
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But ultimately, that I think becomes
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such a front and center.
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It's like, this is our goal or our mission is to hit
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this dollar and cents and it's like,
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that's really our mission.
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You know, that's what we're here to do is just that.
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And so maybe it's the what and the why,
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but man, as I hear you talk about that,
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I know offense to everybody, just about every company.
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I just don't think they've got that why nailed down.
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And they certainly, if they, they may put it
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on a piece of paper, but then actually in town halls
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or in things like that, all they're doing
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is talking about revenue.
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- So me, Gabe, and again, I'm a 39 year old dude
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who's a student of this.
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I don't have the answers here, but what I see
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and what I feel is that the difference is patience.
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So these organizations can and should make money.
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And what we know, Gabe, is that good CX does make money.
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- Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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- But the quarterly shareholder mentality
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is the antonym of long-term customer value,
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is the antonym of great CX.
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And so when we try to just cram in and accelerate
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that revenue generation into these little pockets,
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these little windows of time, these quarterly windows
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of time, we're robbing from the future
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of our own organization.
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We're robbing from our future customers and their success,
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trying to squeeze it in right here.
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If we can just allow ourselves to have that longer term view,
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that that's what great organizations do.
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They can and should make money.
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It's just a matter of, are you gonna make this little bit
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of money now, this quarter, or are you gonna make
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this money in two years?
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- Yeah, yeah, look, I mean, sometimes they're long.
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And look, there's gotta be a balance, I think,
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as you're saying, but I do think a lot of us
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are leaning towards maybe being too quarterly focused
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or too dollar focused.
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- It's hard, I get it.
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Those are the pressures.
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- The soft stuff versus the hard, you know,
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like sometimes it's hard to go after the quote,
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unquote softer side of the business,
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but I love your point.
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You invest in that.
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You're gonna see the returns in the longer.
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Okay, so number one is this servant leadership,
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it's this idea of getting to the why,
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making sure you do it at the leadership level.
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Okay, got it.
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Where do you go for layer two then?
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- So then we are in layer two.
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So the leaders are connected.
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There is a concept of the ideal customer experience
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we're trying to create.
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The brand promise is clear.
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Now it trickles it down to our employee organization,
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the community of our organization,
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and it's trying to awaken what I've been calling
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guides and guardians.
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So these are people, and it's a metaphor coming
15:49
from building a story brand by Donald Miller,
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but the customers, the hero of this story.
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- Oh man, Donald Miller, oh man,
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I haven't heard that name for a while.
15:54
- Right.
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- Is it that guy's the wrong story?
15:56
- Nashville boy, you got to represent Nash Vegas out here.
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- I love it, I love it.
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- It's a brilliant, just simple way to think about the fact
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that we, the customers that hear of the story,
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so we get to be the guide.
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So what does the guide do?
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Well, the guide is trying to bring the customer
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to their definition of success, their destination.
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So that requires us to know what that destination is,
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what that requires a great voice of customer engine
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to be able to do that.
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It requires us to be a capable guide,
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to have the skill, the knowledge, the desire
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to walk alongside the customer on that journey,
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and like Jarvis, to be proactive in terms of the overcoming
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of the obstacles that one would navigate along this journey.
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- So it's making your employees that ambassador, that guide,
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but then it's a guardian too, like they care so much
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about the integrity of the brand promise
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that they are willing to defend it.
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They're going beyond the bare minimum, they're going beyond.
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So think about this, there's so much training
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and chatter out there about how can we have crucial
17:02
conversations with our coworkers?
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How can we navigate conflict in the workplace?
17:06
The vast majority of people just aren't doing it.
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It's not worth it to them.
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They don't care enough to have hard conversations
17:13
with coworkers, to hold anybody accountable to anything,
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especially at a peer level.
17:19
But that's what great organizations do.
