The Model That Creates Lifelong Customers (and Revenue)

55m

How do brands create customers who stay for years or even decades?

 

In this episode, we break down the model behind lifelong loyalty, emotional connection, and trust-based customer experience - the kind that drives repeat revenue, referrals, and real brand love.

 

Our guest is John Boccuzzi, Jr., CX leader, speaker, author of The Art of Seducing Your Customers, and President of ISG Research. With 30+ years studying how companies build trust and deliver memorable customer experiences, John shares the frameworks and stories that prove: CX is not a cost center — it’s a growth engine.

 

You’ll learn:

The #1 factor that determines whether customers return

Why customer experience is more emotional than operational

The “Ruth Story” - how one pair of glasses changed John’s entire view on CX

How to scale empathy, trust, and personalization across big organizations

What brands get wrong when implementing AI in customer experience

The future of CX and what will matter most in the next 12 months

 

If you lead customer experience, marketing, service, brand, or product, this conversation will reshape how you think about delivering value.

Watch Next: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rgNCaTYkXCE&t=1864s

 

Key Moments:

0:00 Meet John Boccuzzi, Jr.

3:20 What Customer Experience Really Is

5:20 The “Ruth Story”: Creating Emotional Loyalty

10:10 Why Having a Point of View Builds Trust

15:15 Training Teams to Deliver Great CX

18:55 Scaling Emotional Customer Experiences

23:30 How AI Fits Into Customer Experience

29:55 The Power of First Impressions

33:25 How Brands Stay Relevant Today

37:15 Make the Customer Journey Simple

42:55 The Future of Personalization

49:15 Common Misconceptions About CX

50:27 A Trend to Bet On (That Isn’t AI)


Are your teams facing growing demands? Join CX leaders transforming their AI strategy with Agentforce. Start achieving your ambitious goals. Visit salesforce.com/agentforce


 

Mission.org is a media studio producing content alongside world-class clients. 
Learn more at mission.org


Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Press play and read along

Runtime: 55m

Transcript

Speaker 1 What is customer experience?

Speaker 2 It's not just satisfying the customer, it's seducing them. It's getting them to truly believe in you passionately about what you're doing.

Speaker 2 When I ever go to a restaurant, I always say, What do you recommend? And if they say, Well, I haven't tried anything on the menu, that's an epic fail on the restaurant.

Speaker 2 Yeah, they should be sampling everything and have a point of view. AI is a cost reduction opportunity in a lot of people's eyes.
I look at it as a cost expansion opportunity, right?

Speaker 2 A client expansion opportunity.

Speaker 2 How do you create revenue because of the ai not reduce the cost if the first impression does not meet expectation it's a zero percent chance of them winning the deal wow not like 20 not 10

Speaker 2 no one's ever done it so how is your brand creating that first impression with the customer base the thing about friction is it never goes away 100 there's always friction it's kind of like radiation there's a half-life to radiation it never goes away right so i think we always have to consider being a friction hunter.

Speaker 1 What trend are you betting on that's not AI?

Speaker 1 Today's guest is John Bakuzzi Jr., the president of ISG Research and the author of The Art of Seducing Your Customer. Is there an art seducing your customer?

Speaker 1 Well, John thinks there is, and today he shares his playbook and guide for how to do that very thing.

Speaker 1 John has the most popular TED Talk on YouTube for CX, where he talks about his experience as a customer purchasing glasses several years ago.

Speaker 1 This story set the tone for his career and since then he's been writing books, speaking, and advising companies on how to deliver an emotional customer experience, something that sticks with customers in a way that they will never forget it and they want to come back.

Speaker 1 In today's conversation, John and I debate positive friction versus negative friction, where there might be room to add a little extra friction, but ultimately why simplicity is the most seductive choice.

Speaker 1 John also shares why he thinks younger generations are going to be craving more analog, human-driven experiences and how brands can prepare for that change.

Speaker 1 We talk about AI and what he's seen in research about how enterprises are successfully using AI.

Speaker 1 And he also shares a statistic that blew my mind about why the first impression with a brand is the most important. We also get into employee empowerment.

Speaker 1 And when you think about it, your $20 an hour customer service rep is the one that's representing your company as the face of the brand most frequently.

Speaker 1 So how can you empower them to make the decisions that are going to actually lead to customer enjoyment and an emotional response that keeps them coming back?

Speaker 1 This is Experts of Experience, and I'm your host, Lacey Pease. I absolutely love this conversation with John today.

Speaker 1 But before we dive in, please hit that like button, hit that subscribe button, and leave a comment below with your favorite takeaway from this episode.

Speaker 1 Here's John Picousi Jr., the president of ISG Research and the author of The Art of Seducing Your Customer. John, welcome to the show.

Speaker 2 Lacey, thanks so much for having me. I really appreciate it.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I am so excited to talk with you today. I have been spending the last hour sort of doing a deep dive.
I watched your TED Talk again.

Speaker 1 I looked through your book and I was like, oh, I cannot wait to have John on the podcast and ask all the questions that I've been burning to ask now that I've been reading some of your content.

Speaker 2 Thanks, Lacey. And look at your title of this podcast.
It's perfect because I'm all about experience. So thanks for inviting me.

Speaker 1 Yeah, yeah, of course. So I've asked guests in the past out the gate to define what CX is.
And I would love to hear from you. What is customer experience?

Speaker 2 This is a journey that's been over 30 years now for me and really figuring out that it's a critical component to success in business and your life in general.

Speaker 2 And I would say customer experience is about trust.

Speaker 2 It's about relationships. It's about empathy.
So as I think about customer experience, those are the three type of big words that I think about. when I think about customer experience.

Speaker 2 So when that customer or that client is engaging with you,

Speaker 2 do they trust you? Do they understand that you empathize with the challenges they may be having? Those are big important things for me. And that's how I think about defining customer experience.

Speaker 1 What I love about that definition is it's very emotional based. It's like how, like, if I were to summarize that, I would say that CX is all about how does my customer feel, right?

Speaker 2 Yeah, how does my customer feel? And it doesn't mean they're always going to feel like you're always going to wow them, but did they get what they needed?

Speaker 2 That's kind of what we want to deliver, right? Is I wanted an ice cream. I got an ice cream.
That's fantastic. You have to over deliver, but you need it to deliver.
Yep.

Speaker 1 It's cool to me that you're, you're coming at it from this perspective of sort of that emotional experience of empathy, trust, right? Because you could have answered.

Speaker 1 You know, customer experience is these touch points that you have with your customer in sales and in marketing, right?

Speaker 1 Like we could have gotten really into the business weeds of what is customer experience, but I think we lose touch so much with what is our customer actually going through through if we think about it from this like very logistical perspective instead of the emotional human side of no how do they feel yeah do they trust me did they get what they wanted did i satisfy them and so it kind of brings me to to your book the art of seducing your customers which is just a great title like kudos to you for naming it that that's fantastic tell me a little bit about the origin story of this this book and yeah your kind of like foray into this customer experience field field.

