Join Jess and Michael as they explore the intricacies of chatbot management, customer touchpoints, and the evolving customer demographic. Get inspired by Michael's insights on data-driven decision-making, the value of customer interactions, and the importance of leadership that prioritizes customer feedback at an executive level.
0:00
(upbeat music)
0:01
- My name is Jess Servion,
0:03
and I'm super excited to bring you my new podcast,
0:05
The Juice With Jess.
0:07
This podcast is gonna be about everything
0:09
in your customer's journey.
0:11
We're talking acquisition, awareness, making that purchase,
0:15
retaining that customer, bringing them back around,
0:18
and everything in between.
0:19
This is gonna be all about delivering dope brand experiences
0:24
and talking to some really amazing people
0:26
who are in the customer experience space,
0:27
and marketing space, and everything in between.
0:30
(upbeat music)
0:32
- Welcome back to another episode of The Juice With Me,
0:40
Jess, your host.
0:43
This week, I am in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
0:46
home of the Eagles.
0:48
- Go birds.
0:49
- Go birds with my friend Michael Bear,
0:52
who is SVP of customer experience at Figs.
0:56
Michael, tell the homies who you be.
0:59
- Oh, okay, hi everyone, I'm Michael Bear.
1:02
Yeah, so I'm SVP of customer experience for Figs.
1:04
I lead two teams, I lead our customer experience team,
1:07
which is like our customer support team,
1:09
or customers through email, phone, chat, SMS, social,
1:14
and then I also lead our B2B sales team,
1:16
which helps larger healthcare organizations
1:18
outfit and uniform their team into Figs.
1:21
- Wow, that's so interesting to do like both sales
1:24
and customer support.
1:25
- I have so many questions on that.
1:27
Well, I have one question.
1:28
- Okay.
1:29
- So you know how like in customer service,
1:32
experience, whichever one you wanna put it, right?
1:35
Everybody's always like, we don't want it to be a cost center.
1:38
Do you think with like having B2B sales
1:41
and customer support, you've like,
1:44
or do your customer support people
1:46
have any sort of like revenue goals?
1:48
- So my customer experience people currently
1:50
do not have revenue goals.
1:53
- That's good. - Yeah, which is good.
1:55
Yeah, their only job is to make customers happy
1:57
and serve them and that's what they're supposed to do.
2:00
Traditionally, I have, so you know,
2:03
I've run, my background is like seven years
2:07
in financial sales, doing true inside sales,
2:10
and then I moved over to the customer experience space,
2:12
but always kind of like leading retention teams
2:13
for mainly subscription businesses.
2:15
So they had large, you know,
2:17
they had big portion of their role
2:18
was retaining customers on subscriptions.
2:21
And so they definitely had revenue targets.
2:22
I would actually say this is the first role I,
2:26
I haven't had a lot of epiphany.
2:29
This is actually the first one I've ever had
2:30
where I'm leading a customer experience team
2:32
that does not have some kind of like revenue or sales target
2:35
'cause I've always led customer success or subscription.
2:37
- Yeah. - Yeah, definitely my B2B sales team.
2:40
Like they're all revenue focused.
2:42
- Yeah, I mean, of course, right?
2:43
B2B sales, right?
2:44
I think it's really interesting.
2:47
Okay, so fun fact, Michael and I both come from B2B.
2:53
- Mm-hmm. - Before E-com.
2:54
- And then even before that.
2:56
- Even before that, we worked at Wells Fargo.
2:57
- Financial sales. - We'll build
2:58
financial sales, which, let's just even start there.
3:02
'Cause actually, we're gonna take the audience
3:04
on a big old ride, okay?
3:07
So let's talk about Wells Fargo.
3:09
- Okay. - What did you do
3:10
at Wells Fargo?
3:11
- Okay, so yeah, that was my first job at college.
3:13
I was lucky enough to get recruited my senior year
3:16
and started there literally like two days after I graduated.
3:20
- Yeah, I did consumer lending.
3:22
So I worked at a branch and then I eventually moved
3:25
into one of our HQs which had like 3,000 people in it
3:29
when I joined in 2005.
3:32
And then like, I was there for seven and a half years,
3:36
which seems wild 'cause people don't state jobs
3:39
for seven and a half months anymore.
3:41
But yeah, it was my first job for seven and a half years.
3:44
I did it in site sales and I was a supervisor
3:46
and then I ended up being like a call center manager
3:48
for the sales team there.
3:50
- Yeah, wait, what city were you living in then?
3:52
- I was in Philadelphia.
3:53
- Oh, what? - Yeah, so I originally
3:54
worked at a branch in Ohio 'cause I went to school
3:57
right on the border and then got transferred to the HQ
4:01
which is here in Philadelphia and that's how I came to Philly.
4:03
- I did not know that Wells Fargo had an HQ here.
4:08
- Well, I worked-- - I was out of San Francisco.
4:12
- It was, so I worked for Wells Fargo Auto Finance.
4:15
Auto Finance in the site quarters was here.
4:16
- Yeah. - Yeah, so we had 3,000,
4:18
I mean, a little history.
4:20
We had 3,000 people when I first started.
4:23
By the time I left in 2011,
4:25
so that was right after the mortgage crisis,
4:27
the banking crisis and everything,
4:29
I think the place the location I was at had 300 people.
4:31
- Whoa. - So it just shrunk so much.
4:33
- It's so crazy, man.
4:34
Like that working in the financial industry
4:38
was such a wild ride, but I also think that it's like
4:41
the core of, like, well, for me and I don't know for you too,
4:46
like, of my customer experience journey.
4:48
- Yeah. - Because when you're dealing
4:50
with people in the finance industry
4:54
and, like, as your customer,
4:55
it's like the most sensitive subject in somebody's life.
4:57
- Yeah. - You know?
4:58
- Oh, yeah. - Yeah.
4:59
- Yeah, I can remember so many conversations
5:01
with customers where, yeah, it was like,
5:05
if they didn't get this loan or they didn't get this product,
5:08
like, it was not gonna go well for them.
5:10
- Yeah. - And also, I think the other thing
5:12
it did, and I don't know how close you were to this,
5:14
but, like, that was where I learned, like,
5:16
debt-to-income ratio and LTV, which has learned a value,
5:20
not lifetime value in our world.
5:21
- Yeah. - Um,
5:23
you had to relearn all of that.
5:24
But honestly, that was where I learned,
5:26
I was like, oh my gosh, there are people that, like,
5:28
have 60% of their gross income going out to their bills.
5:32
- Dude. - And I grew up, like,
5:34
pretty poor anyway, so I was already, like,
5:36
pretty scarcity mindset. - Yeah.
5:38
- But going there and seeing just how much
5:40
of the general public live paycheck to paycheck
5:43
would be, like, an understatement, but, like,
5:45
literally live in negative if you did their bills for them.
5:48
It was pretty eye-opening because I was, like,
5:50
I don't wanna be in a situation.
5:52
- Yeah, yeah, I learned for myself, like,
5:56
during that time period, 'cause, so,
5:57
when I worked at Wells Fargo, I worked in the branches.
