Australian companies are looking for ‘more collaboration’ with customers, according to a global study by IBM.
According to the stud, business leaders in Australia and in more than 69 other countries, have identified the top three priorities to improving customer engagement as creating a consistent customer experience (81%), quickly responding to emerging trends (77%), and combining internal and external data to gain insights (76%).
Digital will continue to emerge as the lead channel to connect with customers for Australian business leaders, however, Australian customers wield less influence on business leaders than in other countries. The study shows that taking a “digital-first approach” to customer collaboration will help the C-suite to achieve its priorities.
Australian customers (47%) wield less influence on business leaders than in other countries (where the figure is 54%), the study shows, and only 29% of Australian business leaders claim to have strong collaboration with customers today. According to the study, in the next five years the Australian C-suite will triple its efforts to collaborate with customers, up to 87% from 29% now.
But for now, the study found that two-thirds of business leaders say they have a weak digital strategy–or none at all, with only 32% claiming to have an integrated digital-physical strategy. It also found that Aussie C-suite leaders called out competing priorities (75%) and the lack of a cohesive social media plan (72%) as the key challenges hindering implementation of this strategy.
Here are some other takeaways from the study:
Less than 50% are strongly influenced by customers today, with only 29% saying they understand their customers well
87% called out customer collaboration as their top priority over the coming five years
92% will choose digital as the lead channel to engage with customers in the next three to five years
Two-thirds currently feel they have a weak digital strategy–or none at all
Ian Wong, IBM Interactive Experience Lead, Australia and New Zealand, said in a press release that the rapid adoption of digital technologies and the high penetration of mobile devices by customers “has driven a power shift, pushing organisations to take an outside-in approach to business strategy. Listening, capturing, and analysing data from these customer interactions provides valuable insights for business leaders.”
The study shows that in Australia today, face-to-face is still the lead channel for customer engagement for the C-suite, followed by digital (80% face-to-face and 66% digital). But the study shows that, in the next three to five years, this trend will reverse with 92% of business leaders identifying digital as the channel to engage with customers.
“The lack of a digital strategy suggests that Australian leaders are taking a tactical, siloed approach to digital collaboration with customers rather than a seamless cross-channel engagement,” Wong added. “If organisations are to remain relevant to customers, and survive in the digital economy, their business strategies need to be informed based on insights gained from integrated digital-physical engagements with customers.”