Speaker 2 Yeah, sure.

Speaker 2 So, look, I have to give my wife, Cynthia, full credit for the book title and the TED Talk title. Oh, really? So, I thought it was far too provocative for the TED Talk.

Speaker 2 And she said, no, John, you've got to do it. And so, the TED Talk became the number one TED Talk on customer experience.
And I think partially due to the title.

Speaker 2 So, full credit to my wife, Cynthia, for that. And really, the journey started, like I said, almost 30 years ago in New York City.
I was, you know, just look at it.

Speaker 2 I was a sales professional inside of tech at a startup, and I went to get a new pair of glasses. And, you know, didn't, you know, back then, 30 years ago, there wasn't Google.

Speaker 2 There were, you know, there were simpler things that we utilized to find brands and find stores and retail, et cetera, and do our research.

Speaker 2 And I walked downstairs, took a left-hand turn, and there was 1010 Optics store for glasses. And I just needed glasses that I couldn't see, Lacey.
That's as simple as it gets.

Speaker 2 And but that one experience with Ruth and the owner of that store and her, the way she built confidence for me changed my life and changed the perspective of how I thought about customer experience.

Speaker 2 Cause that's why I utilize those words of trust and empathy. So certainly I went in there because I couldn't see, but I left.
And not only could I see, but I experienced life in a whole new way.

Speaker 2 And why that was, is she convinced me to get a very, you know, wild pair of glasses,

Speaker 2 really outside of the realm of what I was used to. It had multiple colors.
And I was more of a Michael J. Fox kind of guy, you know, wire frames.

Speaker 2 And when I left the store with those frames on, feeling pretty not confident, I felt a self, you know, I was really, really doubting myself. A woman walked up to me and said, I love that, your frames.

Speaker 2 And I, you know, I didn't know who she was. And I figured, oh my God, Ruth was pretty smart.
She has somebody outside ready to compliment you when you leave her store.

Speaker 2 But it was five compliments later on the train ride home. And then my wife loving the pair of frames.
And I knew that she had really made a difference in my life. And I shopped with her.

Speaker 2 I've shopped with her for the last 27 years. I travel all the way to New York, even though I don't work there anymore.
And that really, Lacey, inspired the whole TED talk and the book is.

Speaker 2 It's not just satisfying the customer. It's seducing them.
It's getting them to truly believe in you passionately about what you're doing because I could buy frames anywhere, right?

Speaker 2 I could buy them online now. I could buy them at the local optics center, but I go all the way to New York to get those frames.

Speaker 1 I can't believe that you fly to New York to do that. That's amazing.
Have you told, what's her name?

Speaker 2 The owner of the shop, Bruce.

Speaker 1 Have you told Ruth about this?

Speaker 2 Like that, hey, Ruth and I, I mean, we've done selfies together.

Speaker 2 I did a book signing at her store.

Speaker 2 You know, I'm a huge Ruth fan. In fact, I've named a chapter after Ruth about the idea of hiring a team of Ruths, right? Oh, my gosh.
Yeah, we have a shout out to Ruth.

Speaker 1 Oh, man. What I also love about your story, and you share this in the TED Talk, is that she gave you three options, right?

Speaker 1 She gave you option A is sort of the generic version of what you've already been doing. B is like a little bit more out there.
And C is what you ended up choosing, right?

Speaker 1 And she was strongly encouraging you to go see.

Speaker 1 And I think just like the time that she took to curate, here are the three options for for you. And then the time that she gave you to explain which of these three are.

Speaker 1 And then she gave you the vision of like, you will walk around in the world as you are today if you choose option A. And if you choose option C, you'll get to walk around in a different world.

Speaker 1 And like, how cool is it that she spent the time with you to do that and curate that experience for you? And then you got to live it out after you left the shop.

Speaker 2 So cool. Yeah.
And Lacey, again, option one was exactly the option I was going to pick. No questions about it.

Speaker 2 But she really, again,

Speaker 2 it becomes that empathy and that trust factor that said, hold the phone. I've just met this woman, but you know what? I trust her.

Speaker 2 And she's taken that time, like you said, to kind of curate that experience. And it was a life changer for me.

Speaker 1 What I think too is interesting about that is she sort of chose a little bit of like, I guess, conflict, right? She was like, I'm not going to give you the easy out.

Speaker 1 Like she could have just been, oh, choose whatever, go with it, give me my money and you're out of the store, Right.

Speaker 1 But she was like, no, I'm going to push you and kind of disagree with you and say that, like, this one you don't want, you want this one.

Speaker 1 And I think that like friction actually builds a lot of trust whenever you have any kind of engagement with like a customer service person or a salesperson.

Speaker 1 If you tell me, like, hey, no, you don't want this and like this thing you actually do want, I automatically trust you more than if you just like smile and nod and go along with what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 So I'm curious if there's any like, I don't know, thoughts or guidelines there there that you have for customer service folks that are working with customers on, you know, how can they creatively but and authentically have that kind of friction built in?

Speaker 2 I like that you're thinking about it this way. I don't know if I'd necessarily call it friction, but almost a strength of point of view.

Speaker 2 Yep. Um, is really having a point of view.
Because, look, I don't consider myself an expert in eyewear or frames,

Speaker 2 but I went into an optics store just thinking I needed a pair of frames, but I met an expert.

Speaker 2 And within 20 minutes, he convinced me of that.

Speaker 2 So, what I would say to firms about their companies, about their customer experience teams and their call center teams, is don't just hire because they're $18 an hour.

Speaker 2 Do the interview process and dig a little deeper so they have a POV about what they're doing. Okay.
There's a point of view. I think Jet Blue is a great example when they first started that airline.

Speaker 2 Their interview process,

Speaker 2 they asked a question: tell me about a time that you helped somebody.

Speaker 2 And most of the people they hired were former firemen or firewomen, people that worked on ambulances.

Speaker 2 And the reason why is because if you can save a life or you could take somebody out of a burning building, you obviously can get them a customer, a hot cup of coffee on time

Speaker 2 and create a cool experience. So I would say, Lacey, is we get tend to get stuck on the cost center of experience rather than it being a revenue generator.

Speaker 2 And I would look and say, don't look at it as a cost center, look at it as a revenue generator.

Speaker 1 I want to get more into that. But first, I kind of like this idea around hiring.
You know, you talked about JetBlue's strategy for finding good team members.

Speaker 1 And I believe you shared something that was along the lines of like, if you're hiring, you're hiring someone at $20 an hour to be the voice of your brand, right? Like that's, that's powerful.

Speaker 1 And whenever I read that, I was like, oh, yeah, like, no kidding. I'm.
you know, one of the lower paid employees is actually representing my brand every single day.

