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Jess Cervelon 43 min

From Disney to HopSkipDrive: Why Empathy is the Heart of Every CX


Jess is joined by friend and mentor Michelle McCombs, Vice President of Trust and Experience at HopSkipDrive.



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.

0:10

We're talking acquisition, awareness,

0:13

making that purchase, retaining that customer,

0:16

bringing them back around, and everything in between.

0:19

This is gonna be all about delivering dope brand experiences

0:23

and talking to some really amazing people

0:26

who are in the customer experience space,

0:27

the marketing space, and everything in between.

0:30

(upbeat music)

0:32

Hey, welcome back to another episode of The Juice.

0:40

With me, Jess, your host, listen, my friends.

0:44

I know I gotta say this every week,

0:46

but this week, I'm actually really serious.

0:48

I'm serious every week too.

0:50

My guest this week is Michelle McCombs,

0:53

and she is the VP of Trust and Experience

0:58

at HopSkip Drive.

0:59

Here's the thing, fun fact.

1:02

Michelle and I have known each other for,

1:05

I don't even know.

1:06

- Yeah, I was thinking about that probably three, five years.

1:11

No, it can't be three years.

1:12

It's gotta be like five years.

1:13

- It's gotta be five years, yeah.

1:14

- So Michelle and I met,

1:17

actually it was kind of in the height of the pandemic

1:20

when people really went online

1:22

and I was like seeking out mentors

1:24

to really help me excel my career in CX.

1:27

And I forget how Michelle and I met in particular,

1:31

but we started chatting and vibing and being homies,

1:35

and at the time I was actually living in DC.

1:37

- That's right.

1:38

- Michelle is in LA, I'm currently in LA right now,

1:40

but I don't live here.

1:41

Anyway, and so this is why I'm excited.

1:43

This is why I'm giving you this backstory,

1:44

because Michelle was actually one of my first mentors.

1:48

So it is fucking awesome to interview Michelle.

1:52

And on that note, Michelle,

1:54

why don't you tell the crowd who you be, girl?

1:58

- I love it.

1:58

- Yeah, Michelle McCombs,

2:00

I am Vice President of Safety and Experience at Hobscave Drive.

2:04

And I have been in the CX World, gosh,

2:07

looks like 15 plus years.

2:11

You know, working both at small startups,

2:15

growing with them and also got my base at Disney and Nestle.

2:20

And so I have the experience of working with large companies

2:22

and how they do that well,

2:23

and kind of translating that

2:25

to help small companies grow.

2:27

And it's been a wild ride.

2:29

- I know, that is so crazy.

2:31

Why don't you tell the audience who Hobscave Drive is?

2:34

'Cause I think it's really important to talk about

2:37

your company and what your company serves.

2:40

- Yeah, so Hobscave Drive is a technology company

2:43

that solves the complex transportation challenges,

2:46

where there's a high-level need for safety, equity and care.

2:49

So we kind of do this two ways.

2:50

One, with a marketplace where we help arrange transportation

2:55

for kids, older adults,

2:56

anyone that needs a little extra support

2:59

with our highly vetted care driver's own wheels.

3:02

We really emphasize that they're caregivers,

3:05

driving these people around.

3:07

And then we also have a software and advisory services

3:11

to really help solve big transportation problems

3:14

at schools, at school districts,

3:16

or having around the country.

3:18

If you're paying attention to the news,

3:19

there's a lot about bus driver shortages

3:21

and how to make things more green and transportation.

3:24

And we're helping really build that and use that

3:27

and be another lever for schools to use,

3:29

especially when they're having to cut costs

3:31

and get smart with how they're spending their money.

3:33

- Wow, that's amazing.

3:35

I think that the mission of your company is really awesome.

3:39

You know, I was actually just thinking to myself,

3:41

like, are your drivers in California too?

3:45

Like all over the US? - Yeah, we are.

3:47

- Okay.

3:47

- Yeah, we are in 13 states in Washington DC

3:50

with lots of growth and plan coming.

3:53

You know, we obviously want to get across the country.

3:55

The shortage, the problems,

3:56

the transportation solutions are everywhere.

3:58

And we're working on really building that out.

4:00

So home base is LA.

4:02

You know, the three moms that founded our company

4:05

are all here solving their own transportation solutions.

4:08

So we know that that's just,

4:10

that happened here because it happens everywhere.

4:12

- Yeah, that's amazing.

4:14

I actually will,

4:15

I want to look into Hub Skip Drive for my dad in Oakland.

4:19

- Yeah, we have a, it's a smaller contingency

4:22

of older adults, but it's so great,

4:23

especially the caregiving aspect that we're providing.

4:26

- Absolutely.

4:27

- You know, we have seniors that, you know,

4:29

they just, these are drivers that'll hop out

4:30

and walk them up to their door.

4:32

And you know what, we have in Denver,

4:34

I remember a story of a driver.

4:35

It was icy.

4:36

And so he came back with a shovel

4:38

and just scraped her walk so she could go on her walk.

4:41

And it's just like, that's the type of drivers

4:43

that we have on our platform.

4:44

And it just, it just makes it,

4:46

so you feel so much more comfortable using it

4:48

for people that need a little extra help.

4:50

- Yeah, I mean, talk about surprise and delight

4:52

and customer experience, right?

4:53

It's like the next echelon for that, right?

4:56

- Yes, yes.

4:56

- And it's fun for us because it's like,

4:59

we built the brand, but we rely on the drivers to do that.

5:04

- To deliver it, yeah.

5:05

And so how do we work with the driver community

5:08

and help them remember that and reinforce it

5:11

and celebrate it with them?

5:12

And it's a fun challenge to do.

5:14

- Yeah, that's amazing.

5:16

Well, before we get into like the nitty gritty of like,

5:19

you know, CX for you and like what that means.

5:22

And 'cause I can't wait to honestly share your story about it.

5:25

I learned so much from you,

5:27

so I wanna share this with everybody else,

5:29

but I really wanna talk about your background.

5:30

- Yeah. - Actually.

5:32

So you've been with Hop skip drive

5:33

for over seven years now?

5:34

- Yes, well, almost seven years.

5:36

- Almost seven years.

5:37

I think that that's really amazing,

5:39

especially in the startup world.

