Effective Customer Experience Management is about understanding and measuring how clients and consumers ‘intuitively’ feel as they touch all moments of an experience. Yet in order to understand ‘intuition’ we need to find some measure that does not depend on self-report, surveys and the like. Instead we used a heartbeat monitor; testing intuitive responses by looking at consumer stress’ rates over a 5 hour experience shopping and eating in Milton Keynes shopping center.
The results are seen below:
We have highlighted the key findings on this chart.
Point A: at rest, at home
Point B: getting into the car (with 2 children under 4)
Point C: covers the range of activities within the shopping center
Point D: covers the period going home
Point E: at rest, at home
What this demonstrates is:
1. Even though verbal reports may state a restaurant environment as relaxing, at no stage was this at the same level (and hence holding the same intuitive association) as the at rest, at home stage. This is an important finding for experience designers as customers may say they are relaxed but in fact are more stressed than they themselves realize.
2. The beginning point of C was quite interesting. This was at a low level comparatively and demonstrated the entry point to a destination – note the peak just before this demonstrating the stress of finding a parking spot. Clearly, the feeling of relief at arrival and the anticipation of ‘getting to where we need to go to’ after a stressful journey is important and impacts on the memory of the event; an important point when we consider the start of an experience.
3.At stage D, the anticipation of leaving and getting home leads to a similar sense of relaxation. Here end points matter!
By Steven Walden | Published: September 1, 2009
For the restaurant and the shopping center the lack of a sense of relaxation is important – even though this was a quiet Sunday. Using such techniques can therefore shine a light on the intuitive side of an experience, those parts that consumers cannot tell you about yet are peak moments that influence how we think and feel.
The question for any business is do you understand the heart rate of your experience?
By Steven Walden, Head of Research
By Steven Walden | Published: September 1, 2009