Speaker 1 And so like, how can I ensure that they're empowered to represent me well and that they want to? So can you talk to me a little bit about that? Like, how do I actually empower frontline employees to

Speaker 1 be able to do like what Roost did for you?

Speaker 2 Yeah, look, I've got a good example in the book. And there's others that I've watched because I pay attention to this so closely.

Speaker 2 you know, it's that ability one is point of view. So, you know, if I always go to, when I ever go to a restaurant, I always say, you know, what do you recommend?

Speaker 2 And if they say, well, I haven't tried anything on the menu, that's an epic fail on the restaurant.

Speaker 2 Yeah. Because they should be sampling everything and have a point of view, not just, oh, get the lobster because it's the most expensive thing on the menu, right? Or what the chef's pushing.

Speaker 2 So I would say, is as you think about your customer experience teams, make sure they're experiencing it.

Speaker 2 When I worked at Edible Arrangements and I ran the call center over 500 people during the Valentine's and Mother's Day, we made sure that those employees enjoyed and tasted chocolate-covered strawberries and pineapple on a sick

Speaker 2 and apples dipped in caramel and chocolate. So they could say on the phone is, my absolute favorite is.
Okay.

Speaker 2 And that's that difference. So again, you know, $20 an hour, but you're asking that person to represent the overall brand.

Speaker 2 And so giving them a point of, making sure they have a point of view and then giving them the permission to go outside of the box, right? Of course, we have scripts and everything else.

Speaker 2 I remember at New York, New York Hotel in Las Vegas, I came in after a terrible flight. It is what it is.
You know, it happens when you travel. I was tired.
It was one in the morning. I had a 7 a.m.

Speaker 2 meeting. So I'm only going to be in the hotel for a couple hours.
And I walk up to the desk and the woman says, Welcome to New York. And I was like, hold the phone.
I just left New York.

Speaker 2 Now I'm back in New York. I don't even know where I am.
And I kind of had a little sense of humor left. So I just wanted to, you know, I figured I'd have a little fun.

Speaker 2 And she said, well, sir, hold on one second. And she came back in like 30 seconds.

Speaker 2 She said, sir, since you were in New York and now you're back in New York and you have no idea where you are, we've upgraded you to our largest suite.

Speaker 1 Oh my gosh.

Speaker 2 And you know, look, she didn't, you know, like she had to go five levels up to get permission. The hotel room was already empty.
It's six hours. I was going to be there for six hours.

Speaker 2 It was one night stay. So she made this experience incredible by just quickly on her feet, thinking about, okay, this customer's got a little bit of a sense of humor.

Speaker 2 I'm going to surprise and delight them, you know, and

Speaker 2 run with this. And I give her a lot of credit.
So, and I give that brand a lot of credit for giving not only that employee

Speaker 2 an ability to have a point of view, but also the authority to kind of make some decisions, right?

Speaker 2 That room probably was three, four, five thousand dollars, but for them, it was no cost because it was empty. It was going to be the cleaning charge, right?

Speaker 1 Yep. And I don't think it's just authority, right? It's also knowledge.
Like, I know how to make it so I can book this room for this customer.

Speaker 1 I've had some recent issues where I've called up customer service reps, and it feels like they don't even even know how their systems work. Like, oh, I don't know where this went.

Speaker 1 Oh, there's been a lot of blaming AI recently that I've noticed, where I call a customer service agent and they're like, oh, we have an AI

Speaker 1 algorithm that vets these things and I don't really know how it works. And I can't really tell you if or when, you know, we'll be able to solve it.
And it's like, what?

Speaker 1 You know, and it's not that person's fault that they don't know how it works, but it feels to me like there is a huge part of this that's education.

Speaker 1 So it's like, yes, giving people the autonomy to act, but if they don't even know how to act or what to act on or like how the systems work, then they can't do what, you know, you got to experience there in New York.

Speaker 2 Yeah, I think this is critical. I think training is a big component.

Speaker 2 My son just went to go work for a healthcare technology firm, Epic.

Speaker 2 And the founder, it's a privately held firm. So she doesn't have to worry about

Speaker 2 the stock and shareholders and shareholder value, et cetera. Super successful.

Speaker 2 I think she's 80 or 85, somewhere in that range. She's had the business for 45 years.

Speaker 2 And now it's a multi-billion dollar business, but she still teaches courses on her own for new employees around how the firm acts, what they believe in. Wow.

Speaker 2 You know, so it is pretty powerful.

Speaker 2 And so not only is my son having a great experience, but he's going to go into the workforce and go to customers all over the world, all over the country, and be able to create a better client experience, customer experience, because he understands what the mission of that business is.

Speaker 2 And he's been trained on all the systems. He has to take a test every week on different systems.
So that investment, it sounds like, oh my God, again, a cost.

Speaker 2 No, it's an investment in the future and profitability. She's the number one tech for healthcare.
And it's because she does that training, in my opinion.

Speaker 1 Yeah, oh, for sure. And it gives you the opportunity to really get your employees bought in, right?

Speaker 1 Because the best experience that I'm going to get from an employee is if they actually believe what they're selling or doing or offering.

Speaker 1 And so like that ability for your son to be able to have like front row seat with her, who's the, you know, founder, and be able to hear like, this is our story. This is why we do what we do.

Speaker 1 I think there's been a gap that I've seen recently in training where like people just don't get that going back to emotions, that emotional investment as employees anymore because they just go in, they do their job and they go back home.

Speaker 1 But you can't really deliver on a great customer experience if you aren't also emotionally invested as an employee.

Speaker 2 Yeah, that's right. And I think they, I don't want to get it wrong, but so I might and I apologize, but there's three edicts that they focus on.

Speaker 2 Wow customers, have fun and make money. I love that.
And I think it's so simple, but I think you need all three. Listen, we're not charities.
You have to make money to be able to wow customers.

Speaker 2 But first is about the customer and then it's about having fun.

Speaker 2 Because if that call call center person and that team is having fun doing what they do and they feel like they're contributing, it's a much different experience than somebody just, again,

Speaker 2 they came in, they were breathing. So you gave them the job and the phone to answer calls for your brand.

Speaker 2 I thought that was a really simple but easy way to understand business and what you should be trying to do.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Oh, yeah.
I love that. I love that.
Well, I want to get back a little bit back to this emotional,

Speaker 1 how emotions can drive repeat engagement is something that we've been talking about. Your prime example of flying to New York to still continue to buy from Ruth for your glasses, right?

Speaker 1 Did she pick out the ones that you have right now?

Speaker 2 Yeah, she picked these out. I mean, you know, I really don't have any choice or option.
I come in, she gives me the good news and I depart.

Speaker 2 I actually get to drive because I'm only in Connecticut, so I get to drive.

Speaker 2 It's still a couple hours.