5:41

You know, it's like, like let's dive into that

5:43

for just one second.

5:44

Like I think in the startup world,

5:46

like a lot of people don't stay in the same company

5:48

for a long period of time.

5:49

Like what has made you stay at Hop skip drive?

5:53

- Yeah, yeah, yeah.

5:55

I should kind of surprise me every day that I'm still there

5:59

'cause I am a person that likes to jump and try new things.

6:02

And I always say, what gets me looking for my next job

6:05

is being bored and being like,

6:07

oh, this is what we've done.

6:08

I've solved this.

6:09

It's the routine.

6:10

Like that's great for some people.

6:11

It's just not great for me.

6:12

And I think that's part of why I say to Hop skip drive

6:16

is we went from, when I started,

6:19

we were just in California

6:21

and we're talking about expanding to Colorado,

6:23

which is our second market.

6:25

And with that, I've gotten to try different things.

6:29

I think at one point or another,

6:31

like a lot of the operational and customer facing functions

6:35

have been under me and popped in and out and stuff like that.

6:38

And I think that's part of why I love Hop skip drive

6:40

is we're willing to try it.

6:41

If it works, great, let's keep going.

6:43

If it doesn't, let's move on.

6:44

We've learned a great lesson.

6:46

And then the mission is really fun

6:48

because even with customer service,

6:51

customer facing roles, safety,

6:54

you hear a lot of the bad,

6:56

but we get to hear a lot of the good.

6:57

And it really is, like the driver

6:59

that shovel the sidewalk or just the engagement

7:02

that we see with the community

7:04

or the lives we can make,

7:06

a lot of the students we help our experiencing homelessness.

7:09

They're the foster system.

7:11

They have special needs.

7:13

And getting to hear like adding some normalcy to their life

7:16

and those type of stories really kind of keeps you

7:18

from burning out over all of the bad that can happen.

7:22

- Yeah.

7:23

Well, it's like really putting the empathy

7:25

and customer experience.

7:26

And I think, and we'll get more into this,

7:30

but I think that you guys also have

7:31

a very unique customer experience

7:33

because at the height of it all is trust and safety,

7:37

which is also a very big topic for, you know,

7:40

a lot of customer experience teams,

7:43

especially when you're dealing with a lot of customer data.

7:46

- Yes.

7:47

- And like, and I mean, you're dealing with like

7:49

very important data. - Very sensitive data.

7:50

- Very sensitive data.

7:52

And I think, and I actually think

7:53

that those customer experiences are very different.

7:56

'Cause I, I wanna say no, this was,

8:00

I joined this company after I met you,

8:02

but I joined, so I met you during a time

8:05

when I worked at a cybersecurity company.

8:06

- That's right, yes.

8:07

- Obviously like a lot of trust and safety there, right?

8:10

But then I went to HealthTech.

8:11

And so like in the HealthTech company,

8:15

HIPAA, like everything else, right?

8:17

So my point is though, is like, I can only imagine.

8:21

Like, I can only imagine you're dealing with like children.

8:23

- Yes.

8:24

- And like elders. - Yes.

8:25

- So I definitely wanna dive into that at some point.

8:28

But, you know, continuing on the path of like background,

8:32

I'd love to hear how like the company has changed

8:34

since you've joined.

8:35

- Yeah.

8:37

I mean, first obviously the size, I came in,

8:40

I think we were made, I would say we're definitely under 50,

8:43

maybe even under 30.

8:44

Now we're kind of at the 250 plus.

8:49

And you know, markets is there,

8:51

but what's super interesting and has been fun

8:55

and part of why it's never boring is when we started,

8:57

like I said, we're founded by three moms

8:59

looking to solve their own problem.

9:01

And so we were focused on the parents

9:04

and being very direct to consumer, right?

9:06

A parent books are right for their own kiddo.

9:08

And then, you know, a caregiver feels that right.

9:10

And it's after school practice, it's this and that.

9:13

And then we started learning about all the needs

9:16

for students that, you know, like I said,

9:17

students experiencing homelessness,

9:19

students in the foster program.

9:20

There's a lot of government funding

9:21

to make sure those kiddos stay at their school of origin,

9:24

which is super important for them, right?

9:25

So if you're moving around a lot,

9:27

at least you're out at the same school,

9:28

you have the same friends.

9:29

- Same consistency.

9:30

- Yeah, you're not falling behind.

9:31

And there's just, there hasn't been great ways

9:33

to do that well.

9:35

You know, schools, they either have to try to send out buses,

9:38

but it's really hard to send a bus for one kiddo,

9:41

or they give them a Metro Pass,

9:43

but you know, here in Los Angeles, especially like--

9:45

- Big cities, are you kidding me?

9:47

- An hour away, yeah.

9:48

And so it's just, it doesn't make sense.

9:50

And so a lot of kiddos were missing out on the chance

9:52

to have that normalcy because of it.

9:53

And so we got to, you know, being part of filling that gap

9:57

really helped us see that this is a huge problem.

9:59

And we wanted to be part of the solution.

10:01

And that's, so we made a really hard pivot

10:03

from really focused on the parents

10:05

booking rides for their own kids,

10:08

to what can we do to support the student transportation

10:11

industry and continue to support it and evolve with it

10:15

and help them, you know, like I said at the top, right?

10:18

Build better solutions and more efficient solutions

10:20

and be part of that helping out all the students

10:23

across the country.

10:24

- Yeah, absolutely.

10:25

Well, you know, transitioning to this, like,

10:29

and talking about like the transportation industry,

10:31

like what does that customer experience look like?

10:35

- Yeah, it's a fun one because, you know,

10:40

we have a lot of customers.

10:42

So we have our care driver community, right?

10:44

They're independent contractors,

10:46

they're choosing every day if they're gonna do

10:47

these rides or not.

10:48

And so we have to make sure we're focused on that experience.

10:52

We have the kiddos in the car.

10:54

We have their parents or caregivers, right?

10:56

Guardians, grandmas, aunts, uncles,

10:58

whomever may be taking care of them,

11:01

keeping their eyes on them.

11:02

And then we have our school clients.

11:04

And so, you know, usually we're working

11:06

with the transportation department

11:07

or a homeless liaison or something like that,

11:11

who, this is one of a million things that they're doing.