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So if you care enough about the brand promise to guard it,
17:25
to defend it, you're going to be willing to engage
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politely, respectfully, like radical candor,
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we're going to care personally, like I care about you,
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you're, we're in the trench together,
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we're fighting this wonderful battle together,
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but like I care so much about winning this
17:42
and ensuring that we protect the integrity
17:44
of our brand promise, this is something
17:46
that we need to work on together here.
17:48
This is something that needs to be better.
17:50
- Yeah, it does seem like, so this next level's all kind of
17:53
that really engaging and mobilizing this workforce
17:58
in a way that potentially they haven't done it before.
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And one of those ways--
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- I've been guarding it.
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- I don't know if it's an employee engagement,
18:06
but this idea of actually being a guide and a guardian.
18:09
- Yeah, yeah.
18:10
- That is a different framing.
18:11
I mean, sometimes I think we, you know,
18:13
I use the word employee engagement,
18:15
employee satisfaction or something like that,
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but especially I think nowadays with customers,
18:20
you know, those words might resonate more than ever.
18:23
They want this, I don't want to say a consult
18:26
with a relationship, but it's like,
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I want someone to tell me how to become a superhero,
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you know, like I want that.
18:32
I'm trying to think of--
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- Or the pepper pots.
18:34
- Or the rings pepper pots type of thing, you know.
18:37
- Yes.
18:38
- Like where's the wizard who guides Frodo on the journey
18:41
to get the ring, you know, or--
18:43
- There is the wizard.
18:44
- Somebody to kind of help me on my journey,
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because in a lot of cases, this is,
18:50
we're talking about things that are important to people, right?
18:52
I mean, these are the clothes I wear,
18:55
it's the identity I am, you know,
18:56
this is a very important kind of purchase for my family.
18:59
So, and it's crucial and it's like,
19:01
man, I just, if I could just have somebody
19:03
kind of help me understand.
19:05
So, I think customers actually want it,
19:07
but we've not been able to get employees to embrace it.
19:10
Where do you feel like some of the challenges
19:13
with this one have been like,
19:15
why are we not there?
19:15
Why are we not getting to this guides and guardians moment?
19:19
- Yeah, I mean, it's generally people
19:20
that they have not reached that level of tribe
19:24
to use tribal leadership language
19:26
inside the organization to where that has happened.
19:29
I mean, the vast majority of organizations
19:31
are stuck between tribe two and tribe three,
19:34
which what that is, is my life sucks.
19:37
That's a tribe one.
19:40
And then tribe two is, well, I'm okay, but all of you suck.
19:44
And then tribe three is like,
19:47
I guess we're doing a few things okay,
19:49
but most of the rest of you are not so good.
19:52
But like, I'm all right.
19:54
It's like, whoa, whoa, whoa,
19:55
how are we gonna do much in terms of external ambassadorship,
20:00
in terms of really stepping up
20:02
to wanna guide the customer
20:03
and intimately understand their needs,
20:05
to get them to their definition of success
20:07
when our lens is that much on ourself,
20:10
when the circle of psychological safety
20:12
is broken to the point where all we can do
20:14
is really focus on ourselves.
20:16
So we have to restore that.
20:19
We have to change that lens
20:21
to be more focused externally on our customers
20:24
as the hero of the story.
20:26
But it requires a lot of friction reduction.
20:28
People have to have the desire and the ability.
20:31
- Oh, yeah, the ability to.
20:34
- But when, and this, I mean,
20:36
so customer is an example of a friction fighting tool.
20:39
- That's right.
20:40
- But the average enterprise organization
20:41
has 464 custom applications inside of it.
20:45
So think about the digital ecosystem mess
20:48
that we have created.
20:49
Information is everywhere.
20:51
And the ability for a customer service worker
20:53
to just do their jobs requires
20:55
like 14 different tools in like a 30 minute window.
20:58
- It's just fun.
20:59
- So it's like, it's stupid.
21:01
It's ridiculous what we've done to ourselves in that area.
