What the academics at Harvard were able to quantify is something that when you think about it makes perfect sense. How your employees feel about where they work has a big influence on how they act, and how they act has a big influence on how customers feel. If you really want to shift your Net Promoter Scores (NPS) then start taking your employees seriously.
The best way to build a brand that customers will love and admire is to start by winning the hearts and minds of your employees. The brands that are celebrated for their distinctiveness and high levels of customer service are generally businesses that see their employees as critical to delivering the brand. Take a look at some of the most successful global brands. It is no coincidence that brands like Apple, Google, Coca-Cola, Facebook, IBM, GE, Disney, Nike and Ikea (to name just a few) are businesses where the brand matters as much on the inside as it does on the outside.
The very best brands don’t tend to make a distinction between ‘brand’ and ‘culture’; in businesses like Nike and Ikea they are tantamount to the same thing. This is an important point because, in many organizations, different functions tend to operate in their own silos. So brand becomes the responsibility of the marketing department, the human resources team have responsibility for culture and the customer service team lead the attempt to improve the NPS. In brand-led organizations the situation is very different. The business has a clear sense of what it is trying to achieve and as a result the brand is owned by the whole business. Rather than trying to compete with each other, different functions then collaborate to find the ways in which they can manifest the brand both inside and outside the business.
In a brand-led business this approach starts at the top. Brands like Apple and Coca-Cola view their brand as the face of their business strategy. There is no arbitrary separation between the ‘hard stuff’ and the ‘soft stuff’ – they are seen as inextricably linked. In this type of organization a presentation to investors will typically start off by outlining the brand or organizational purpose, then move to demonstrate how the strategy will help the business achieve that purpose and then demonstrate how the brand will be used to enact that strategy with employees and customers.
As well as a clear and unequivocal statement of their brand intent, these businesses tend to operate in a way that is both tight and loose. They will be very tight on a few brand essentials, ethos and values etc, but looser when it comes to how the brand is executed. This often contrasts with the ‘loose and tight’ approach, usually in evidence at less enlightened organizations This often-encountered situation is where a business is actually quite loose about what it stands for but incredibly tight and controlling when it comes to every aspect of execution. You know the type: no one inside the organization is really sure what they are trying to achieve but they do know that the greatest sin of all is using the wrong version of the logo!
We have seen the leadership of businesses that profess to be brand-led struggle to even recall their own brand values. In one particular instance a senior leader even admitted that the reason he couldn’t recall the values was that there were too many of them to remember. If the senior leadership of a multinational business can’t remember their organizational values, either because they are a bit meaningless or there are too many to remember, then how seriously is the brand being taken further down the business?
In an era where reputations are hard-fought and easily lost it is vital that employees are clear about the type of behaviour that is not acceptable. Employees need to know what the brand expects of them and how they can escalate issues internally (without fear of reprisal) if they see something illegal, immoral or inappropriate. A clear and understandable set of brand values can help an organization anchor the behaviours it is seeking.
A brand-led business will also typically invest heavily in high-quality recruitment processes and they will spend time inducting their new employees into the business. Emphasis will be placed not just on what the business does, but on why it does it and how it does it. The best brands are not seeking uniformity from their staff: they are seeking to instil the notion of freedom within a framework. It is no coincidence that a candidate seeking employment at Goldman Sachs is likely to be interviewed six or seven times before being asked to join. Or that Pret A Manger give existing store staff the final say on who joins their team. Brand-led businesses know that getting and training the right kind of talent are key to high performance. Such businesses will also seek to ensure that the employee experience is first class and that employees are continually trained and supported such that they can be the very best versions of themselves.
People often mistakenly believe that employees’ goodwill can be bought simply by giving out good stuff. No amount of holiday buy-back or free coffee is going to make up for being poorly managed or badly mistreated. Winning hearts and minds is about:
Enlightened brands are also obsessed with their customers. They rightly see their staff as both ambassadors for their organization and an important connection point with customers. Even if you don’t subscribe to the idea that there is a direct link between how your employees feel and how your business is performing then you must surely see their potential as ambassadors? On the basis that we know how important word of mouth is, we are constantly amazed that many large organizations spend such little time helping to turn their employees into advocates.
Nissan’s manufacturing plant does a great job here. Not only does it have a clear brand purpose, a motivated workforce and an ongoing programme of customer and community engagement, but it also runs schemes to allow employees (and their families) to purchase cars at heavily discounted rates. Employees who are both making and owning the vehicles are the very best kind of ambassador. They are demonstrating their confidence in the brand by spending their own money.
It’s often easy to spot a brand that requires help on the inside. A bit like when you are feeling unwell: the symptoms can often lead you to the cause. How often have you heard things like: ‘I am not really sure what the company is trying to achieve’ or ‘I know we need to change, but I am not quite sure how we intend to do it’. Often business leaders will talk about ‘employees not really getting it’ or express their frustration at the ‘lack of change within the business’. All of these statements are really exposing a failure to engage staff and many of these issues can be addressed by harnessing the power of brand.
When it comes to changing your strategy or repositioning your brand, you would do well to first engage with your employees. What hope do you have of delivering a new strategy to customers if employees are unclear about why the organization is changing direction as well as what is now required of them? Brands should apply the same tools and techniques to their internal audiences as they do to their customers. Hearts and minds are rarely won over with a fifteen-minute PowerPoint presentation.
A lot of nonsense is spoken about engagement programmes. In many businesses it is as though a collective amnesia descends the minute the business starts having to engage internally. Employees should be treated just like a more intimate group of customers. It is naive to think that material produced internally (such as videos or presentations) won’t finish up being shared on social media. Assume that it will be and then start using that to your advantage.
Accept that, just like your potential customer base, you are unlikely to convert everyone to your cause. Don’t waste time trying to play chess with people who ultimately don’t want to play chess. Instead focus on the employees who are open to change and target your resources where you know it matters. Communicating any type of change requires employees to first hear about the change, then to understand the change, then to see the change happening and ultimately to believe in the change. Treat your engagement like an ongoing campaign. Use the full suite of appropriate channels, encourage dialogue, and don’t hide from the difficult questions. Accept that the process is ongoing.
All of this matters because delivering for customers is getting more complex. The most progressive and fast-moving brands are no longer working in silos. The internal structures within organizations are changing to reflect the need to have a single view of the customer and deliver seamless customer service across any type of device or access point anywhere in the world.
Agile teams come together to solve specific issues and then dissolve again once the issue is fixed. Teams are networked and diffuse. The best way of meeting this challenge is to make your brand work as hard for you internally as it does externally. Create a strong purpose and use it to drive meaning and coherence across your organization. Treat your employees as more intimate customers. Recognize the potential of your employees to act as ambassadors. Engage effectively and welcome challenge. Get your employees to share customer problems and harness their expertise to help you solve them.
We live in the age of total branding. It is not possible to divorce or hide what goes on in an organization from what is happening outside. Brands are essentially porous. We know that what happens inside an organization has a direct influence on how a business performs. Motivating and engaging your employees are the best way of improving your customer service and increasing your customer satisfaction. Great brands spend a lot of time engaging and nurturing their employees because they know this is the way to achieve outstanding results and celebrated service – they make sure that their staff know what behaviour is expected of them and how they can individually play their part in the development of the organization.
In this era of total branding little distinction should be made between employees and customers. Both have the potential to be passionate advocates for your brand and both are critical to your success. To get it right on the outside you first have to get it right on the inside.
The Service-Profit Chain: https://hbr.org/2008/07/putting-the-service-profit-chain-to-work