11:13

So how do we make it really easy for them to use us

11:18

and help us be part of that solution and solve

11:20

and help those kiddos?

11:21

And so we get lots of feedback

11:23

from a lot of different points about it.

11:25

And there's a lot of involved parties

11:27

to make sure that we're thinking about

11:29

and supporting well with all very unique needs.

11:32

- Yeah.

11:33

- And it's a lot.

11:34

- It's a lot.

11:34

And it gets even more like, you know, like,

11:36

oh, it's a school district, but a school district,

11:38

like, you know, we can have,

11:39

we're helping out students with special needs.

11:41

So we're working with the special needs department.

11:43

And then we have students experiencing homelessness

11:45

and that's their homeless liaison.

11:46

And then we have kiddos in the foster program.

11:48

And that's a different person.

11:50

And so it's like, it's one customer, right?

11:53

The one school district is our customer,

11:54

but four different people with four different

11:56

big different needs.

11:57

And those kiddos have different needs too.

12:01

And what they need and what they need

12:03

Hopskip Drive to do and how that experience is.

12:05

And so it is, it's a lot to think about

12:09

and prioritize and bounce between.

12:11

- Yeah, absolutely.

12:12

How big is your team?

12:13

Like your experience team?

12:15

- My team right now, we are at 63 and growing.

12:18

- Wow, yes.

12:20

- What is the structure of that?

12:22

- So I have kind of four pillars

12:26

of kind of the safety and ride experience.

12:30

So we have my Safe Ride Support team.

12:32

They are phenomenal.

12:33

They're kind of, I liken them to like an ER nurse.

12:37

They are dealing with the rides in progress.

12:39

So they are trying to just solve it

12:41

and go to the next thing, right?

12:42

They get all of this inbound, inbound urgent stuff.

12:46

And so they're just kind of like,

12:48

you know, good, okay, next.

12:50

And then they're just going and churning.

12:53

Then I have my in ride experience crew.

12:56

They're working on operational excellence.

12:57

What can we do to continue to deliver on our promise

13:01

of a great experience for all of our users on the platform?

13:04

What is the root cause of some of these problems, right?

13:07

So if there's a problem about the ride,

13:10

like a great example is we have an option

13:13

where parents can put parents or school,

13:17

can put in notes about the rider.

13:18

Like, hey, FYI, you know,

13:20

Michelle doesn't like loud music when she gets in the car

13:23

and it's like that, to how to make it successful.

13:24

And what we hear sometimes frustration from the schools

13:27

is why don't these drivers follow these notes?

13:29

But then we hear frustration from the drivers of why,

13:32

why are these notes so confusing?

13:34

They give me contrary information.

13:35

And so how do we get to the bottom?

13:38

The bottom is everyone wants this kid

13:40

or to have a good ride.

13:40

So what do we need to do?

13:41

How do we set up both sides for success?

13:43

How do we make sure that they know

13:46

what they should put in these notes

13:47

and what's important about it

13:48

and how do drivers know when to follow them

13:50

and stuff like that?

13:51

And so it is, that's kind of what that in-ride team is doing.

13:54

- Wow.

13:55

- And then I have my trust and safety team

13:57

dedicated to kind of the really the harder escalations

14:01

that happen, right?

14:02

There's vehicles on the roads every day

14:07

with different people having different experiences.

14:09

And so there's personality mismatches,

14:12

there's flat tires, there's just lots of different things

14:15

that they deal with and making sure

14:17

we have a great quality driver on our platform.

14:19

- Wow, that's crazy.

14:21

- So much.

14:22

- It's crazy because I remember meeting you

14:24

and your team wasn't that big.

14:25

- No, no.

14:26

- So that's a lot of growth, my friend.

14:27

- It's a lot of growth.

14:28

- That's pretty amazing.

14:29

- It's been pretty consistently too exiting every year.

14:33

So it's really exciting, but it's a lot.

14:36

- Well, I mean, this is actually a really good transition

14:38

because I actually really want to ask you questions

14:41

about kind of like what CX leaders

14:44

like should be looking at and stuff.

14:46

And so I would love to know from your CX leadership perspective,

14:51

like what are the metrics that you utilize

14:55

to ensure that your team is very successful?

14:58

- Yeah, I get a lot of different data points

15:03

and I like to look at a lot of different things.

15:07

I think one of the most important things

15:10

for especially when I say fried support saying

15:11

that we look at is what percentage of calls

15:14

are we answering in two minutes?

15:15

We kind of set the two minutes as like,

15:17

how long is it okay to say like,

15:20

this is a reasonable like two minutes waiting

15:22

to talk to someone about an urgent thing.

15:24

What percentage of the team is doing?

15:26

Like how many calls are heading that, right?

15:27

It's like, this is a team that they have to,

15:31

like sometimes the call is,

15:32

hey, I just want to, my app's not working.

15:34

Can you tell me the driver's on my way?

15:35

Yeah, the driver's there.

15:37

They're on their way, they'll be there in five minutes.

15:38

Great, bye, right, done.

15:40

Or there's a situation where a driver calls

15:43

and is like, hey, this kiddo is having a meltdown in the car

15:47

and they're hitting me and I need to pull over.

15:50

What do I do?

15:51

And so it's really hard to hold the team to like a handle time

15:54

because you want them doing 30 seconds with that,

15:57

one person and 10 minutes with the next person.

16:00

And how do you do that?

16:01

And so we've been really focused on

16:03

what are the service levels we look at handle time,

16:05

we look at average wait times like that.

16:09

But we really are focused on

16:11

and really hold the team accountable

16:12

for how fast are we getting to the calls?

16:15

How are we helping them?

16:17

We do, we call it average talk percentage.

16:19

So what percent of your time are you actively talking

16:22

to a customer or available to talk to a customer?

16:25

To, you know, like if you are,

16:28

if you're doing that, if that's really high,

16:30

then that's what we expect of you in your role.

16:32

And then we do satisfaction surveys.

16:34

Yeah.

16:36

As you do.

16:37

Yes, as you do, right?

16:39

But it's great because we use a system

16:43

that I think does a really good job really highlighting.

16:45

Like tell me about the specialist,

16:47

that's what we call our team specialist.

