How To Become (More) Customer Centric

Three surprisingly simple actions and three increasingly rare qualities to help you walk the talk

Nic Brandenberger
4 min readDec 23, 2020
COVID-19 has reinvigorated the discussion around what it means to be customer-centric. A front-line worker is delivering packages to a customer. Photo by Maarten Van Der Heuvel via Unsplash.

Given the breadth and depth of conversation around the topic, one would expect there to be more consensus on what it means to be customer centric. Or at least general agreement on a few examples of brands that have nailed a customer centric approach (other than perhaps Amazon).

But there’s surprisingly little of either.

Even worse, the most basic levels of market orientation — like investing in a customer insights team, or running the occasional focus group — are often confused with full-on customer obsession.

So, what makes a company more customer centric, then?

First, the good news: There are three easy action steps to help managers advance toward true customer centricity.

The bad news: They will require three increasingly rare managerial qualities to successfully walk the talk.

1. Start With The Customer, Not Yourself

Customer-centricity starts with recognizing a simple truth: You are nothing like your customers.

Unless you sell luxury, you are likely in a different income class, have a different educational background, live in a different part of town, drive a different car, own a (different) house, and most likely work a different type of job than your average customer.

These differences make it unreasonable to assume your customers see, feel or do things in the same way you do. Or like the same things you like — including your product experience and your advertising.

The most successful leaders show a high degree of humility in their journey toward customer-centricity.

Instead of an inside-out philosophy that puts the product first and often anchors in individual presumptions and opinions, they will follow an outside-in operating model, anchoring decisions in a rich blend of customer data, customer research insight, experience and informed gut.

For them, putting customers first means to admit they know little or nothing about their customers.

And that is their starting point.

2. Know The Why Behind The What

Customer-centricity goes beyond merely observing customer behavior to understanding the underlying motivations.

Of course, running a series of epsilon-greedy bandit tests can help explain what customers do, and translate to improvements in key business metrics. However, it doesn’t explain why customers do what they do, and therefore doesn’t yield much value for systematic experience improvements.

Scalable experimentation is short-term, tactical business optimization, not customer-centricity.

Successful leaders demonstrate curiosity in addition to optimization skills.

Successful leaders keep asking “Why?” (not unlike young children), so they can understand customer needs, barriers and motivations at a more granular level.

They know that customer demographics, -behaviors and -preferences are easily identifiable characteristics — observations, not insights. Insights are tacit, hidden, sometimes subconscious, and always difficult to unearth.

But precisely because of that, they can serve as a basis for long-term, strategic competitive advantage.

3. Level Up Your Listening

Customer-centric leaders listen not only to react to customer needs, but to anticipate customer lifetime value.

Operating a customer research team, running customer panels and focus groups, or inviting a handful of customers to the annual employee event does not make your company customer-centric, yet.

It is entirely possible for a company to acquire significant customer knowledge (e.g. through psychographic segmentation and end-to-end journey mapping) and still only use it to explain the past, or react to the present situation.

The leaders of the future listen with empathy.

While attentive listeners can generate sufficient understanding to react to a customer need in a relevant way, their perception is limited to feelings of sympathy.

Empathic listeners, on the other hand, can step outside their own frame of reference to generate a more profound understanding of their customers’ viewpoints.

And they will synthesize knowledge to emulate the context in which their customers make decisions, helping them not only to predict customer behavior, but also to model customer intent.

Knowledge Is Nothing Without Action

Humility, curiosity and empathy are critical leadership qualities to build customer-centric organizations and experiences.

However, as long as corporate goals remain exclusively product- or shareholder-centric, it will be difficult for leaders to propose customer-centric action plans which intuitively link to and impact core KPIs.

Most companies will start making meaningful progress on their path to customer-centricity after they’ve complemented their balanced scorecards with customer-centric metrics like Customer Lifetime Value, Customer Equity, or Likelihood to Recommend.

Or, for a really slow ramp, maybe start with Share of Wallet instead of Average Revenue per Customer?

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Nic Brandenberger

Suspicions and positions about brands and products, the people who manage them, and the marketing they create to promote them. The good, the bad and the ugly.