6:00
- Yeah. - I was, like,
6:02
what's the role was called when you're, like,
6:04
half a personal banker and half a teller?
6:06
- A PB. - It would know,
6:08
but it's, like, the step before that.
6:10
- Yeah, I forgot to say. - It's, like,
6:11
a customer-something rep. - Yeah.
6:13
- And then I was a PB-8, PB-1, and then a PB-2.
6:17
Personal banker, that's what PB means.
6:20
Anyway, but I remember I worked in Wells Fargo
6:23
while I was in college and, like,
6:25
kind of, like, was on that trajectory because
6:27
it's also, this is aging us, but,
6:30
there was a during a time where, like,
6:32
you would live paycheck to paycheck
6:34
or you would just live above your means
6:36
because, like, financial, I don't know,
6:39
society around you was, like, here's a loan for that.
6:43
Here's a loan for this, you know?
6:44
- I could tell, we could sit here for an hour
6:46
and I could tell you stories about lending policy
6:49
that would explain a lot of what happened in 2008,
6:52
2009, 2010. - Yeah.
6:54
- It was just, yeah.
6:55
But I think, yeah, ultimately, it's very,
6:57
yeah, you, working at a bank,
7:00
if nothing teaches you a lot about personal finance,
7:02
and that personally was quite valuable.
7:05
- Yeah, no, I agree.
7:07
I mean, I think it changed my entire projection on it.
7:12
Oh, and you made one comment, you were, like,
7:13
seven and a half years, I definitely worked
7:15
with a bank for, like, five years.
7:17
- Did you? - Yeah, that's well.
7:19
- But in a lot of different branches.
7:22
- Oh, yeah.
7:23
- I actually, this is, like, going really deep,
7:25
but I worked in, like, and this is in California,
7:29
but I transferred to, one of the last branches
7:31
I transferred to, I actually experienced, like,
7:36
I was robbed. - Oh, no.
7:38
- I don't know, I don't know how to say this, right?
7:40
Yeah, I was robbed, but-- - Oh, my gosh.
7:42
- But it was, like, with a note, there was, like,
7:44
no, like, weapon or anything like that.
7:46
But in those moments, it's so interesting,
7:50
'cause, like, you know, you go through all this training
7:52
and you're supposed to say, like, green bag or something,
7:54
right? - Mm-hmm.
7:55
- And I literally just, like, backed away
7:57
from the teller thing, and I was like,
8:00
I'm being robbed right now. - I feel like I'm more,
8:01
I'm walking out. - Look, I gotta go.
8:04
Yeah, that was the end of my Wells Fargo career.
8:07
- Was that your last? - Yeah.
8:09
That was like, I'm gonna go work in an office, so.
8:11
- Yeah, yeah. - Anyway.
8:13
- Yeah, working in the branch, I only did it for one year,
8:16
but yeah, the volatility of people walking in is very high.
8:21
- Yeah, yeah, I know. - Yeah.
8:25
- What an interesting time.
8:27
Okay, so we're on a journey.
8:29
I do wanna talk a little bit about working
8:31
in a call center, though, because it's something
8:33
that we actually don't really talk about that often.
8:36
I think we're, like, in your career where you are today,
8:40
and where I was, it's like, we're all in this digital world,
8:43
right, but like, there are these call centers still, right?
8:47
And I think, I remember, Philly, Go Puff.
8:51
- Oh, yeah. - Big headquarters here, right?
8:53
- Yeah. - Yeah.
8:54
I remember interviewing for a role from them years ago,
8:57
but for like call center with hundreds of agents,
9:00
all this stuff. - Oh, well.
9:01
- What are, like, tell me about working in a call center.
9:04
Like metrics are so different, so this is so different.
9:07
- Well, so first, I'm clearly old.
9:11
Look at me. - I'm very old.
9:13
- I get graduated college in 2004,
9:16
started at Wells Fargo right after that,
9:18
and worked there for seven years.
9:19
- You know, at that point, like,
9:20
most contact centers were call centers.
9:23
And the role I was in was pure sales,
9:26
so like, we use digital marketing
9:27
and whatever it was back then.
9:29
And direct, a lot of direct mail to drive calls to my team
9:34
to then try to generate revenue for the business.
9:37
So, so we definitely had traditional call center metrics,
9:42
like abandonment rates and service levels
9:44
and handle times and stuff like that.
9:45
But honestly, it was like mostly like close loans.
9:48
- Yeah, all they cared about. - Close loans,
9:49
generate revenue, cross-sell, upsell.
9:52
In this day, like, you know, whatever happened with,
9:57
whatever happened happened with Wells Fargo, whatever it is.
10:00
I'm super grateful for that experience
10:02
because I learned two sides of the business.
10:05
I learned like a, you know,
10:06
kind of traditional customer experience,
10:08
contact center metrics.
10:09
And I learned traditional like sales revenue targets.
10:13
And I used both of those,
10:14
and I've used both of those almost every single role
10:16
I've been in and still to this day.
10:18
So it's a different world.
10:20
I mean, it's like, you know,
10:21
if you've never worked in a call center,
10:24
you know, where there's like 50, 100 people
10:25
and phones are ringing off the hook and everyone's talking.
10:28
Like, it's just like a very different experience.
10:31
But like to this day, some of my best friends were with that.
10:32
Like I had some people over to my house on Saturday.
10:35
One of the managers from my team was there
10:37
and him and I still kind of joke about,
10:39
he had this thing where he would like kind of lean back
10:42
and his chair and talk super loud.
10:44
And he's like this very loud New Yorker.
10:47
- Yeah. - And it was just
10:48
the funniest thing in the world.
10:50
There's just like, you know, some of this happens
10:51
in contact center culture anyway,
10:54
but it's just like when you have 50, 100 people
10:56
sitting around doing more or less the same job,
10:59
it's fun. - Yeah.
11:00
- It's like, it's a, it was a really--
11:01
- You're like in the fucking trenches, man.
11:03
- Oh yeah. - Yeah.
11:04
Yeah, all those people, like, I mean,
11:06
especially like when I was there, you know,
11:08
we kind of had like opened OT and I was poor
11:12
and I wanted to make as much money.
11:13
So I would have worked 10, 11 hour days
11:14
to the point where I'd like lose my voice every single day.
11:17
- Dang.
11:18
- That was the only way I could pay for my bills.
11:20
- Yeah. - So, but yeah,
11:21
you become very close with all those people.
11:23
- Yeah. - Yeah.
11:24
- Do you wanna know a fun fact?
11:25
- Always. - That I've like never
11:27
have said this to anybody?
11:29
My first job was in a call center.
11:30
- Yeah.
11:31
- I worked for AT&T. - Mm-hmm.
11:33
- Wait, I'm pretty sure it was Bell self.
11:35
- Was this in high school?
11:37
- Yeah. - Yeah.
11:37
- Yeah. - Yeah.
11:38
It was like 14. - Wow.
11:40
- I bet that could be wrong.