16:48

Tell us about the specialist and not necessarily

16:50

the situation, which I know is a lot of the big feelings

16:53

about satisfaction surveys is if you have to say no,

16:57

that they're gonna give me a no,

16:58

they're gonna give me a one and it's yeah.

17:00

I mean, you see that a lot,

17:02

like you definitely see that a lot,

17:03

like especially in like actually e-commerce, right?

17:06

Yes.

17:07

But e-commerce versus B2B is like kind of different, right?

17:11

So in B2B or like B2C, right?

17:15

'Cause it's kind of this mix, right?

17:17

It's like you have features and you do the things

17:19

and you have your end users, right?

17:23

So a no is kind of a lot different

17:26

than like an immediate no, right?

17:28

Exactly.

17:29

And then like an e-commerce where you're like,

17:30

no on a refund, of course you're gonna be like,

17:32

I'm pissed, right?

17:34

One, yeah, one stop.

17:35

And because then you're actually dealing with like

17:37

actual consumer behavior rather than just like usage behavior.

17:41

Yes, exactly.

17:43

So it's like metrics are like,

17:44

but I think that the metrics do intertwine, right?

17:48

Like satisfaction does intertwine on the same

17:50

on like whichever side you're on.

17:52

But I think that a lot of things are just very different.

17:56

Yeah, and it's like, I always emphasize to my team,

17:58

they're great, they're always like,

18:00

I just can't get to 100%.

18:01

And I was like, I don't want you to get to 100%.

18:03

That makes me think you're probably like just,

18:06

I don't know, giving away money

18:07

or doing things that you shouldn't, right?

18:09

And so it's like, that's why we do 90% is our goal

18:11

in our team.

18:12

It's like, that's why we do 90%.

18:14

And we understand that like,

18:15

even if you are perfect on every call,

18:17

like it is subjective.

18:19

And so how do we balance that?

18:20

But we're always talking about like,

18:21

how do we balance the efficiency and the quality

18:23

and make sure we're tracking both equally.

18:25

Yeah, I think that's also a really good call out too,

18:28

because like even for me being a CX leader,

18:31

15 plus years as well,

18:32

like I have only strived for 96% and above.

18:37

But I think that that's actually a really good call

18:39

that 90% is like better, right?

18:42

Like 90% is better because that 10% difference

18:46

isn't gonna make or break anything.

18:48

Like let's be fucking real.

18:50

You can very quickly find out if someone is like,

18:53

their scores are low because they're struggling

18:55

on the phone and they need soft skill work

18:58

or if it's just, you know what I mean?

19:00

Like it's like, you can, those people are,

19:02

they show themselves in other ways too.

19:04

Yeah.

19:05

Yeah, absolutely.

19:06

Absolutely.

19:07

And again, sorry, last comment.

19:09

But like also I don't think your CSAT survey

19:12

should be indole-beal.

19:14

Yes.

19:14

You gotta look at the whole picture of it, right?

19:17

Yeah.

19:17

But I see so many people as just being like,

19:19

oh, I love a CSAT.

19:20

It's like, this is my only metric.

19:21

I'm like my dudes.

19:22

No, no, no.

19:23

My dudes.

19:25

Like you gotta look at the whole picture of it, right?

19:28

Yeah, because it's like the one,

19:29

and maybe like a long whole time comes into a CSAT.

19:32

Maybe this or that happens, you know,

19:35

then maybe you do get a lower CSAT

19:37

if you take 20 emails to respond.

19:40

Right.

19:41

But for the most part, you're not, right?

19:44

And so there's, it's important.

19:46

It's a good measure, but it's not.

19:48

And you know, especially for my team,

19:49

and you know, like I said, fast pace,

19:52

like a perfect CSAT probably means really, really low.

19:57

Come on.

19:58

And I need them to do both.

19:59

Apps to fucking loot, ladies.

20:02

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20:03

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20:04

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20:07

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21:03

- Okay, so really interesting about metrics,

21:07

'cause I do understand that,

21:09

and I love the philosophy of it.

21:11

Let's talk about retention though.

21:13

How does retention work at Hop skip drive?

21:16

- Yeah, yeah, it's again,

21:17

where we kind of look at different angles

21:20

with all the different community members we have, right?

21:23

Like, care driver retention is monitored and cared about.

21:27

- Yes.

21:28

- By one team and rider retention, right?

21:31

It's an interesting one to play with,

21:33

because it's, did we lose the rider

21:35

because of a bad experience?

21:36

Or did we lose the rider because they've moved schools?

21:39

- Yeah.

21:39

- Or whatever it might be.

21:42

And then our client retention is really, really strong,

21:44

and that's, you know, very much due to,

21:46

we have a very dedicated account management sales team

21:52

that really makes the client feel heard.

21:55

What's great is like,

21:57

they're transportation people that we work with a lot,

21:59

and so they get that it can't be perfect every single time.

22:03

And what they love about us is that we're striving for it,

22:06

and that we're open and transparent about areas of opportunity.

22:09

So it's like, hey, we know that didn't go well.

22:11

We're not gonna pretend,

22:12

we're gonna tell you it didn't go well,

22:14

and we're gonna tell you what we're gonna do about it.

22:15

And that's really what sets us apart

22:18

from a lot of the other,

22:19

there's not a ton of players in this space,

22:21

but some of the other players in the space

22:22

is just that real, that ownership,

22:25

and that transparency and that relationship

22:27

that we've built with our community.

22:28

- Yeah, that's amazing.

22:30

I mean, yeah, I think it's very community driven.

22:32

Like, absolutely, and I think retention,

22:34

I mean, obviously retention is completely different

22:37

for y'all versus like another P2B company,

22:40

or an e-com company, or any of these things, right?

22:42

Like, there's no like real metrics

22:44

that you can put behind it.

22:45

- Yeah.

22:46

- Other than like, churn rate.

22:47

- Yeah, exactly.

22:48

And it's one of those two, it's like, we talk a lot

22:50

about how like, we need to be so focused on that experience

22:54

because there's only so many school districts.

22:57

And they talk, right?

22:58

And it's like, the microcosm you see of like a promoter,

23:03

detractor, and like, you know, a direct-to-consumer thing

23:06

is amplified significantly when there's, you know,

23:09

6,000 school districts across the country.