Speaker 1 Yeah, no, no. But I think it's what's great is you're repeating.
It's that repeat engagement.

Speaker 1 Like you're going to keep going back to her because of the emotional experience that you had the first time you interacted with her.

Speaker 1 So my question for you is: how can brands create those types of emotionally resonant experiences,

Speaker 1 especially at scale? Because I think about like one-stop shop, like you know, you get to work with the owner of the glasses place, but how can a bigger brand do this at scale?

Speaker 2 At scale. Yeah, look at it.
At scale is tough. Even the JetBlue struggles with that, right?

Speaker 2 As they grew as an airline, it's harder to find people that worked in EMS or a fire or fire fireman to come and work.

Speaker 2 Scaling is challenging. Starbucks is struggling with it, right? You know, the barista of 15 years ago was a different experience than potentially you're looking at today.

Speaker 2 But the good news is, is brands like Starbucks is a good example, is they continue to retrench themselves and go back to the basics and then come back out.

Speaker 2 And they've done that a couple of times, right?

Speaker 2 They got mixed up in this idea of a lot of different menu items and hot foods. The next thing you know, you went in, you didn't smell coffee, you kind of smelled an egg sandwich, et cetera.

Speaker 2 And they retrenched, figured out a new mechanism to be able to deliver the experience, and with, you know, including the aroma of the store, and then came back out of it.

Speaker 2 So I would say, is: look, when you're doing things at scale, you're going to constantly have to come back to the basics and the core

Speaker 2 and then come back out and figure out how to grow from that.

Speaker 2 What tends to happen is

Speaker 2 you have this unique experience up front, and then you lose it as you go on because as you scale, you can't keep that mechanism. You know, the cost of the training is too much.

Speaker 2 You know, the ability to have a location to bring people together and teach a course is not efficient. You got to get rid of all that.
No, it worked for you. So continue.
Figure out a way to do it.

Speaker 2 You know, again, I don't want to spend too much time on Epic, but look at 16,000 employees, largest share. I think they have 80% of U.S.
consumers utilize their technology.

Speaker 2 It's not because it's the best best technology. Maybe it is, but it's probably because of the darn experience that they give the hospitals and their patients.
So I think it's critical.

Speaker 2 And she's been able to do that at scale. So I think you have to look at it and figure out how are you going to keep that core? And there may be costs associated with it, but the value is there.

Speaker 2 AI is

Speaker 2 a cost reduction opportunity in a lot of people's eyes. I look at as...
a cost expansion opportunity, right? A client expansion opportunity.

Speaker 2 How do you create revenue because of the AI, not reduce the cost? So, I would say, is make sure you understand what was the core. Another good example of someone that does it really well is Chewy.com.

Speaker 2 You know, they have continued to blow me away on how they train their teams and create that autonomy for those employees.

Speaker 2 A quick little story here, if I can, is I obviously wrote the book and didn't tell them about it, but the book is out. And I wrote a blog, a LinkedIn post about my cat getting this great treat from

Speaker 2 chewy.com

Speaker 2 two weeks later my book shows up at my house from chewy.com and i'm like well i already have this book i wrote it i don't need a copy yeah i don't need a copy i'm good um but i open up the cover and inside the book is a portrait of my cat painted oh wow Now they didn't go through multiple levels to get that done.

Speaker 2 A customer care person inside of their experience team figured out that was the right thing to do to wow me

Speaker 2 and created it, got it done, shipped it out, found the book, by the way. So, how did you even find that? You had to go on LinkedIn, you had to go on Amazon, think about published author.

Speaker 2 So, that's Lacey, that's the opportunity is, are you seriously caring about your client, your customer, whatever you call them?

Speaker 2 Because some people call them clients, some people call them customers, but are you really thinking about what they're looking for? Or is this just a transaction?

Speaker 1 Yeah, yeah. I do want to go back to something that you mentioned in that about how people are often thinking about cost reduction versus cost expansion, right? And I think that's so true.

Speaker 1 I mean, I, this is a mental issue that we all get into, like a mental game in our own heads, even personally with finance, where we're like, oh, I'm feeling stressed about money.

Speaker 1 So I'm going to try to save and sock away $100. Like, oh my gosh, I got to save my $100, right? Versus how can I make $100 more instead of like trying to lower how I live or whatever it is.
So think

Speaker 1 at a business scale, the same thing starts to occur where we're like, okay, we got to reduce costs.

Speaker 1 This thing is starting to cost too much money versus, oh, can we use these tools to actually grow cost?

Speaker 1 And so I think it's actually an important reframe, especially as we get into the AI conversation around like, oh, there's so many things that we can automate.

Speaker 1 These like we could quote unquote lower job count or we could do this.

Speaker 1 And I think the people that I've talked to that I've been the most inspired by are the ones that are not talking about how do we reduce headcount, but how do do we take the headcount we have and augment them so they can have more fulfilling careers and do the work that they want to do and not have to do this boring stuff that, of course, we can use technology to help automate.

Speaker 1 So, I would kind of like to go into AI since it is such a hot topic.

Speaker 1 What's your initial take and thoughts on adding AI into the mix as it relates to customer experience?

Speaker 2 Yeah, look,

Speaker 2 I am thrilled. I'm having so much fun, even personally, with

Speaker 2 AI, Agentic AI, all these, the ability to kind of almost really utilize it as a

Speaker 2 coworker.

Speaker 2 So, my personal experience has been incredible.

Speaker 2 And at ISG, where I am now as the president of research, we're tracking well over a thousand use cases of it being leveraged everywhere from customer experience through in different industries.

Speaker 2 And again, it's augmenting the work and allowing people to do a higher level skill, you know, where a human is required rather than doing some of the back-end work.

Speaker 2 And so I think there's a huge, huge opportunity for AI to create some efficiencies, optimization, and better experiences.

Speaker 2 Now, again, always when things are coming about, you've got to be careful about how fast you launch.

Speaker 2 And I've seen some cost reduction options, you know, GoDaddy, one of my favorite customer care experiences until about two years ago when they offshored their customer care.

Speaker 2 And they saved, you know, 10, 15, 20% by, you know, offshoring it. But for me as a customer, the experience was horrendous.

Speaker 2 And I can already see now as I call them, and I almost dropped them really, because it just, again, it's just so frustrating. I can see they're making a pivot back.
And that's going to be important.

Speaker 2 A good example of where I saw somebody offshoring in a different way was Autos, a large service provider out of France. I was on the phone with an executive literally just yesterday.

Speaker 2 Great conversation catching up. And he mentions, you know, we opened up this center of a thousand people in the Canary Islands.

Speaker 2 Now, the Canary Islands are Spanish and they're just off the coast of Africa. I'm like,

Speaker 2 you got to tell me more. Why would you have done that? That just seems like an odd thing.
Why not Asia, Philippines, you know, India, all these other places where you see this outsourcing?