11:41
- 14, 15, somewhere around there.
11:43
Anyway, living in Louisiana,
11:45
'cause I grew up in Louisiana.
11:46
- Right. - First job.
11:48
And I worked for AT&T, but it was Bell self then.
11:51
- Yep.
11:52
- And selling, selling phone services.
11:57
I was fucking terrible at it.
11:59
I was so terrible at it.
12:00
- I would imagine most 14 to 15 year olds
12:02
would terrible at that.
12:03
- Dude, I don't know what was wrong with Louisiana,
12:04
like employment. - That's very young.
12:07
- Let's not even go in there.
12:08
- I had a paper out when I was 14,
12:10
but no one's putting me on the phone with like adults.
12:11
- Yeah, I don't know how I even got this job.
12:13
- Yeah. - Dude, I do not know
12:15
how I got this job, okay?
12:17
But like, how crazy, like I know what you're saying about,
12:20
like those call center environments,
12:22
if you're a little cubicle in your headset
12:24
and like, you connect to your calls
12:26
and it's just constantly, constantly, constantly.
12:27
- I would do 78 calls a day.
12:29
Most of our calls work 20, 30 minutes long,
12:31
'cause you're like financial loans.
12:32
- Yeah.
12:33
- You have to like talk through it, 70?
12:36
- Oh yeah.
12:37
- To 30 minutes each.
12:39
- I was on all day. - Doing that now.
12:40
- All day.
12:41
- Oh my God. - Like all day.
12:43
- These jobs that shape your core, my friends.
12:45
- I know, it's like, yeah, I've teamed now
12:47
and they're like, "Oh, I don't wanna do 10 calls."
12:48
I'm like, "I don't really have much sympathy for that."
12:51
But okay.
12:52
- You're like, "You should really get on the phone."
12:55
- Yeah. - Yeah.
12:57
- Yeah man, that was my first job.
12:58
I didn't last very long.
12:59
- Yeah.
13:00
- I think I lasted like, maybe two months.
13:02
- Yeah, I was, you know, I'm not a good sales person.
13:05
I kind of tell people all the time,
13:06
like I'm not good at that.
13:07
I'm really good at process.
13:08
I quickly figured out like being organized,
13:12
having trackers, holding myself,
13:15
like I had little tickers about how I would do everything.
13:18
- Yeah.
13:19
- Made all of the difference in the world.
13:20
- Yeah.
13:21
- When did you decide that you were really good
13:23
at process though?
13:25
- I think,
13:26
I think it was my second job.
13:30
'Cause when I was at Wells,
13:31
because I had been working there for seven and a half years,
13:34
and this was part of the reason I wanted to leave
13:36
by the end of it, I was like,
13:37
I just know this like the back of my hand.
13:40
Like I knew everything there was
13:42
in that very confined thing
13:43
to that part of consumer lending.
13:46
Like it just felt really, really confident.
13:47
It wasn't until I went to my second job,
13:49
which was the most amazing experience of my life.
13:51
I had the most amazing boss.
13:53
She's the kindest woman in the world.
13:54
I think I've told her a million times,
13:57
but I'll tell her a million and one times.
13:58
But that was the first one where I was like,
14:00
and then I was good there.
14:02
I wasn't like, you know, I wasn't the right away.
14:03
It took me a long time.
14:04
It was energy, so it was completely different.
14:06
But that was the first time where I was like,
14:08
hey, actually like the task oriented side of me,
14:11
the, you know, I have a pretty strong A type personality
14:15
that actually has a serviceable use in that.
14:18
Like I'm pretty organized and I'm pretty good with process.
14:20
Like in, I can think about things very linearly.
14:23
So that was probably the first time I noticed it.
14:26
- Yeah.
14:27
I didn't realize it was good at process
14:30
until I got fired for my job.
14:32
(laughing)
14:33
I worked as an office assistant and I was so bad at that job.
14:38
There's a lot of jobs that I was just like really good at
14:43
for like people and like empathy and like really could
14:46
just talk the talk, right?
14:48
But like, and I don't mean that in like a BS way.
14:51
I mean like literally just like I'm a good gapper, right?
14:55
And I, but office manager was not my jam.
15:00
- Because it wasn't using your process skills
15:02
or what was it?
15:03
- Yeah.
15:04
- It just like wasn't using, it was a little chaos.
15:06
I remember like at my desk, like I was supposed to be
15:09
filing paper and then I would like procrastinate
15:11
and never file the paper.
15:13
So then it just became this like a long stack,
15:16
just little things, you know?
15:18
But the pivotal moment was actually maybe fired.
15:21
- Yeah.
15:22
- And then I got good at process.
15:23
- Did they tell you, hey, you're not,
15:25
were they like, this isn't for you?
15:27
Or how did they know?
15:28
- No, it wasn't even, it was literally like
15:31
I planned this whole off-site.
15:32
You know, I'm now gonna name names,
15:34
but if this woman is out there and--
15:36
- If you happen to listen to the Jews.
15:38
- If you happen to listen to the Jews
15:39
and you see me on LinkedIn
15:41
and we make this a social clip.
15:42
- She's just like, wow, she really turned it around.
15:44
- Because I wonder, I actually think back,
15:47
I'm like, do these people wonder?
15:49
Like, is there actually on my LinkedIn?
15:51
- Oh yeah.
15:52
- Anyway, so I planned this whole off-site
15:55
and then I remember, I think the last straw
15:57
was like a reservation was wrong at a restaurant,
16:00
which actually wasn't my fault.
16:01
It wasn't even my fault.
16:02
- All the things, right?
16:03
- Yeah.
16:04
- That wasn't even the one.
16:05
- That was not even my fault.
16:06
And so a reservation was wrong.
16:08
And then like the next Monday,
16:09
I like get called into the office.
16:11
(laughing)
16:12
And I don't get told like why or anything.
16:15
It was just like, we're gonna let you go.
16:17
- Oh.
16:18
- Which--
16:19
- But were you like, resecally like,
16:21
yeah, this is probably for the better.
16:22
- No, I was really upset.
16:24
I had never been fired for a job.
16:26
- Yeah.
16:27
- But now looking back, I was like,
16:28
no, that was probably for the better.
16:29
- You know.
16:30
- I learned my lesson.
16:31
- Yeah, yeah.
16:33
I have a lot to say on that,
16:34
but I think if you've never been fired
16:36
or never been laid off, it's like,
16:38
it hurts the beginning,
16:39
but you, I think with a little bit of time,
16:41
a little bit of healing,
16:42
you kind of quickly realize like,
16:43
look, some of that stuff is not your fault.
16:45
Like, I don't know if that was exactly your situation,
16:47
but like some of that stuff is just like,
16:50
you're not right for the company.
16:51
- Yeah.
16:52
- Right?
16:53
And the company's not right for you.
16:54
And if you're not thriving there,
16:56
you gotta find something where you're gonna thrive.
16:57
- Yeah.
16:58
Well, ironic here, okay.
17:01
So a job that I did thrive in was actually my first startup
17:06
and reporting to the head of business ops
17:10
because I didn't wanna get fired.