23:13

And so, you know, remembering that everything we do,

23:17

they'll tell their friends, good or bad,

23:19

and they rely on us is super important

23:22

for us and our growth.

23:24

It's helped us like, oh, they use you,

23:26

then we know you're great.

23:27

- Yeah.

23:28

- And it's also been like,

23:29

I was talking to my friend, she's worried about this.

23:31

How do we improve on that, you know?

23:32

- Yeah.

23:33

- And so it's really...

23:34

- Yeah, man, I think that word of mouth

23:36

is so interesting for retention.

23:38

You know, just, even in just being in this space, right?

23:44

Of like being a CX leader, but also like being

23:49

really like a lot of different relationships

23:51

with like partners, right?

23:53

And having a lot of different like advocacy,

23:55

like conversations, it's just really interesting

23:58

that like sometimes, and I'm saying this out loud,

24:01

and I'm saying this directly to the camera,

24:02

because sometimes your retention, my friends,

24:05

isn't just in your fucking metrics.

24:08

And then this applies to B2B, B2C, or D2C companies.

24:12

Sometimes you gotta go out there

24:14

and do the consumer research and survey your customers

24:17

or just experience the experience for yourself, right?

24:21

Because like what I've learning is like,

24:25

I'm learning and have recognized and just pointing it out,

24:29

the word of mouth carries more weight

24:32

than a metric sometimes.

24:33

- Yeah, yeah, definitely, yeah.

24:35

And that's, you know, and I think that's again,

24:37

where our client base really loves that we come in

24:40

and we talk to them and we bring donuts

24:43

and we build those relationships.

24:45

- Relationships.

24:46

- It's so critical and it's so key and it's like how,

24:49

I think, you know, thinking about that for any company,

24:52

you know, when I think about what type of CX experience

24:55

I like to build in my career, it's where, you know,

24:58

you know, there's the surprise and delight,

25:01

there's the effortless experience,

25:02

there's lots of different theories,

25:03

and I'm like, well, but like there can be both, right?

25:05

- There absolutely can be both.

25:06

- And catering it to what you need

25:09

and understanding who your clients are

25:12

is really the big, important thing there.

25:14

- Yeah, absolutely, understanding who your clients are.

25:17

I think also, 'cause I think this is really interesting

25:20

and really interesting also for the viewers and listeners.

25:24

So Michelle and I come from like a B2B background

25:27

that ended up maybe in D2C at times or B2C, right?

25:32

And I think that one of the things that I've talked about

25:36

a lot is how my B2B career has really influenced ECOM, right?

25:40

Like my ECOM career, right?

25:42

And you can flip back and forth between it.

25:44

And I think that there's so many lessons to be learned

25:49

on each side of it.

25:50

And so where I'm getting,

25:51

'cause I'm gonna land this plane, I promise you.

25:53

Okay, is that I've been on both sides

25:56

of customer support and customer success,

25:58

as well as product marketing, right?

26:01

And so, and I think that that like,

26:03

like when you think about it,

26:04

the relationship building aspect of it,

26:07

and so what you're talking about, like your client success,

26:09

but then you're all through your drivers

26:11

and then even in the individual,

26:13

that's relationship building.

26:14

And that's what makes a good customer experience, you know?

26:17

Effortless experience, absolutely, surprise and delight,

26:20

absolutely.

26:21

And I think that those things definitely all apply,

26:24

but when you look at your customer

26:26

or you look at your client,

26:27

it's the relationship building

26:29

that's gonna build things for you.

26:30

That I see you, right?

26:31

Yeah, it's that, you know, like I know who you are

26:34

and I understand your pain and I wanna solve it for you.

26:38

Which is, and I think that's, it can be, you know,

26:40

people talk about, oh, well, they, you know,

26:42

when you're hiring, right?

26:43

I started out very early on,

26:45

I started like online gaming and people like,

26:48

well, can you make that transition?

26:49

I was like, look, let me tell you about

26:50

what a customer is an online gaming is,

26:52

a passionate person willing to put their money

26:54

where their mouth is.

26:54

Like, that's something,

26:56

that's a customer regardless of what it is.

26:58

And it's, what's great is like,

27:00

what I appreciated in a customer is the passion.

27:03

And so I love that about a customer community.

27:05

I don't, like, when I think about where I wanna go

27:07

with my career and the different industries I've been in,

27:09

like, they've all built on each other

27:11

because at the end of the day,

27:12

it's appreciating the human and that, what they need.

27:16

Yeah, absolutely.

27:17

I think you also, I wanna transition real quick,

27:20

just because like, you're also one of my mentors, right?

27:22

Like, I've known you a long time,

27:24

but I think you just hit on a really good fucking point

27:27

to how sometimes people look at you in your career

27:30

and then you'll be like, oh, well,

27:32

how are you gonna do this and then do this, right?

27:35

Yes.

27:36

And so I think you're a story about like the online gaming

27:38

to switching to like, I don't know what was after that,

27:40

but like, all the movies.

27:42

Yeah, but now I'm in rideshare for kids.

27:44

Yeah, yeah, yeah, you know, all over, yeah.

27:45

But like, the individual's philosophies about CX

27:49

can all relate, right?

27:51

I'm not saying it's all the same.

27:52

I'm not saying CX is all support-driven.

27:54

Different playbooks, different-

27:55

Absolutely.

27:56

Yeah, strategy, yeah.

27:57

Absolutely, but the reason I wanted to bring it up again,

28:00

'cause I mentioned this before in a previous episode,

28:03

but several episodes actually I think,

28:06

is that it's so interesting because I came from a B2B background

28:10

and to have then switched into festivals,

28:13

but I applied for so many D2C jobs,

28:16

so many D2C jobs, like 'cause I really wanted to,

28:20

like I wanted to build my career

28:22

and have that other like e-com side of it, right?

28:24

Yes, yes.

28:25

I think I knew you during this game too.

28:27

I think so, yes.

28:28

I remember when we could like start chatting more.

28:29

Yeah.

28:30

And yes, it was, it was.

28:33

And so, and I remember nobody giving me a chance.