21:03
So you've got good people that have the desire,
21:05
but do not have the tools and capability
21:08
to actually fulfill their desire to serve well.
21:10
- Yeah, yeah, yeah.
21:11
Wow, man.
21:12
- Amen to that.
21:14
And I love just the point of it's one thing
21:16
to have the desire and to know I need to be a guide,
21:18
but the ability to actually execute all that.
21:21
I'm glad you threw that in there
21:22
'cause sometimes I got it, but I just can't actually do it.
21:25
All right, we got one and two guide guardian.
21:28
We got kind of servant leader.
21:30
Okay, number three, where do you go for number three here?
21:33
- And this is where so few brands get to do,
21:35
but it's the most exciting one.
21:37
This is where we get to blow the doors off this building
21:40
and go outside in the world
21:42
and cultivate meaningful community with our customers.
21:46
We get to start co-creating alongside them
21:48
and we're attracting the right customers to us.
21:52
The care about this brand promise as much as we do.
21:55
They wanna see the world as a better place
21:57
in the same way that we do.
21:59
I'll use UL as an example.
22:01
That they had a clear brand core
22:03
of making the world a safer place
22:05
in these specific and good ways.
22:08
You can't be selfish with a brand promise like that.
22:10
You've activated your employees.
22:12
Now let's go out and let our customers join us
22:16
in the future of what it looks like
22:17
to make the world a safer place.
22:19
And you've got an actual community mechanism,
22:22
a virtual space in which that collaboration,
22:26
that organic collision is happening.
22:28
Now it's good and it's scary and it can be awful.
22:33
If the brand tries to jump straight to level three community,
22:38
the organization can't sustain it.
22:40
There's not that authentic overflow.
22:42
You don't have the business earning the right to over spill
22:47
over into their customers and invite them
22:49
into a community that already exists inside the business.
22:52
So you've got to have those layers one and two.
22:56
Then you get to start bringing those customers in
22:58
and you're learning so much from them.
23:00
The most dynamic and rich voice of customer channel
23:03
ever created is there.
23:04
Suddenly you have customers supporting other customers
23:07
in a really good edifying way.
23:10
So from a customer service perspective,
23:11
I mean it's tremendous.
23:13
It's like the greatest channel ever created.
23:15
(laughs)
23:16
So I mean there's just so much implication
23:18
to brands that can get to this level three layer
23:21
of community and co-creation alongside customers.
23:24
But that to me, Gabe, is the future
23:26
of customer experience work for great organizations
23:29
that can do it.
23:30
- Yeah, I mean it's a word that is sometimes thrown around.
23:33
I love the way you've kind of put it in the three layers.
23:36
Let's do one more click though on the last one there.
23:38
'Cause again, if you walked around to some six liter
23:41
and you're like you should have a community people
23:42
and be like, I know I just don't know how.
23:46
Where have you found that people on that last pillar
23:49
and you could go tactical or principle based,
23:52
but how do you kind of start to dive into that one?
23:54
Where is it?
23:55
Do you need to buy a tool?
23:57
Do you need to have, I mean I get you probably,
23:59
to your point you gotta make sure you have the leadership
24:02
and the employees in place.
24:04
But do you start running a newsletter?
24:09
Do you like, what are the principles of,
24:13
is it information, you gotta like,
24:14
Gabe you gotta give them great information often
24:16
through whatever means newsletter.
24:17
Like how do you, how would you guide someone
24:20
on that third pillar to get cracking?
24:23
- Yeah, I'm still learning a lot here, Gabe.
24:25
You know, I feel like I'm just in this past year
24:28
in seeing the true power and the future
24:32
of what community's going to mean for us.
24:34
And it was that report, you know, months ago
24:36
that woke me up and created even more of a sense
24:40
of urgency inside of me.