17:12
So I like knew I had to like shape up,
17:15
you know what I mean?
17:16
And so I didn't, so I like got really good at like process then.
17:21
But this leads me to like actually a question
17:24
I wanna ask you.
17:25
So we haven't gone through your entire career yet,
17:29
but what is, if somebody's out there listening,
17:33
what is one of the biggest lessons you've learned
17:35
in your CX career that you would wanna share with somebody?
17:39
- In my CX career.
17:41
There's so many.
17:45
- What's the one?
17:48
- I don't know, there's one.
17:50
You're gonna edit out all these arms.
17:51
- Yeah.
17:52
- You know, I would say the one thing that I feel like
17:57
that I do differently, or at least I really try to focus on
18:01
is Reed Hoffman has a saying that you listen to anecdotes,
18:04
you make decisions with data.
18:05
And one of the really nice things
18:07
about working in customer experience is you have data
18:09
for everything.
18:10
There's a scoreboard for everything.
18:11
CSAT is a number, service level is a number.
18:14
Net Promer score is a number.
18:16
You should have, you can have numbers for everything.
18:18
Individual performance, team performance.
18:21
You should be able to measure all of that.
18:23
Even like the qualitative stuff,
18:24
you can really, you can start to like, you know,
18:26
put some measurements there.
18:28
And I really have always tried to hold myself to the extent
18:31
where like the last two CX management teams I've led,
18:34
I title our Slack channel with that topic.
18:38
Because I have always really tried to hold myself to like,
18:42
I don't wanna trust my gut.
18:43
I don't honestly think I'm that,
18:44
I'm definitely not that smart.
18:46
I'm not good at just like kind of like coming up with stuff
18:49
off the top of my head.
18:50
So I really try to have data in front of me
18:52
to make decisions.
18:53
'Cause honestly, there's a lot of things
18:55
that customers will choose,
18:56
particularly like depending on what customer,
18:58
if you might be serving a customer,
18:59
is that that is not you.
19:01
That's not your preference.
19:02
And I think that in customer experience,
19:03
you find a lot of people that talk,
19:05
like they talk about their strategy or their initiatives.
19:09
And it's like, that is your preference.
19:11
That is not the customer's preference.
19:12
So I really try to use data.
19:14
And I think like we sit on the wealth of data, so use it.
19:18
(upbeat music)
19:20
- Guess what, fam?
19:23
The customer community is back.
19:24
If you're not already familiar with the community,
19:27
you can sign up to get your questions answered,
19:29
discuss best practices,
19:31
and connect with other professionals in the CX space.
19:34
Check it out today at community.customer.com.
19:37
See you there.
19:38
(upbeat music)
19:41
We're probably gonna get like,
19:44
eatin' alive for this one.
19:46
But I don't think that customer experience is all,
19:51
like I think it is data, for sure, right?
19:53
Data insights to lead you to the decisions,
19:56
to like, you know, test out your hypothesis.
19:59
If your strategy is correct, right?
20:01
But I also think that a lot of times,
20:04
people are looking at the wrong metrics.
20:06
- Totally.
20:07
- I was asked a question today.
20:09
I just shout out to my friend, Zach Cox.
20:13
He sent me this, I don't know,
20:16
like video of Jack Bezos talking about customer service
20:21
in Amazon.
20:22
And he asked me for my opinion.
20:23
He was like, it was customer service in Amazon,
20:25
but what Jeff was talking about was like,
20:28
I'm calling Jeff, you know,
20:32
Bezos was talking about metrics.
20:37
He was like, if you're only looking at the metrics,
20:39
you're never actually looking at like the customer service,
20:42
right?
20:43
And I actually do believe that.
20:45
Like I feel like data and insights will inform you
20:48
and will like prove your hypothesis right or wrong, right?
20:52
But I also think that we have to be flexible
20:55
in the metrics that we're looking at, right?
20:57
That's the video where he's like,
20:59
the numbers were saying one thing,
21:01
they were saying we had really good service,
21:02
but then customers were telling us
21:04
so he just pulls out his phone and he calls the number
21:06
and they wait on hold for like 12 minutes
21:08
before it gets answered.
21:09
- Yeah.
21:10
- And yeah, to me it's just like,
21:11
well, that just seems like they were,
21:13
I mean, it seems like they were like cherry picking numbers.
21:15
And a lot of people certainly will do that.
21:17
And honestly, I understand why,
21:18
because most people, it's like, you know,
21:19
if your performance is measured on these numbers,
21:22
you're gonna certainly try to pull numbers
21:24
that make it look like it.
21:26
But if you're the leader of something
21:27
and you actually care to make the customers' lives better,
21:31
then you can't be cherry picking numbers
21:33
that just make it look better if it's not actually.
21:35
- Right, right.
21:36
And it's like, and I think those metrics are really good,
21:39
like especially in like call center
21:41
or the digital world of it, whatever it is,
21:43
because it's like, yes, like,
21:45
average handle time, the amount of tickets,
21:47
like all of those things,
21:49
those metrics are like good for you to know
21:51
of like what's coming in.
21:53
But I think that that also tells you
21:56
what is how are you doing in React?
21:59
- Mm-hmm, totally.
22:00
- It doesn't tell you how you're doing pre-viewing
22:02
when you go act it.
22:02
- Well, this gets to like, that's why it can't be the whole
22:05
store, it can't be, that's why customer service,
22:08
customer support is not just customer experience.
22:10
Because like the three things that I primarily like report
22:13
off of are for sure customer experience tickets,
22:16
'cause we have a really wonderful customer base
22:18
that will tell us straight up what they love,
22:19
what they don't love.
22:20
We also have like garnered so much,
22:23
and I think this is a key part of this,
22:25
we've garnered so much trust with our community
22:27
that they know we listen to them.
22:29
We actually have things on our app that like
22:31
reinforce that point, we certainly have that
22:33
with our policies that are in place.
22:35
But then we also, you know, we infuse just as much
22:38
social listening, we infuse just as much serving.
22:41
And once you combine all three of those,
22:43
you know, outside of like micro phoning,
22:45
you know, doctors and nurses walking around a hospital
22:48
and hearing their feedback and when they say,
22:49
"Hey, talk about us."
22:50
I feel like we have a pretty good sense of their voice.
22:53
- Yeah.
22:54
- And yeah, if you just, in silo, I mean, it's just similar.
22:56
Like if you just picked just social,
22:57
or if you picked just one survey,
22:59
if you just picked one data source
23:01
to tell you the customer experience in air quotes,
23:03
well that's gonna be misleading.
23:05
- Right.
23:06
- That's why I have to use all three.
23:07
- Right.
23:08
- I mean, hopefully I have more.
23:08
- I agree with you, I think that's why you have to use all three,
23:11
and this is gonna be a bit of a hot take,
23:13
but like you and I have been in like executive level CX roles.
23:17
I also think that this is why there should be
23:19
executive level CX roles in the world.