28:36

And then I remember one of the feedbacks

28:38

from a very well-known brand said to me,

28:41

like, and it wasn't negative, it was nothing terrible,

28:43

but they were like, oh, your resume is like,

28:46

and your pedigree is so amazing,

28:48

but you don't have D2C experience.

28:51

And you're just like, ah.

28:52

I know, but what's so crazy,

28:54

what's so crazy about that is that

28:57

I then ended up got the,

28:58

you got the festival's job like years later, right?

29:01

And the reason I did is because I was like in Chicago

29:04

at the right place and like, they took a chance on me.

29:06

Yeah.

29:07

And you're just like, thank you.

29:08

Yeah, but like, that's my point though, right?

29:11

Sometimes take a chance.

29:13

Because somebody who might have a background

29:15

of flibidab or success or whatever,

29:17

if they're passionate about it

29:19

and they love your brand and they love

29:21

like what it is that you're doing or building,

29:24

they're probably gonna be a dope ass employee.

29:26

Yes, yes, exactly.

29:28

A fucking badass.

29:29

And like, I think I keep,

29:32

I always, I get to relearn that a lot

29:33

with my SafeRite support team, right?

29:35

Because like, who else is doing live monitoring

29:37

of rides with drivers, you know?

29:39

Like it's just, it's like, it's 'cause, yeah, exactly.

29:43

Right? And it's like, you know,

29:44

people are like, well, can you recruit from like 911?

29:46

I was like, no, I can't recruit 911.

29:49

Like, those people are highly paid professionals.

29:52

Like, or like, you know, like,

29:54

someone's like, how about air traffic control?

29:56

And I was like, I think that's a advanced degree.

29:58

Like, I need someone to answer phone calls.

30:00

And sometimes, sometimes I do need like that 911 brain

30:03

and sometimes I need the customer service brain.

30:05

And so it's like, you know, when I think about

30:09

what leaders I need in that team

30:10

and who I need on that team, I'm like,

30:12

I need a little bit, someone that gets,

30:14

understands like, their job is to make sure

30:16

things happen well and safely.

30:18

And that they need to be responsive and reactive.

30:21

And one area that I've been fun to recruit from

30:24

is like improv because the yes-and.

30:26

- Oh, yeah. - Because you have to get a,

30:29

you know, they get a wild scene thrown at them

30:31

and they're like, okay, I acknowledge the scene

30:34

and I'm gonna build on it, right?

30:35

And that's fun and improv,

30:36

but it works so well in customer service too.

30:38

But like, how many people are willing to take a chance

30:40

on someone who like their whole background

30:42

has been like comedy writing and improv?

30:43

- I know, I mean, honestly,

30:45

this episode will be after, right?

30:48

This episode, but this person that I'm bringing on,

30:51

Lucy Samuel, she comes from improv.

30:56

- Right? - Yeah.

30:57

- And what's really amazing about her though,

30:59

is she had a background in CX, customer experience, right?

31:02

- Yeah. - Previously and then after

31:04

and then like transitioned into DTC.

31:06

And now she's a fucking amazing copywriter

31:08

for e-commerce brands. - Love it.

31:10

- But that's my point is like,

31:11

everybody has a different background, right?

31:13

- Yes, and it's not like,

31:14

and immediately there's not a ladder too, right?

31:16

- Right, there's not a fucking ladder.

31:18

- No, like Chase, what's interesting,

31:20

it's like, that's like a hopscot drive,

31:22

you know, being there seven years,

31:23

it's like, I'm like, yeah, let me try it.

31:25

Let me see what, like, and then, you know,

31:27

some thing a year later, we're like,

31:29

well, that was a great try, you know?

31:31

- Yeah. - And I appreciate

31:32

when they're willing to take a chance on me, right?

31:34

- Yeah. - And see if we can do it.

31:36

And, but like, it's not,

31:38

it shouldn't be this prescribed thing.

31:40

- Right, absolutely. - And next job,

31:42

who knows what it will be, right?

31:43

Is it gonna, you know, like, I'd always joke about,

31:46

I'm gonna go open an Airbnb or something.

31:48

- Yeah. - Airbnb, but like a B&B.

31:49

And just like go be cute with that, you know?

31:51

- Do you wanna know what my dream is?

31:52

- What is that? - Okay, so my dream

31:54

is actually to get my herbalist certification

31:58

and start some sort of apothecary.

32:00

- Yes, let me know if you do.

32:02

- Oh, don't worry. - Don't worry.

32:03

Don't worry, we're manifesting over here

32:05

on this episode, okay?

32:07

- Yeah, I feel like a lot of people, like,

32:10

customer service, customer facing,

32:11

customer experience roles, like have that backup dream

32:14

of like just like a calm life, right?

32:17

- This is, you know, a calm life, absolutely.

32:19

It's so interesting as you get older,

32:20

like the more and more you crave it, you know?

32:22

- Examine. - Examine older now.

32:23

- Right, I'm not gonna let y'all know

32:27

how old I am, 'cause the Botox will be full in you, okay?

32:31

But I'm gonna tell you right now, mom's tired.

32:33

- Yeah. - Okay, she's high tech, right?

32:35

But I also really, like, I have this dream

32:37

of having my own e-commerce brand, right?

32:40

- Yeah. - 'Cause I know so much

32:42

about marketing, I know so much about customer experience.

32:44

I'm not saying I'm an expert, but any needs.

32:46

- No, but yeah. - But I love a trial

32:48

and error. - Yeah, yeah.

32:48

- I love a pivot. - I love this.

32:50

I'm gonna work for you. - Yes.

32:51

- I know, I want this full circle. - Michelle and Jess.

32:54

- I said it to Pothakary, let's go.

32:55

- Let's do it.

32:57

- Okay, wait, so, you know, I wanna ask you this question

33:00

because we're talking so positively about, like, people

33:03

who, you know, take a chance, do all these things, right?

33:06

And you're, man, you are a baddie leader, okay?

33:09

Like, you've been in the space for a long time, right?

33:12

I'm curious from you, have you had a terrible hire?

33:17

- Yes, I think that's like,

33:20

what are the best things I learned in my career is like,

33:22

how do you deal with that? - How do you deal with that?

33:23

- You can't bat 100, right? - No.

33:26

(laughing)

33:27

I know. - I know.