Speaker 2 And he says, the reason why is because a huge number of Europeans from all over Europe end up retiring at a very early age, 45, 50, in the Canary Islands.

Speaker 2 And then they want to do something and add value. And guess what? They speak four to six languages.
Wow. Okay.
Wow. And so they're adept to being able to handle all these different calls.

Speaker 2 And they love the idea of coming in and being part of something and then going back and enjoying the beaches of the Canary Islands.

Speaker 2 So I just thought that was a unique approach to saying, can we, instead of just offshoring, what's the best place to offshore? So

Speaker 2 I like this idea. You can do these things.
You can utilize AI, but in a thoughtful way, what are you trying to accomplish? If it's just saving 20%, you're probably going at it the wrong way.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Yeah.
I mean, like save a penny and then lose your customer trust forever. I mean, you almost lost, GoDaddy almost lost you, right? Because

Speaker 1 of this, right?

Speaker 1 And I've been seeing that with some of the AI stumbles is like, oh, we're going to completely automate this thing, or you're going to call, and now I have to go through so many hoops to actually get a human on the phone.

Speaker 1 And then, and then whenever I get them on the phone, they actually don't even know what I need, even though I just explained it to this thing.

Speaker 1 Like, there are so many, and, and then I've had the opposite experience where I've communicated with the AI chat bot and it's been great.

Speaker 1 And then I do need to level it up to a human and they have all the context that they need. And the human is like, oh, you don't even need to repeat anything.
I got it all. Don't worry.

Speaker 1 And here's how we're going to fix it. And it's like a 60 second.
two minute phone conversation with them and it's resolved and I feel great.

Speaker 1 So it's like I've seen both sides of it where it's used poorly and used really, really well.

Speaker 1 And I think, yeah, companies just need to be kind of cautious and thoughtful, as you say, about how they roll it out.

Speaker 1 Like, how is this going to actually impact customer experience and customer trust in the long haul? Because if I roll this out and it does fumble, like it's going to take a lot to get it back.

Speaker 1 Like, we're talking about cost centers. I think rolling out AI and it fumbling will actually be more of a cost increase than a cost reduction.

Speaker 2 Well, yeah, you nailed it, Lacey. And I'll give you a good example.
Clarna is a pay, buy now, pay later system in Sweden. Yeah, and in 2022, 23, somewhere in that range, early AI, early AI.

Speaker 2 They said they were going to reduce their staff by 700, leveraging AI.

Speaker 1 I remember this. I actually remember this.
Yeah.

Speaker 2 Yeah, it was a total train wreck, a total train wreck. And in 2025, they said we're, you know, we're reverting back and don't get a happy mix.
You know, have some AI, et cetera.

Speaker 2 You know, good examples are Sephora, you know, leveraging AI to figure out skin tone and what to wear. Like that's really cool.

Speaker 2 So, I think we're in the early days. Okay.

Speaker 2 I think some brands will figure it out faster.

Speaker 2 Again, we're at ISG. I mean, our whole job is trying to help firms figure out what's a practical approach to leveraging technology.
And clearly, everywhere we're talking now, it's about AI.

Speaker 2 But it's got to be done in a set format to make sure you accomplish it correctly.

Speaker 1 Is there anything else you guys are seeing in all the research that you have been doing?

Speaker 1 whether it's around AI or just trends in general that you think are important for business leaders to be thinking about going forward?

Speaker 2 I'll give you something that I think would shock your audience, and it's pretty impactful. So, we do a lot of research on our own deal flow.

Speaker 2 We do about 20 billion a year for large firms, everything from the Marriotts and Carnivals of the world to the American Express's Bank of America.

Speaker 2 And one of the things that we found as a data point that was pretty shocking to me is first impressions and how important they are.

Speaker 2 So, when a service provider is presenting to our client, whoever that might be, the end client, enterprise client, if the first impression does not meet expectation, it's a 0% chance of them winning the deal.

Speaker 2 Wow.

Speaker 2 Not like 20%, not 10%.

Speaker 2 No one's ever done it. I look at this, Lacey, and I don't think it just relates to large deals.
These deals are $25 million to a billion dollars, but in tech. But Lacey, this is the same for

Speaker 2 Somebody that's even a loyal brand person, there's other data out there, and I might have the number a little off, but, and I think it was PWC, but 30% of the time, if a loyal customer has a bad experience, they'll leave that brand.

Speaker 1 Yeah.

Speaker 2 So not only first impressions, but long-term impressions are options today, Lacey. I can I can buy paint anywhere.
I can buy frames anywhere.

Speaker 2 So if you don't give me a good experience, I'll just go somewhere else. It's not a problem.
I won't even tell you about it. Okay.

Speaker 2 So I think there's this opportunity in the research that we see for ourselves in our deal flow is first impressions 100% matter and have a huge impact.

Speaker 2 So how is your brand creating that first impression with the customer base and the prospect base? Huge. That would be a huge thing to look at.

Speaker 1 That is really interesting that even like from an enterprise level, that matters so much because I would think from a consumer level of I can literally go buy shoes or glasses anywhere.

Speaker 1 Like, of course it makes sense. Like, why would I waste my time with you?

Speaker 1 But from an enterprise level, you only have so many options, especially when it comes to certain types of software that you can purchase from.

Speaker 1 So it's interesting to me that even at that level, the impression matters so much that it's like a complete no in my head.

Speaker 1 I mean, and it's just how human brains work, right? Like from a psychology standpoint, like the first thing I hear is likely the thing I'm going to believe for the rest of my life, even if it's wrong.

Speaker 1 And even if you tell me it's wrong a thousand times over, it's just the way our brains are wired, which is, you know, the reason why like misinformation is so bad is because if I read that first, then I'm predispositioned to think that thing.

Speaker 1 But like from a brand's perspective, understanding, wait, what do people actually think about when they see us?

Speaker 1 And that comes back to everything we've been talking about and like the marketing and sales influence.

Speaker 1 Like if my first experience of you is some sort of marketing campaign, it's not even like that I've spoken to you, but I see something and that's a bad first impression.

Speaker 1 Then I'm not even going to engage with you at a further step. So I think that's really interesting.

Speaker 2 Yeah, and customers will walk out. I mean, I was at the beach this weekend with my family up in Westerly, Rhode Island, and we walked in for the first time to a cafe.

Speaker 2 I was super excited because I always like to find, I'm a foodie, so I like to find new places. New cafe.
We went in, the floor was kind of a little slick.

Speaker 2 People were talking behind the counter, not talking to the customers. I walked out.
We didn't buy a thing. Yep.
Yeah. You know, so first impression.

Speaker 1 John, I had a conversation yesterday, actually with another John. So another John that we were interviewing.

Speaker 1 And he was talking about how in this like future where I'm doing most of my research on, you know, LLMs, right? Like I'm going to Chat GPT to be like, where can I find glasses?