23:22
'Cause I don't think that,
23:23
and this, I know this is leading down
23:25
like a little bit of a different path,
23:27
but like there's not a lot of executive level CX roles.
23:32
Like your senior vice president, I was VP of CX,
23:36
Kate from Terra Cafe, CXO, right?
23:39
Eli was senior director at Jones Road,
23:43
and like, but the reason I'm naming all of these like positions
23:46
is because a lot of times people look at,
23:48
especially in e-comm CX as CX, just CX managers,
23:52
and they only look at the one layer of it,
23:55
then like if you're looking at your brand
23:56
and you're looking at your brand strategy
23:58
and all these other pieces,
23:59
you should be like, you have so much first party data
24:04
within this team that like,
24:06
if you're never leveling your CX team up
24:08
to like strategically think on like that executive level
24:13
or even share those conversations
24:16
or like the insights that are coming through this department,
24:19
like you're not really advocating for your customer.
24:22
- Something that really comes down to like,
24:24
what does that organization want
24:25
their customer experience to be?
24:27
If you want it to just be like to get it back to your like
24:29
your cost center or ID or your cost center comment,
24:32
if you want it to just be customer service,
24:34
you just like, we don't want to hear about these problems,
24:37
just take care of them like, you know,
24:40
at one time I heard someone make an off-handed comment
24:43
about my team, this is a long time ago,
24:45
which is like, he needs to just shut up
24:47
and go answer emails.
24:49
- What?
24:50
- And that, and like, I was just like, that person has,
24:54
and like, you know, part of me is just like,
24:56
I have probably not done a good job
24:58
of like evangelizing to that person,
24:59
like the value that we provided the organization.
25:02
I've worked a plenty of organizations,
25:03
otherwise that really do value.
25:05
And it's like, some of that is like cultural,
25:07
some of that is like, what do you want
25:08
your customer experience to do?
25:09
Do you actually want in fairness,
25:11
like the person who said that worked at an organization
25:14
where I don't think they really wanted to hear,
25:16
they really wanted to hear what customers had to say.
25:19
- Yeah.
25:19
- But if you do care, if you do care about your community,
25:23
if you do care about customers,
25:24
if you do believe that their value,
25:26
or that their feedback can actually make your product
25:28
or service better, well then you better have someone
25:30
in the organization that's actually like,
25:33
like senior enough to take that feedback
25:36
and make it happen.
25:37
- Yeah.
25:37
- And I think that's like one, you know,
25:38
very lucky in the role that I have,
25:41
because you know, the CEO that I work for,
25:43
no one cares about customers more than she does.
25:46
And she really listens to like what I share.
25:51
Not because she thinks it's my voice,
25:53
but because she knows that I really care about customers
25:55
and that I really care about making our product
25:57
as great as it can be,
25:58
and therefore making customers as happy as it can be.
26:01
You know, I feel for people that work in organizations
26:03
where the highest CX person is like a director.
26:05
And that's, this is no shot at a director.
26:07
- No. - That was a director at one point.
26:08
That was a thing.
26:09
It is just really hard if you've got to go through like a COO,
26:15
or you've got to go through a CMO.
26:16
That's usually one of the two people that they report to.
26:19
If you report to a CRO, you're definitely not.
26:23
It's just really hard to get your feedback heard.
26:28
- Yeah, I agree with you.
26:30
I think it's really just like giving CX a seat
26:33
at the table too.
26:34
So it's like, you know,
26:35
and not every organization can like have a CXO or a VP level.
26:39
And like, I completely understand that,
26:41
but I think it's really valuing what comes into the CX team
26:45
to bring it across the table.
26:48
You know, it's like at festivals and like everything
26:52
that I've done in my core of like just,
26:55
not even just festivals, like every organization,
26:57
like evangelizing for the team, advocating for it
27:00
and no matter what level I was,
27:02
I mean, like that's probably why
27:04
I've probably pissed off a lot of people.
27:07
'Cause I'm like, oh, okay, you don't want to listen to me.
27:10
I will go find somebody to listen to me.
27:12
Don't you worry.
27:14
- Yeah.
27:14
- You know, but anyway,
27:16
I think it's like having CX at the table,
27:18
allowing CX to come to the table,
27:20
and not just like being like,
27:22
okay, give me a weekly report.
27:23
Like no, like, and CX also I think is,
27:27
I think it's not just what's happening amongst the tickets
27:31
that are coming into you,
27:33
but I think it's the overall website journey, app journey,
27:36
like checkout journey, like all these other places,
27:40
but I even think even it's even one layer deeper,
27:42
like especially in like products,
27:45
whether it's like food and bev, apparel, all these things,
27:48
investing in consumer insights too.
27:50
- Yeah, yes.
27:51
- 'Cause that's your CX, right?
27:53
- Yeah.
27:54
- Quick question, since we're on this subject,
27:58
how in like in your ways, like what tactics have you
28:02
utilized to not, I don't know if it's like bringing
28:07
customer experience to the table,
28:09
but like advocating for the CX within an organization?
28:14
- Yeah, I think two things that I've tried to do
28:17
pretty consistently over my career.
28:20
One is hire the best people and be okay
28:25
that they might, that most of them
28:27
probably won't stay in customer experience,
28:28
but they'll go work in other departments.
28:30
So that people that actually know how to talk to customers
28:33
and who actually know what customers love
28:35
or don't love about the product are in the organization.
28:39
So, I worked at a company 10 years ago,
28:41
that one where I worked for the most wonderful person,
28:45
we had tons of people in other places.
28:47
I've taken that kind of same philosophy,
28:50
I have this thing where I say I only hire people
28:52
with PhDs, passionate, hungry and driven.
28:55
Like I look for a very specific type of person
28:57
that I know, maybe they'll be able to grow into a CX role,
28:59
but honestly when you hire some of these CX associates,
29:01
there's only so many manager and director roles,
29:04
they're gonna have to go to other places.
29:05
And that is certainly real.
29:07
So that's one.
29:08
The second is trying to communicate
29:14
that the value that we create in the organization
29:18
is not to just shut up and answer emails.
29:21
There are tons of like financial metrics
29:24
you can monitor, post call or post contact LCV increases,
29:29
post contact, repeat purchase rates.
29:32
If you have programmatic things like surprise and delight,
29:34
seeing how that changes the financial profile
29:37
of those customers, try to be honest with yourself
29:41
and look for the places.
29:42
'Cause sometimes you're actually gonna find like,
29:44
hey, I thought this was moving the needle more than it is
29:46
and I love this program, but it doesn't actually move the needle.
29:49
But try to find the things actually to prove
29:52
that it actually does matter.
29:53
And if you find out it's not, then you just gotta keep peeling
29:56
the onion back to figure out like,
29:58
okay, so that stuff you're doing for the customers
30:00
by answering their call and 10 seconds
30:02
or answering their email in one minute,
30:03
actually it doesn't matter.
30:04
You could actually like have it be 10 times as long as that
30:07
'cause they want something else.
30:09
So try to find the things in your processes,
30:11
try to find the things in your service levels,
30:12
try to find the things in your channels
30:15
that actually meaningfully make that customer more valuable.
