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The Customer of the Future

10 Guiding Principles for Winning Tomorrow's Business

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About this listen

With emerging technology transforming customer expectations, it's important to keep a laser focus on the experience companies provide their customers. Tomorrow's customers need to be targeted today!

Customer experience futurist Blake Morgan outlines ten easy-to-follow customer experience guidelines that integrate emerging technologies with effective strategies to combat disconnected processes, silo mentalities, and a lack of buyer perspective.

The Customer of the Future explains how today's customers are already demanding frictionless, personalized, on-demand experiences from their products and services, and companies that don't adapt to these new expectations won't last. This book prepares your organization for these increas­ing demands by helping you do the following:

  • Learn the ten defining strategies for a customer experience-focused company.
  • Implement new techniques to shift the entire company from being product-focused to being customer-focused.
  • Gain insights through case studies and examples on how the world's most innovative companies are offering new and compelling customer experiences.

Tomorrow's customers will insist on experiences that make their lives significantly easier and better. Craft a leadership development and culture plan to create lasting change at your organization!

Business Communication Career Success Consumer Behavior & Market Research Customer Service Forecasting & Strategic Planning Management & Leadership Marketing & Sales Business Marketing Career Technology Artificial Intelligence Management Computer Science Innovation Leadership
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This book opens with a ridiculous metaphor about blind cave fish in Mexico. It’s interesting, no doubt, but the author’s complete misunderstanding, or at least misrepresentation, of Darwinism is undermining the whole book for me.

If the author is going to use a metaphor to underpin their argument, it had better be solid. When the argument is built upon a flawed metaphor, there’s nothing for it argument to stand on.

These blind cave fish did not _choose_ to lose their sight in order to survive, evolution just does not work like that. You cannot base an argument on this; you cannot say that humans need to be more like this fish, and be prepared to let go of the status quo in order to evolve. It’s complete nonsense.

I’m only 10 minutes in, and the author continues to refer back to these blind cave fish, It’s making it very difficult to listen further.

Ridiculous metaphor undermines the point being made

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