Speaker 1 Or what's the best brand to get jeans from? Or, you know, or if I'm an enterprise, you know, what's the best, you know, B2B SaaS tool, you name it, that I'm looking for, right?

Speaker 2 Yep.

Speaker 1 So a lot of the research is being done now on these tools. And I may never actually end up on your brand's website.
Like I may never ever click through and actually see your brand.

Speaker 1 I might just make that buying decision. Like after I've compared ABC option on Chat GPT, I'm like, oh, I know I want to do that.
I'm ready to go buy it, sales call.

Speaker 2 That's it. Right.

Speaker 1 So as we get to this place where like more and more of this research is being done off the brand's website in a place that you don't really control as a business, how like important do you think actual brand experience is going to matter?

Speaker 1 You know what I'm, you know what I mean? Like if I, when I do land on your your website, how important is it that I'm actually very interested in what is appearing?

Speaker 1 Or if I do walk into your store, how important is that in-person experience now that I have no other touch points with you besides that experience?

Speaker 2 It's going to be crucial. And this goes to the ideas of,

Speaker 2 you know, what are brands going to need to do to stay relevant and up to date? And,

Speaker 2 you know, because look, remember, the speed at which brands go out is astonishing, right?

Speaker 2 Before, it might take two decades before, you know, the buggy whip person that sold whips got it, went out of business because of cars.

Speaker 2 But today, you know, Blockbuster was out in, you know, less than two years because of Netflix and other challenges. And then Netflix was almost out because of Hulu.

Speaker 2 And then they reached, you know, they saved themselves pretty quickly. So the speed at which things are happening,

Speaker 2 I think, is crucial to keep up with. What you want to do is you want to create that, again, that trust factor and how you make them feel.

Speaker 2 a great mentor to me uh iron you mark uh he was the ceo former ceo of bergdorf goodman and he started out as a doorman way back in the day and ended up becoming the ceo of bergdorf goodman wow took and took the brand i's such a great mentor i feel very lucky that i was i was fortunate enough to know him for many many years um but you know he said he says john it's how you make your customers feel because they can buy jeans, they can buy the dress anywhere.

Speaker 2 But how do I make them feel in the store? How do I make them feel after, right? Just think about Ruth and how she made me feel in the store and then afterwards with my glasses.

Speaker 2 So now all of a sudden, I can go think about buying that pair of jeans, but in my head, I'm like, I'm going to go to Bergdorf because I know the experience is going to be great.

Speaker 2 I'll give a good example. I'm wearing this headset that I absolutely love, but I did all the research utilizing AI.

Speaker 2 And then once I found out which one was the best headset, where did I go? I went to Best Buy because I trust Best Buy

Speaker 2 and I want to buy it from Best Buy. So I think, Lacey, it's creating that awareness and that brand trust and that empathy for me as a consumer that I know that's where I'm going to go shop.

Speaker 2 I'm going to shop at Best Buy. So I think you've got to do that.
Or I could have bought it anywhere, right? I'm sure I could have gone to Amazon, you know,

Speaker 2 or

Speaker 2 directly to the

Speaker 2 brand's website and bought it there. But they've created something with me that is now sticky.

Speaker 2 So, how do you create that with your customers? Okay.

Speaker 2 Airline, same thing.

Speaker 2 I have lots of options to fly with ISG, but I always lean towards Delta because I know experience-wise, it's spectacular.

Speaker 1 Yep. Yep.

Speaker 1 There's something that you also shared in your book about simplicity. And so, getting into that as part of our decision-making process, right?

Speaker 1 Like, the reason why you might go to a best buy is you know exactly what you're going to expect. Like, I can walk in, I know I'm going to find it easily.

Speaker 1 someone will help me, I can buy it, we're done, right? Like, it's not, it's not going to be a complicated process.

Speaker 1 So, could you tell me a little bit more about your thoughts on how important simplicity is in the customer experience?

Speaker 2 We don't need to always, um, a word that seems to be overused in customer experience is delight.

Speaker 2 Um, you know, that's a word that's like, you know, what does it really mean? Um, of course, we're going to delight our customers. All customers are really actually after is the cause and effect.

Speaker 2 I need a headset,

Speaker 2 get get all the friction out possible to make it as easy as possible to get to the final result. So it's, I don't think we have to overcomplicate things.

Speaker 2 I think it's a very cause and effect type of mechanism, right? It's a consumer has a need, you have an item that will help satisfy that need. What is the simplest way to get that

Speaker 2 need met with your brand or your solution? And I, we over sometimes we overengineer that whole, that whole process, that whole experience in itself. And it's a distraction for the consumer, frankly.

Speaker 1 You know, I have a point of, I wouldn't say disagreement, but I would like to hear your thoughts on this.

Speaker 1 We interviewed someone who was sharing about how good friction can be in the sense that it makes the customer feel like I've accomplished something and it gives them a little like extra little mental juice of like, I'm the hero of this story, right?

Speaker 1 I got to choose. So like giving people a little bit of options.
Like by definition, that is a little bit of friction because it's not just like I can click and buy.

Speaker 1 but now that i have optionality um to some extent not overwhelmingly so i i feel like i'm putting myself into this decision a little bit more and so it is like and maybe we just have different definitions of friction but i think there is some good friction that actually makes people a little bit more invested in what they're doing and maybe more likely to share i mean going back to your example of buying your first pair of glasses with Ruth, there was some friction in that in the sense that she kind of like pushed back on you.

Speaker 1 She gave you some options. And it could have been as simple as you go and grab what you want and leave.

Speaker 1 So I just wonder if there is a place for some

Speaker 1 complexity in order to make someone have that emotional response.

Speaker 2 I love that you're challenging this. And there's a chapter in my book about being a friction hunter.

Speaker 2 The thing about friction is it never goes away 100%. There's always friction.
It's kind of like radiation. There's a half-life of radiation.
It never goes away, right? It's just.

Speaker 2 And this is the same thing as the key is, is what components of friction, and I'll give you a good example. This is Amazon.

Speaker 2 Think about how frictionless the process is. Now, to your point, is even when I say, oh, I want to buy something, it gives me this is the best choice, most popular.

Speaker 2 This is the one with the most stars, and then these are all the others, et cetera. So I still, to your point, have a choice to make.
I guess I would define that to your point as friction.

Speaker 2 But the process of getting to the end result and the speed at which I can get that item is they took a lot of friction out of the process.

Speaker 2 Remember, before, okay, if somebody here remembers Sears Robux, right, the Amazon of the past, right? They you could buy a house from Sears Robot, right? Wow, yeah, um, yeah, you could.

Speaker 2 I mean, so, but think about what the process was. You got the Christmas catalog, it was 700 pages long.
As a kid, I used to open it up and go through and circle all the toys.