30:19
- Yeah.
30:20
So you said one metric though, like post,
30:24
it was like post conversation like post contact.
30:26
- Post contact, yeah.
30:28
- Post contact, repeat purchase.
30:30
- Mm-hmm.
30:31
- I don't remember the tool name,
30:33
but Michael from HexCloud is starting to like track this
30:36
for like the actual. - Yeah.
30:38
- But I'm curious of like, what is your like techniques
30:41
or tactics to do that like scrappy without a tool?
30:44
- I mean, you don't need a tool to do it.
30:46
I mean, if they are still, I'd love to see it.
30:47
But you literally just take all the customers
30:49
who have ever contacted you and look at the,
30:51
what does she use if you wanna do repeat purchase rate,
30:54
repeat purchase rate of people of contact you,
30:56
people of not. - Right.
30:57
- You do it by channel, people have called you,
30:59
people have not, people have texted with you,
31:01
people have not, and then do it by the number of contacts.
31:04
Now you have to also like, there is some,
31:06
I forget the term, but like,
31:10
customers that contact you by their nature
31:13
are probably more engaged.
31:15
So you do have to like some,
31:16
you have to keep that in mind as you go through it.
31:18
But you look at customers that have contacted you one,
31:19
two, 10 times. - Yeah.
31:21
- And see their journey.
31:22
Because one of the predominant things
31:24
in customer experience is like,
31:26
how do I get these people to stop calling or stop emailing us?
31:29
That's what like someone who doesn't know anything about it
31:31
will say, well, what if you found out
31:34
that actually every customer who contacts you
31:36
is actually more valuable?
31:37
And after they contact you,
31:39
so if you have a LTV trajectory of $100, $200, $300
31:43
of a non-contacted customer,
31:45
but then you look at a customer who has contacted you
31:47
and their LTV trajectory is $1,300, $600.
31:51
Well, wouldn't you want every one of those people
31:52
to start contacting you? - Yeah.
31:54
- Because the $3 it cost you to pay for them to contact you?
31:58
- Yeah. - It's probably worth
31:59
the extra couple hundred dollars of LTV.
32:00
- Yeah. - And I think,
32:02
yeah, there's a tool that can do that, right?
32:05
But you can also just do that pretty,
32:07
I mean, it doesn't work in early stage startups
32:10
where you're like, you know, very on.
32:11
But if you've had a business where it's been around
32:12
for years, you can look at that.
32:14
- Yeah.
32:15
Well, I wanted you to break that down
32:16
because I think that sometimes people are like,
32:18
science. (laughs)
32:20
You know what I'm like, it's not that hard, you know?
32:23
You just gotta put out, yeah, I mean,
32:25
there's probably like, I don't know,
32:27
half dozen different like core metrics
32:28
that I'll look at around that area.
32:31
And yeah, you wanna have some financial,
32:36
you wanna have some revenue tied to,
32:40
like to prove that like,
32:41
customers actually like doing more business
32:46
with your business when they interact with your CXD.
32:47
- Yeah, absolutely.
32:49
Well, I think you also just challenged everything
32:51
that I even talked about,
32:52
like deflecting the amount of tickets.
32:54
- Well, so I'm curious, so I think deflection is obviously
32:58
because of like what's going on in the last like three months
33:01
or six months or whatever, deflection has gotten
33:03
in it because I do think like what you did with a chat bot
33:06
where you made a channel for someone,
33:09
that's not deflection.
33:11
Deflection to me has a negative connotation
33:13
because it's inferring that like,
33:16
oh, this person didn't, they still contacted you.
33:18
That's still a channel.
33:19
Like if your chat bot, your chat bot,
33:20
is still a channel, it's still a contact.
33:23
No, a human didn't have to deal with it,
33:24
but you still paid for that chat bot.
33:26
So it's like you made a paid a dollar for that contact
33:28
versus $3 to a human, but you still paid for it.
33:31
- Yeah, well, I think it was like also a different scenario
33:34
with the chat bot.
33:35
- Yeah, you were doing it 'cause you don't have people
33:37
being like, hey, bro.
33:39
- Or I love Mr. Beast, 5,000 times a day.
33:43
- Time to day.
33:43
- Yeah, yeah.
33:44
- But I mean, that's why like we had to build it
33:47
into a channel, but which was a fun channel.
33:49
And that's also just knowing the audience.
33:51
Again, going back to consumer insights, right?
33:55
And understanding the customers,
33:56
like we knew that customer.
33:59
And so built something based off of that customer.
34:01
If you take that same theory of like doing a chat bot,
34:05
you can still make your chat bot worthwhile, right?
34:07
But it's like make it educational.
34:09
The same thing you do in like retention and life cycle, right?
34:12
Like you said all these emails to be like,
34:14
hey, here's my candy or here's why you want these scrubs, right?
34:19
Do that same thing when the person's on your website
34:23
and looking for the information.
34:25
There's like nothing wrong with that.
34:26
- Yeah, I'm so interested to see like where
34:29
this whole thing goes because there's so many companies
34:33
with seemingly chat bot products now.
34:36
And they all seemingly tout the same value propositions.
34:41
- They're all layer onto like.
34:43
- And I'm not sure how many times you got the article
34:47
or the press release from, what was that payment company
34:51
that like deflected?
34:52
- Oh, Clara.
34:53
- Clara, I don't know how many times you got that sent to you,
34:54
but I got that quite a few times.
34:57
And I'm just like, you know, I've a pretty,
35:00
I think I have a pretty informed opinion on this kind of stuff.
35:03
But it's just so interesting.
35:04
I mean, like no one, the thing I'm always like,
35:06
do you like interacting with your app bots?
35:08
And everyone's like, no.
35:08
And I'm like, so you want to put this in front of customers.
35:11
Why? - Yeah.
35:13
- It's just interesting how, you know,
35:15
people in a business suddenly, you know, to go,
35:18
I guess I'll contradict myself, to go counter to what I said,
35:21
how quickly people will ignore their own personal preferences.
35:25
And also just like what most mass surveys say
35:28
that most customers do not like, you know,
35:30
Gartner has tons of studies that say like 80, 90%
35:33
of customers do not like interacting with chat bots.
35:35
- Yeah. - Yeah, chat bots.
35:36
- Well, I actually think this is really interesting.
35:39
- Yeah. - Now we're in.
35:41
- We're gonna fight this out.
35:43
- Okay, so I did see the clarinet thing, right?
35:46
And I do agree with you that like a lot of people do not
35:49
like interacting with chat bots.
35:50
But what I think is really interesting is that
35:53
there's a new generation coming onto the market
35:55
where like of purchasers, right?
35:57
And I don't even just mean like Gen Z
35:59
'cause Gen Z now is like,
36:01
they're too close to millennials where we're like--
36:04
- Gen Z's are 30 now. - Yeah, dude.
36:07
I didn't, dude.
36:08
I just didn't math the other day.
36:10
- I was like two, the year 2000 was 24.