24:41
But with the experiment of CX accelerator
24:44
and that being as successful and helping brands
24:47
to set up a couple brand communities,
24:48
at this point what I would recommend
24:50
is to be thinking through, okay,
24:52
what is the true brand core here?
24:54
What is the promise that we wanna defend
24:57
and that purpose element where a community makes sense?
25:01
So in other words, we want to be collaborating
25:04
with people inside the organization,
25:05
inviting customers in long term
25:08
to where this type of interaction makes sense.
25:11
Not every organization is a use case for community.
25:15
But if you wanna see some great use cases
25:17
and get some of these practical steps,
25:19
belonging to the brand by Mark Schafer
25:21
is a wonderful resource that can help you to think through,
25:26
am I a good candidate for this as a brand?
25:29
And what would it look like
25:30
in terms of the digital extension of the community?
25:33
I mean, you're gonna be asking yourself the question,
25:35
where are our customers now?
25:37
And how can we, in the most frictionless way,
25:41
a lot of times there is the mobile app component
25:43
and there's some great pre-built community,
25:46
mobile app capabilities where you can build it,
25:48
right there, there is your Slack and your Discord
25:52
in incredible virtual spaces
25:54
where just remarkable functionality is already built in.
25:58
But there's some, sometimes,
26:00
depending on the needs of your community
26:02
and some of the specific things that you wanna amplify
26:04
with it, you might wanna custom build your own app
26:08
or your own interface in which those interactions
26:11
are going to take place.
26:12
So there's questions that need to be answered
26:15
as you navigate that journey
26:16
and then you gotta have good moderation here.
26:20
And so Community Roundtable is an incredible organization
26:23
that equips these community moderators
26:25
to be able to establish that originating culture
26:29
to when you start inviting folks in, they pick it up.
26:33
They see what you're trying to do.
26:34
They're excited.
26:35
They come to life about their ability to co-create with you
26:40
around a specific meaningful purpose
26:43
and they just kinda take on the vibe of it.
26:45
And it's almost seamless when it's a great community
26:48
but that requires very intelligent community moderation
26:51
behind the scenes to make that happen.
26:54
So you've gotta have some unique individuals
26:56
with that gift set and with that up-skilling
26:59
to be able to facilitate that type of environment.
27:02
Then you just cultivate it and grow it and let it evolve,
27:05
almost lose control of it a little bit
27:08
as you truly do allow your customers
27:11
to guide the future direction of that community with you.
27:14
- I love it man.
27:16
Oh my goodness.
27:17
We always do, man.
27:20
I could talk to this guy for like four hours.
27:22
I told him it was gonna be 15 minutes.
27:24
I think I'm on like 40 here.
27:25
Just a wealth of knowledge.
27:29
Man, I'd love to keep going.
27:30
I might have to have you back for something else here.
27:33
Either way, love the kind of message on AI.
27:35
I love the idea of bringing community out
27:38
in these three layers, servant leadership guide, guardian
27:41
then ultimately this customer concept
27:43
that really brings that to life.
27:45
So if people wanted to dive a little deeper in with you,
27:49
Nate or learn a little bit more about some of the cool things
27:52
you guys are doing at CX Accelerator,
27:53
what would be the best place to start?
27:55
- Yeah, hop on over to CX Accelerator.com
27:57
and see a great CX community that has come to life there,
28:02
modeled out in that context.
28:04
And then you can certainly ping me right in there
28:06
otherwise LinkedIn, Nate Brown, Twitter, CX Accelerator,
28:10
or I guess X, my apologies Gabe.
28:12
Would love to be a resource for you on this community journey.
28:16
This work has never been more important
28:18
as we as CX leaders get to use our unique gifts
28:21
to fight against the epidemic of loneliness
28:23
and earn the right to grow our brands in the right ways.
28:26
- I love it.
28:26
It's a great kind of closing statement there.
28:29
Mr. Brown, so again, appreciate you taking the time
28:31
and hope everybody enjoys the session.
28:33
Take care.
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