Speaker 2 Lots of friction because I couldn't get the toy, I had to circle them and everything else. Then I had to go to a location that was miles away, not a driver.

Speaker 2 So I had to get my parents and convince them to take me there. And then I had to see if it was in stock, et cetera.
Lots of friction.

Speaker 2 Why Sears struggled was they didn't pay attention to that friction. There were choices.
Great. That's the friction I would want maybe.

Speaker 2 But Amazon came along and said, hey, hold the phone. If you've got the internet or a phone, I'm going to allow you to pick what you want.

Speaker 2 I've got the same millions of items that Sears has, but if you want it tomorrow, I can actually get it to you tomorrow. And that is a friction hunter.

Speaker 2 So simplicity, blockbuster, having to go to the store, remembering to rewind, you know, all these inconveniences, all this friction. And Netflix says, no, we're going to mail you the C Ds.

Speaker 2 Remember, that's how it started, Netflix. They would mail you the CDs in the mail, then you would return them and get a new one right away.
And then obviously the friction was still too much.

Speaker 2 So they reduced it because of Hulu and made it streaming. So I think we always have to consider being a friction hunter.
I'm not sure choice would be something we'd want to take out necessarily.

Speaker 2 I think you're right. You want the hero of the story to be the customer, but you want it to be a great experience.
You want them to feel satisfied. You wanted to make it feel easy

Speaker 2 that they made that choice. Does that make sense? Or can we agree on friction?

Speaker 1 Love that. Love that.
Yeah, absolutely. Now my greatest friction with Netflix is what to watch.
That is called choice overload.

Speaker 1 There's too much.

Speaker 2 What do I do? Yeah, it's a little overwhelming. It's a little overwhelming.

Speaker 1 Kind of like they give me the the choices up front or you've watched this so you might like these that's helping me a little bit yeah i know i know even then though i'm like i could just keep scrolling like i i can't i've lost count of the amount of hours i've spent just like looking for something to watch and then i decide

Speaker 1 and i just turn off the tv because i'm too overwhelmed with the options that's crazy oh see they got work to do yeah apparently i just need them to spoon feed me like five options and that's it

Speaker 1 well well john i want to go into personalization a little bit because i know this is something that you you have some thoughts on.

Speaker 1 As we get into this future with way more technology support, I think there's opportunities for brands to really create more personalized experiences.

Speaker 1 But I also like start to question that because I'm like, if you get too personalized, do we like lose the

Speaker 1 brand feel? You know, like, am I having a totally different experience than you know, even my husband when I experience this brand? And does that lose something about what the brand is?

Speaker 1 So I'm just curious how your thoughts on personalization, especially as it relates to like the next 12 months of what people are going to be sort of investing in and looking at.

Speaker 2 Personalization is a, is a

Speaker 2 slippery slope that you have to be careful because it can get creepy if you get too personalized. Like, hey, I saw you were looking at these five websites, so you might like this.

Speaker 2 You've got to kind of be careful about that because we have, we want to have our own security and personal feel.

Speaker 2 Jack Mitchell, the owner of Mitchell, another mentor of mine, he owns clothing stores, very high-end, very high-end clothing stores. And he wrote a book called Hug Your Customer.

Speaker 2 And one of the things he did from a personalization perspective, and this is going back 30, 40 years, is he made sure his sales teams knew those customers and then wrote net notes.

Speaker 2 Before there was Salesforce or a real true CRM system, he built a CRM system with an IBM mainframe. I know it sounds crazy, but it was 35, 40 years ago.

Speaker 2 And when I walked into the store at Jack's store,

Speaker 2 somebody would approach me and say, John, welcome back. How are you? How's Sabrina, your daughter? And it was just engaging because they had those notes there.
I really love that personalization.

Speaker 2 I felt like they took time to get to know me. They knew what size my clothing was.
They knew the colors I liked.

Speaker 2 They knew that I couldn't really, I didn't really want to spend, you know, $1,000 on a blazer. So they knew there was a $500 set of blazers that I would enjoy.

Speaker 2 I think you've got to, as a brand, and again, this comes back to scale, right? How do you scale something like this?

Speaker 2 You've got to find ways to leveraging technology to help create that personalization and then that human interaction, if it's required, if it's in a store like Sephora, let me use AI to find the tone, but maybe then I need an associate to create that unique experience that makes me want to come back.

Speaker 2 So, where is it going to go in the next 12 months? AI is going to have a huge impact. The acceleration of AI in the marketplace, where it was even just 12 months prior to this.

Speaker 2 So, if you think about the speed at which it's going, 12 months from now,

Speaker 2 you're going to see some really sophisticated, some really useful useful tools inside of ai creating airline reservations um imagine you know when i go to look for a marriott hotel i know where my meetings are imagine if ai was able to start to help me say pick this hotel because it's the least traffic to get to your destination that you're going there for these are the things i'm going to see coming from a personalization perspective coming moving forward is just that extra little step that i'm doing as a human and again remember it's related to reducing that friction component.

Speaker 2 That personalization gets me to my answer faster, right? Gets me to where I wanted to get to quicker.

Speaker 2 Hopefully that helps.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Well, and I think about

Speaker 1 personal AI assistance, because like what you're describing there with the, you know, I have my meetings in this location, find me a hotel.

Speaker 1 That is something that like a chat GPT could feasibly do really well right now. So I'm just curious like how brands are going to be able to tie in what they have to offer to these tools.

Speaker 1 So that way, you know, because I am going to be using probably a personal AI system of some form or fashion. I feel like in the next year or two years,

Speaker 1 I'll have something that's for me, like whether it's GPT or some other AI tool out there that just orders my groceries and they show up to my door and I don't have to think about it.

Speaker 1 You know what I mean?

Speaker 1 Like there's going to be a lot of these like personal assistants, AI assistants out there, but those are like separate companies than the actual like HEB that I'm ordering it from.

Speaker 1 So I'm curious how these companies are going to play together with these tools. Like, how, how are we going to be able to do some data sharing?

Speaker 1 Again, I was talking to a gentleman yesterday about this and he was saying that, like,

Speaker 1 how, you know, if I go onto a, let's say, like, American Eagles website or whatever, like, name your clothing brands website, and they know that I have choice fatigue, like, like I was just sharing with you with Netflix, right?

Speaker 1 Like, I, if I have too many choices, I'm not going to get anything. I'm just going to leave.

Speaker 1 If they knew that about me because of my like way that I interact with and engage with an LLM, then they might present a different website to me specifically.

Speaker 1 But it's like, how do we get to that point where there is that kind of data sharing? That's just like a big question mark in my head.

Speaker 2 So look,

Speaker 2 no different than 5G and the technology around 5G. When 5G first came out, my big statement was, hey, listen, all 5G is going to do is allow bad ideas to move quicker.

Speaker 2 If you don't get it right at the core, just bad things will happen faster.