36:14
- Oh my God. - There's a guy.
36:15
Okay.
36:17
- My wife and I are like rewatching Sex in the City right now.
36:20
- Oh, good. - Which I know, Gen Z,
36:22
you're just like, what is that?
36:23
And it was like this amazing show that came out in the early,
36:25
late 90s early 2000s.
36:27
- Carrie Bradshaw. - Carrie Bradshaw.
36:29
Fashion icon.
36:30
And we're just like, oh my God.
36:33
This was 'cause, you know, it ended right
36:36
as I was graduating college.
36:37
And I'm just like, oh, I missed this time.
36:39
- Yeah, dude.
36:41
I, with my fiance, Alex,
36:45
we just watched all of the spranos.
36:47
- Oh my gosh.
36:48
- Yeah, we--
36:49
- Oh, so good.
36:50
But same thing though.
36:51
It's like so simple. - It was like
36:52
the 90s early 2000s. - Yeah.
36:53
Razor phones, blackberries.
36:55
- Yeah, yeah. - You know?
36:57
It just, yeah.
36:58
So, okay, so going back to the thought though.
37:00
So, going back to the clarinet thing,
37:02
yeah, so I do agree.
37:05
Like, I do agree with you that I think that like,
37:07
a lot of people do not want to interact with
37:09
but I think what's so interesting though,
37:12
is that I see like this Gen Z and this Gen Alpha,
37:15
they do like interacting with them.
37:17
Not all Gen Z, I mean younger Gen Z, right?
37:20
And Gen Alpha because going back to like,
37:22
my Feastables theory of like those individuals,
37:26
like the amount of interactions that this chatbot had
37:29
opposed to email and elsewhere was so insane.
37:34
Like, I mean, the chatbot alone would have anywhere
37:37
from like 30,000 to 90,000 interactions in like a week.
37:41
- And when you built that, that wasn't Gen AI, right?
37:44
Like you guys, you guys scripted most of that, right?
37:46
- It's all in tempeh, yeah.
37:48
Yeah, so, which is also interesting, right?
37:50
Like about, you know, the--
37:52
- I mean, I think this is one of the coolest things
37:55
you ever built, like to build out that many workflows
37:58
for that many comments and that many reactions,
38:01
like it's incredible.
38:02
- Dude, so insane.
38:03
Well now I consult with people to tell them
38:05
how to do these things.
38:08
But, okay, so, okay, going back to that though,
38:10
so like, yeah, it's like all intent base
38:12
is not generative AI, right?
38:14
Which I think will be, and then going to specifically
38:17
the clarinet article, I personally think that like,
38:21
as the generations continue and we evolve
38:24
and we involve all these technologies,
38:26
I actually think that it's an opportunity
38:28
to create more jobs for CX departments though,
38:32
that like people are no longer,
38:33
can just not just be ticket takers,
38:35
but also like have a hand in retention,
38:37
have a hand in other places.
38:39
That's why I'm like, I do like it,
38:42
but I also think there's a fine line
38:44
when your bot's out there hallucinating
38:47
in your social comments, you really need to back away
38:51
and QA that bitch, okay?
38:53
- Well, I mean, you guys, I'm sure you can speak
38:56
to this way more than I can, but like,
38:57
if you've ever set up a bot, the volume of work
39:01
that it takes to set it up and then daily maintain it.
39:05
- I mean, it's just like, it's just like, you know,
39:07
having a team of people, like they need to be told what to do,
39:10
the bot needs to be told what to do.
39:11
Unless you're like free range, like just gen A,
39:14
like whatever it's wants to reply,
39:16
it's like most of the AI is on the inbound side,
39:20
meaning it can read the customer's inquiry
39:23
and figure out its intent,
39:25
you still need to tell it what to do back.
39:27
And in, I don't think you just want to let it
39:29
say whatever you want.
39:30
- Yeah.
39:31
- So, you know, that is going to take a lot of work,
39:33
it's going to take people managing it.
39:35
- Absolutely.
39:36
And I think that's also an opportunity for jobs too.
39:38
- Yeah.
39:39
- Right?
39:40
'Cause I've implemented a lot of different bots, my dude,
39:43
and like--
39:44
- It's programming.
39:45
Like it's workflows, it's, you know, triggers,
39:48
it's automations.
39:50
- You have low expectations.
39:51
- Yeah.
39:52
- Okay.
39:53
'Cause like what you see in your demo,
39:54
I guarantee it takes a good four to six months
39:58
to get there, you know?
40:00
- 'Cause it's got to, I mean, yeah, it takes a long time.
40:02
- Okay.
40:04
So, I've talked about my favorite initiative
40:06
and strategy that I've implemented,
40:08
which is these silly little bots.
40:10
- Yeah.
40:11
- What is looking back on your career,
40:13
like not just figs, like other companies that you worked for
40:16
'cause we haven't even gone on that journey.
40:18
What is your single most favorite initiative
40:22
that you've ever implemented?
40:24
That's a hard one.
40:26
- Yeah, it is.
40:28
You know, it wasn't necessarily a single initiative,
40:32
but I would say the thing that I am the most proud of
40:37
or the thing that brings me the most joy
40:39
is kind of what I was talking about earlier
40:40
is like the hiring philosophy that I was able to solidify
40:44
a good 10 years ago,
40:45
where I really figured out what type of person I wanna have
40:49
joined the team, which would be an asset to the whole company.
40:52
And to see those people, I mean, at this point in my,
40:56
I'm an old man, so it is very long standing career.
41:00
The people that I had an opportunity to hire 10 years ago,
41:05
11, 12 years ago, and to see what they are doing now
41:09
is incredible.
41:10
And I knew some of them.
41:11
Like, I can tell you, I mean, I don't wanna put these people,
41:15
'cause I don't know if they listen to it,
41:17
but like there were people named Anya and just like,
41:20
so many people that I'm like,
41:24
this person's gonna be really good.
41:25
Like, you know, I got the chance to hire them
41:27
when they were 22, 23 years old
41:28
and they were gonna be really, really good.
41:30
And that makes me more proud than anything.
41:33
And to see some of them now,
41:34
they're like leaders of companies,
41:35
they have their own consulting firms,
41:37
they are leading CX at organizations across the US.
41:42
That's, it's really rewarding.
41:44
And I'm still like really, I know, not all of them,
41:46
but some of them really good friends with some of them.
41:48
And to hear about their successes is just like super rewarding.
41:52
- Yeah, I think despite all like the nitty gritty
41:56
and the tactics and the strategies, right?
41:58
I think the most rewarding thing about being a CX leader
42:01
is actually leading people.
42:02
- The people stuff.
42:03
- Yeah.
42:04
- It's also the most heartbreaking because I can tell you,
42:07
you know, there's not a single person that ever resigned to me
42:12
that, and it was like,
42:15
it's always for like so many different reasons,
42:16
but it's heartbreaking.
42:17
It's like, you care so much about these people,
42:19
you see so much potential in them.
42:21
And it's just not for everyone, right?