33:29

- I mean, I've had a handful, you know,

33:32

and some of it, it's, I talk a lot about skill and will, right?

33:36

And like, how, like, if they have the will to do it,

33:40

but not the skill, that's workable.

33:42

But if they don't have the will, if they are, you know,

33:45

if they are toxic, like that's what you gotta get.

33:47

- That's toxic, get rid of it.

33:49

- The toxicity, like, that's the one, oh my God,

33:52

that's the nail on the head is the toxicity

33:54

because it's like, it's not even just will.

33:56

It's like, if you are just a toxic person,

33:59

that is like a snake in the grass, you know?

34:02

- And one thing I found too is like, you know,

34:04

it's a small world.

34:06

- Doddard.

34:07

(laughing)

34:08

- You know, like, I'm always like, it's the way we,

34:10

like, you know, I've had people who have like,

34:12

exhibited in a blazer glory and like, a year later,

34:15

it's like, hey, I'm talking to this person,

34:17

I saw you work with them and I'm like, mm-hmm.

34:20

I would not rehire them, you know?

34:23

(laughing)

34:24

- Word of mouth.

34:25

- Yeah, it's a big, it's a big, and you know,

34:28

and it, and being smart about that, right?

34:31

Like, and just, you know, and I think it's just too,

34:33

like assume positive intent from people is important,

34:36

but also, you know, just remember, like,

34:39

people know each other.

34:40

The world is small, it is small.

34:43

- I mean, we're reproof, I know.

34:45

- I mean, I'm like, what did I find?

34:47

- One, two, three.

34:48

(laughing)

34:49

- For anybody listening, and we high-fived,

34:51

'cause Michelle and I do have a story,

34:53

but we are state in that line, my friends.

34:55

(laughing)

34:57

But yeah, I think you can't bat 100 on hires,

35:00

and like, and I think what's really important

35:02

as customer experience leaders,

35:05

like, whether you're in that position of like,

35:08

I'm managing the support team of the community,

35:10

trust and safety, whatever aspect that is, right?

35:13

The thing is, is that you have to,

35:18

you, I wouldn't say you have to,

35:22

but you are kind of at the core of the company's,

35:24

like, culture. - Yes.

35:25

- Right? - Yes.

35:26

- Like, it's really funny at Feast of Wills,

35:28

because I was, I'm sorry, everybody,

35:30

I like constantly talk about this scenario,

35:32

and I apologize. - Everyone knows what's just about.

35:34

- Yeah, yeah, yeah.

35:35

- No, like, it just even about Feast of Wills, right?

35:38

But like, also Feast of Wills was my fifth,

35:40

and my fifth startup. - Yeah, and you did,

35:42

like, a phenomenal job there, and so.

35:44

- Thanks, girl. - You know it.

35:46

- A lot of sleepless nights, I'm really honest with you.

35:47

- Yeah, I'll tell you, I'll do that.

35:49

- But what I was gonna bring up about that is that,

35:51

I was like, fourth employee of Feast of Wills, right?

35:53

- Yeah. - So, so it's really funny,

35:55

because as a customer experience leader,

35:56

like, you, we have so much empathy,

35:58

and we're like, the moms, - Yes.

35:59

- For the dads. - Yes.

36:00

- Of, of the org, right?

36:03

- Yes, very much. - And it's so,

36:04

it's so hilarious, is that as we were building festivals,

36:09

I kind of became this pseudo-HR person,

36:12

but not the, - We're like, in a bad way.

36:14

- 'Cause like, we all know just drops an F-bomb or two, right?

36:18

But I became the person that everybody was like,

36:20

how do I get into this?

36:21

What do I do to this? - Yes.

36:22

- Or just like, I need career advice to do this job, right?

36:26

- Good job, like that, yes, I love that.

36:28

I, that's my favorite thing about,

36:30

especially like, you know, as a, as CX professional,

36:33

like, that's not any kids dream, right?

36:35

- Yeah. - Just to come in and--

36:36

- I mean, you walk in and say like,

36:37

"I'm gonna work for Cessmore Service today."

36:40

- I love it. - Yeah.

36:41

- And so I love, like, I love, you know,

36:43

I don't can talk about like my little baby birds

36:45

and trying to get them at every other department

36:47

of the company and being like,

36:48

let's, like, I have a person who knows this company,

36:51

take a chance and push on that.

36:52

And it's, it's part of, you know, like you said,

36:54

the team mom, - Yeah.

36:57

- I know, like cheerleader of--

36:58

- It's cheerleader though, yeah. - It's cheerleader.

37:00

I mean, like, the episode, you know, I'm not sure,

37:05

we're not sure of the order,

37:06

because obviously these things are recorded before,

37:07

but there's an episode with Mark Alves,

37:09

and he is the head of CX at Tastelude,

37:13

and like, I am so proud of him,

37:17

because I was his cheerleader, right?

37:20

Like I was brought into his cheerleader,

37:21

and like, that dude is doing some dope shit now,

37:24

but it's amazing. - Yeah, yeah.

37:24

- Like, he's a baddie, but like,

37:26

but he's like, that story about like being the CX leader,

37:30

right? - Yeah.

37:31

- You have these people that are just doing,

37:33

like, oh my God, my baby's gonna grow up, you know?

37:36

Like, look at you go, like, okay, you know?

37:38

And I think that's like one of my favorite things

37:41

about being a CX leader though,

37:42

is because we do have so much empathy,

37:44

and we are part of the experience and the culture,

37:47

that you end up making like, a lot of friends for life,

37:50

and seeing them like, really just like grow and thrive.

37:54

- Yeah. - I just fucking love it.

37:55

- Yeah, and it's like, I know people are like LinkedIn,

37:57

you know, like, it can get a little chaotic.

37:59

- Yeah, I mean, my LinkedIn is chaotic.

38:01

- But, I love it.

38:02

But like, it's also what I love too, is like seeing,

38:05

like being able to have a chance to see that

38:06

I actually, one of my employees at Disney,

38:09

he had posted about like, you know,

38:11

I took a chance on this job,

38:12

that I was not paying the bills, and you know,

38:15

and he's like, and look where I am now,

38:16

and I really, like, I'm so grateful I did that,

38:18

and I was like, I had like tears in my eyes,

38:20

I look at my little baby birds, like,

38:22

even X number of years later in my career,

38:26

seeing that is just, it's the empathy,

38:30

it's the, you know, it's the cheerleading,

38:32

it's the knowing great people can go do great things.