Speaker 2 And now with technology and Agentic AI and where things are going, without a core foundation of that data, bad decisions will now move faster.

Speaker 2 So, you know, we're going to make really bad decisions based on

Speaker 2 inadequate data from the core. So I agree, Lacey.
I think, and it's funny how things never really change. This has been

Speaker 2 the problem for 30 years is when I was in consumer packaged goods and technology for category management, the big issue was the spheric data sets and normalizing them.

Speaker 2 Well, here we are 40 years later, 35 years later, and what are we trying to do? Normalize the sparring data sets. Yeah.

Speaker 2 So it's the same age-old problem. The challenge now, the opportunity now is that the ability to normalize data has gotten a little easier.

Speaker 2 Cloud is going to help us out, obviously.

Speaker 2 But there's still work to be done. And without that core, I don't know if we'll 100% satisfy that piece in 12 months, but we're going to certainly get better.

Speaker 2 But that is going to be the linchpin here is the normalization of those disparate data sets that allows that

Speaker 2 full decision-making process up at the top. Without that, you're still just getting,

Speaker 2 you know, almost the right answer.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Oh, for sure.
For sure. Well, John, I know that we're coming up here to the end of our conversation, and I would like to talk about some advice or trends that you're seeing for leaders.

Speaker 1 So one thing that I wanted to ask you is, what's a misconception that you think people have about CX that you would like to, you know, throw out there and say, no, like I think this opposite thing.

Speaker 2 Customer experience isn't a cost center. That's what I'll say first.
So don't treat it as a cost center. We've talked about that already.

Speaker 2 Stay away from the words like the light. Stay away from, instead of focusing on NPS scores and CSAT scores, okay?

Speaker 2 you know, numbers, focus on customer effort scores.

Speaker 2 What is the effort it takes for a customer to engage with your brand that is far more interesting and compelling to me uh not only as a consumer but somebody in technology is if i could really understand utilizing ai or other technology how to create less effort for that customer to engage with my brand to your point lacey engaging with that american eagles site and helping me make decisions yeah so i would focus less on mps c set scores and more on that customer effort score yeah oh that's great that's great and then what trend are are you betting on that's not AI?

Speaker 1 Not AI

Speaker 1 for the next year.

Speaker 2 That's really interesting. Okay.
So I would say,

Speaker 2 look, there's always a backlash on trends. You know, if the parents are super techie, then the next generation wants to do something opposite.

Speaker 2 I think we're getting back to this next spending generation group where the wealth will be

Speaker 2 is going to look for authentic,

Speaker 2 authentic engagement.

Speaker 2 And I think it's going to be in person. My son's got rid of Instagram.
Okay.

Speaker 2 My daughter, even though she's in PR,

Speaker 2 she doesn't spend a lot of time there. Okay.
No Facebook whatsoever, no social link. She's not trying to live a FOMO experience.
She's trying to live authentic experiences by going to Trivia Night.

Speaker 2 And it's not just her, but it's this group of friends. So if I was a brand and I'm thinking about this is think about Trader Joe's, right?

Speaker 2 Least technical experience you can come up with, you know, using markers to create their signs, but look at the audience in that room that are shopping there. Okay.

Speaker 2 So I think you're going to see a trend towards coming back to authentic experiences, and that means in-person experiences. This group grew up with COVID.
They were on flat screens for two years plus.

Speaker 2 So they're ready to get together in person.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Yeah.
And I think this extends beyond just the younger generation too.

Speaker 1 I think everyone is a little bit hungry for these more like authentic human engagements, especially as we start to see, you know, LinkedIn posts after LinkedIn posts written by AI, which I don't don't mind AI supporting with copywriting and editing, but if your ideas are just generated that way, you know, I think, I think a lot of people are getting burnt out on the generative AI scene.

Speaker 1 And I, and I definitely agree with you that in the next couple months, year, two years, like people are going to be just hungry and starving for like, I know that this idea that you have is truly your idea.

Speaker 1 And I think people are going to start listening to more conversations like this, you know, long form podcasts. We've already seen that grow in the last several years.

Speaker 1 And like my brother is 24 and he spends more time listening to like a Rogan interview than he would ever like binge watching TV or engaging with something online.

Speaker 1 So I think people are just going to continue to like look for more content that is, you can't. can't fake that.
Like we can't fake this conversation we're having right now.

Speaker 2 Yeah. Yeah.
I think the authentic

Speaker 2 personalization, the real conversations, the real posts.

Speaker 2 The last post, one of the last posts I did was me crossing the street in Bangalore two weeks ago and in India and the lessons I learned about business, having some fun with it.

Speaker 2 41,000 people engaged with the

Speaker 2 post. Wow.
You know, and it's the reason why, because it was authentic. It wasn't, you know, hey, look at me at my birthday.
It's perfect.

Speaker 2 It was an authentic conversation about, you know, the complexity of street crossing.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Yeah.
I know. I love that.
Well, is there any final advice you would like to leave our audience with?

Speaker 2 That's a big one. I would say, look,

Speaker 2 again, going back to Ira,

Speaker 2 one of the big things he always talked about was never start with no.

Speaker 2 So as you think about customer experience, how do you train your teams to not start with no and really have that empathy?

Speaker 2 I think that's not just for customer experience, but that's employee experience as general life experience.

Speaker 2 You know, somebody says, hey, I want to take a trip around the world, don't start with no. Ask questions, be curious.

Speaker 2 so i would say don't start with no be curious ted lasso you know uh not judgmental i would say those would probably be my lessons they're not authentic because those are from iron emark and from ted lasso but those would be the the lessons i would say i would leave you with no life is so much more fun if you think about it from like how can i make this happen how can i do that and like make it way more playful than no no we can't do that no we don't offer that i mean definitely a totally different frame of mind to live in i love that thank you john

Speaker 1 well if people want to follow you they're like hey I was so interested in what John had to share. Where should they find you?

Speaker 1 And or ISG research, like, oh, and definitely your book, like let them know where they can find your book.

Speaker 2 Yeah. So you can find the book on Amazon, obviously.
So that's on Amazon. Easy to find there.
You can track us, track me personally on LinkedIn. I'd love to connect with people.
I love.

Speaker 2 hearing other people's ideas and stories. I'm passionate about customer experience.
Those are probably be the two best areas.

Speaker 2 And of course, certainly if you're a large enterprise and you really want to to dig into this a little more deeply and on the tech side and understand where you're going next, then certainly reach out to ISG, me at ISG, and I'm certainly happy to get you to the right people at our firm.

Speaker 1 Awesome. Amazing.
Well, everyone listening, we're dropping that link to his book in the show notes. And John's LinkedIn will also be linked up there.

Speaker 1 So please DM him and, you know, let him know how you like this episode. Thanks so much, John, for joining.

Speaker 2 Thanks, Lacey. Bye-bye.