42:22
Like, I kind of accept that like,
42:24
just because I think, like, you know, I'm an not liar,
42:27
I was able to turn a CX agent role into like,
42:30
you know, a pretty good career.
42:31
I know everyone's not going to be able to do that.
42:34
But yeah, you don't, you know, I remember all of them.
42:38
- Yeah, I remember all of mine too.
42:42
I also, I remember a few people where I've hired them
42:47
for one place, and then I carried it on to somewhere else.
42:51
- That's the best.
42:53
- And then I've cut, they've come with me,
42:54
but then not all fucking fit.
42:56
- Really? Oh yeah, 'cause the organization
42:58
just wasn't right at that place.
42:59
- Yeah, and like, and I think that's something
43:00
I learned in my leadership though, you know,
43:03
is like what you were saying, right?
43:05
Like you have your like three core, right?
43:08
I think like, over time I also learned
43:11
like my three core like qualities,
43:12
and one of them being flexibility and adaptability,
43:15
which is the same.
43:16
- I will say, I don't have many regrets in my life.
43:18
One of my regrets is I've had an opportunity
43:22
to work with someone that I really respect
43:26
and really cared about and really thought the world of
43:29
and didn't take it, and that's still like somewhat
43:31
like sits in the back man, I'm like, I should have done that.
43:33
So, you know, even if those people didn't work out,
43:38
you know, I think you taking them
43:40
and showing them a different experience is still like,
43:42
you know, it's still really valuable and really rewarding.
43:45
- For sure, there's like one individual,
43:46
I'm not gonna put this person on blast, but at all.
43:48
Like it didn't work out at like the second organization,
43:51
but they have found great success
43:54
where I like got them placed for the third,
43:57
and like they're crushing it now, right?
43:59
It was just like a different environment for them, right?
44:01
- What's also really cool is, and I remember this when I left,
44:03
I left a role a couple of years ago,
44:06
and I had the best management team,
44:08
like the team that reported to me is just like,
44:10
there's some of the most wonderful people,
44:12
and I was like, I would take all of them with me if I could,
44:14
and what I started to realize was like, as time went on,
44:17
I was like, they're all gonna outgrow me.
44:20
Like they're all gonna be me.
44:22
And like now, yeah, now this is like years past,
44:25
like they can all, I don't know if they can get my exact role,
44:27
hopefully not, but they can all go get a really high level role,
44:31
like I don't even report to me, and it's sad,
44:34
but it's also like, it's just super impressive that like,
44:38
they're all just like so, so great.
44:41
- Yeah, and rewarding though, sad, but rewarding, right?
44:44
Like I think that's the biggest thing just in leadership
44:47
is like leadership isn't just about you
44:49
like leading the individuals, it's allowing for people
44:52
to like upscale themselves above you, right?
44:55
And like also delegating things to them,
44:57
so they can upscale above you, right?
45:00
Like the teams that I lead, like,
45:03
I'll just use the Feastables example, right?
45:05
Like when I left Feastables, my position wasn't replaced,
45:10
but the gal that I put in as the like CX lead,
45:14
like in my tenure there is now running the show,
45:18
and she's like crushing it, and I like talk to her all the time,
45:21
and she's just like, she still asks me for help
45:25
on like some things are like opinions, right?
45:27
And she's like crushing it though, that like after this,
45:31
like she'll go and do something really amazing,
45:33
because during my time there, like I might've been
45:37
the VP of CX, right, but I like, I was like in the trenches
45:41
showing people how to do the things
45:43
to become a strategic thinker, and I think that's important.
45:46
- I have the exact same situation, I will name here.
45:49
When I was at Inspire, I left and the,
45:51
yeah, she's, I mean, I'll just say she was the best people
45:56
I've ever worked with in my life.
45:57
Emily is just like one of the smartest, kindest,
46:00
most emotionally intelligent people you meet,
46:02
and I keep in touch with her here and there,
46:04
but like I would hear some of the stuff that she put in,
46:06
and I was there for four years,
46:07
so I think I put in a decent amount of stuff,
46:09
but some of the stuff she put in place,
46:11
I was like, yeah, that was the good idea,
46:12
she was right, I'm like, she's just running this better than me.
46:15
- Yeah. - She's better than me.
46:16
- Yeah.
46:17
- So, and it's like, yeah, it's like,
46:20
it's just so rewarding 'cause you're like, you know,
46:23
especially when you were at a place for a long time,
46:25
that company, I was like, I was the first CX person
46:27
there, I was employee 12, I put almost everything in place,
46:31
I hired every single person on that team,
46:34
so I was like pretty concerned out of the trailer,
46:38
but like how it'd be left, but I knew Emily would do,
46:41
and she did better than I thought.
46:43
- Yeah, oh God, it's not the fucking best, though.
46:45
- She's the best.
46:46
- When like-- - If you're listening,
46:47
Emily, you're the best.
46:48
- You're the best, so shout out to Emily,
46:50
I hope I get to meet you.
46:52
Okay, one last question before we hit the road,
46:55
what is the best thing about working in customer experience?
46:58
I know we named a lot, but--
47:00
- The people, right? - Yeah.
47:02
- Isn't it?
47:03
I think it's the, yeah, I mean, it's like,
47:04
they're the, I think just if you work in customer experience
47:07
work, you're probably like outgoing,
47:10
you're not gonna find many introverts.
47:12
- You're, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
47:14
(laughing)
47:15
Yeah, most of us are like,
47:16
will you waste all our extravertedness, add jobs,
47:18
and then we go home and are like,
47:19
just let me read my book.
47:21
But like super empathetic, super kind,
47:25
great communicators.
47:26
Yeah, I think they're just like good, like good people.
47:30
- Yeah, good people, for sure.
47:32
- Yeah.
47:33
- Dude, we've hit the end of the road.
47:35
I know, is that crazy?
47:37
- That blows by.
47:38
- I know, I feel like we don't need a whole other house.
47:40
I'll come back to Philly.
47:41
- Yes.
47:42
- It's a football season.
47:43
- Yes, go birds.
47:44
(laughing)
47:44
Go birds.
47:45
- We'll tell the homies where they can find you.
47:48
- Yeah, all the normal places I'm on LinkedIn,
47:51
Michael J. Bear, I'm on Twitter, Michael J. Bear.
47:54
You know, if you wanna see pictures of my kid in my house,
47:58
I'm on Instagram, Michael J. Bear, so all the above.
48:01
- We'll link his LinkedIn.
48:03
- Yeah.
48:04
- And some of the socials, okay.
48:06
In the show notes.
48:09
And just as a reminder, if you love tuning in,
48:13
please subscribe to our weekly newsletter, The Juice.
48:17
I will talk to y'all next week.
48:20
(upbeat music)
48:23
- Hey, wow, you made it to the end of the episode.
48:26
That means that you like me and I like you,
48:28
which also means you should subscribe to this show.
48:31
(upbeat music)
48:34
(upbeat music)
48:36
(water splashing)
48:40
(upbeat music)
48:43
(upbeat music)
48:45
(upbeat music)
48:48
[ Silence ]