38:35

- Absolutely.

38:36

- But do you also think that is because we're millennial

38:38

CX leaders?

38:39

- Oh, interesting.

38:40

- There's like a whole like new thing

38:42

about the millennial manager.

38:44

- Yes, oh my gosh.

38:45

- Every time we watch this, like--

38:46

- I'm talking, I know, every single time I watch these reels,

38:49

I'm like, dang, that's literally me.

38:51

- Right?

38:52

- I know, I was like, oh, TikTok's got me good,

38:54

like they got my, they know who I am.

38:56

- Let me tell you.

38:57

- Oh yeah.

38:59

- It's creepy, but we're gonna roll with it

39:00

because they give those great millennial managers,

39:02

and we're like, that's so mean.

39:04

- I know, I know.

39:06

- Yes.

39:07

- Okay, I just wanna ask you like a couple of like

39:09

kind of technical questions that I'm really curious about,

39:13

'cause we're coming to the end of the road

39:15

in our boys to men voice.

39:16

- Love it.

39:17

- That's how you know we are millennials.

39:19

- Really?

39:20

(laughing)

39:22

- Not Gen Z.

39:23

- Yeah, I know, right?

39:24

- If you're Gen Z, you're probably like,

39:26

it's okay.

39:27

- Boys to men is great, go check them out.

39:29

Probably playing at a state fair somewhere near you.

39:32

- Probably not as many as when they were famous.

39:34

- Yeah.

39:35

- But you're a fan of mine.

39:36

(laughing)

39:37

Anyway, okay, so like your,

39:40

you're a company obviously, there's a lot of trust and safety.

39:42

There's a lot of like privacy

39:43

and you're dealing with very sensitive stuff.

39:45

I'm curious in your CX team,

39:47

are you utilizing any sort of AI?

39:49

- A little bit, it is, it's a hot topic, right?

39:53

It's hot, it's a little bit everywhere.

39:55

And because of the privacy stuff,

39:58

we're very nervous about it,

40:00

but you know, when I talk about like our software

40:02

and advisory solutions, like a lot of that is AI powered.

40:05

You know, we're helping school optimize

40:07

and look at students' routes and say,

40:09

hey, like the bus should exist.

40:11

Like we should not replace the school bus.

40:13

It's 60 kids and one vehicle going,

40:15

like let's help you look at traffic patterns

40:18

and what your needs are

40:19

and put all of these information into a data model.

40:21

And we're gonna tell you the best route

40:23

and we can save you money, we can save you time,

40:25

we can save, you know, inefficient bus usage

40:29

is horrible for the climate.

40:30

Like let's fix all of that and that's all AI powered.

40:34

And so it's like, it's definitely good.

40:36

I, I, we don't use it as much yet.

40:39

We wanna do a lot more with the trust and safety stuff, right?

40:42

How do we take like, you know,

40:44

you can do a positive or a negative, right?

40:46

So how do I say, like, how do I say,

40:47

like tell me who my problems are?

40:48

Like all of minority report

40:50

or you can take all of the data and information we have

40:52

and say like, these are my best drivers.

40:54

What is their common denominator?

40:57

How do I, how do I get other people to be like that?

41:00

Or what is, you know, like,

41:02

if you have a machine learning all of,

41:04

all of the things, all the million behaviors that happen,

41:07

like what is the chain of behaviors that we can do

41:09

to prevent like, do we have an interpersonal conflict

41:12

because the chain is, this driver's been back to back

41:15

on six rides and they've had full cars

41:18

and it's a heat wave in Texas.

41:21

And of course they're gonna explode when something goes wrong.

41:24

And you know, like, how do we, what do we do?

41:25

What can we do about that?

41:27

How do we, how do we use technology to give driver

41:30

better feedback about their driving behaviors?

41:32

How do we keep the whole, all the road saver?

41:34

And so a lot of it we're into discussion

41:36

because it's such sense of data.

41:38

We wanna make sure we do it, right?

41:40

We wanna be thoughtful about it.

41:41

You know, you know, putting stuff into the beast can be,

41:44

can be scary.

41:45

And so we wanna be thoughtful.

41:47

We know it's what's coming,

41:48

but we know it as a, how do we, you know,

41:51

I kind of always talk about, you know,

41:53

people talking about efficiency and this and that.

41:55

How do we do it?

41:56

And I always like to remind my team, like,

41:58

there's always gonna be things where you need a human brain

42:01

to do it, but let's have the robot do the stuff

42:03

that doesn't need, we always talk about,

42:05

if you need a heart and a brain, we need a human.

42:07

But if you need just a brain, let's have the robot do it.

42:10

- Yeah. - And that's kind of where we're at.

42:11

- That's a good, that's a really good theory about AI,

42:14

for sure, and that's a good way to like simplify it.

42:16

- Yeah.

42:18

- Okay, well, I'm gonna insert a Boyce Men song

42:21

in this moment, 'cause this is, is the end of the road.

42:23

- I don't know that.

42:24

Michelle, where can the audience find you?

42:27

- Oh, nah, nah, nah, nah.

42:28

No, I'm LinkedIn, obviously.

42:31

I'm a millennial, right?

42:33

I think LinkedIn's probably the place.

42:35

I get very like heavy in the knot.

42:38

I'm very fickle with my socials.

42:40

And so LinkedIn's gonna be best.

42:43

- Yeah, all right.

42:44

Michelle McCombs will put a link in the show notes.

42:48

And if you're interested in HopSqiv Drive,

42:50

we'll also put a link in the show notes too

42:51

for you to check them out,

42:52

'cause I think it's a very innovative company

42:56

to help with like elders, children,

42:59

anybody who like really needs extra care with for rights.

43:04

And that's it, my friends.

43:05

Thank you for joining me for another week of the Jews,

43:08

and I will see you, or you'll hear me next Thursday.

43:13

(laughs)

43:14

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43:16

- Hey, wow, you made it to the end of the episode.

43:19

That means that you like me and I like you,

43:22

which also means you should subscribe to this show.

43:25

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