Motivate Employees by Empowering Customer Success

03.16.21

By Jeannie Votaw, Senior Strategy and Implementation Manager & Sam Herzing, Strategy & Implementation Lead, Gongos, Inc.

Reid Hoffman, LinkedIn CEO, has said that “no matter how brilliant your mind or strategy, if you’re playing a solo game, you’ll always lose out to a team.” Leaders intuitively know that mobilizing their employees toward shared goals is essential to business success. But what happens when what makes executives tick, isn’t what makes employees tick?

Historically, most companies frame their goals through the lens of Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) – metrics that focus on revenue, profitability, and operational efficiency. While top-down alignment on these metrics can encourage employees to act in service of business goals, especially when KPI performance is tied to accountability and incentives, the age-old corporate pressure to perform better, faster, cheaper lacks emotional resonance. And that disconnect matters. According to the Ceridian Pulse of Talent report, 49% of employees either don’t think they make an impact on company goals or, more commonly, don’t understand what impact they make, and this half of employees is more unhappy and more likely to leave their company. Creating a connection to goals underpins and empowers employee commitment and is directly correlated with business success.

The good news is, rallying employees around a more motivating cause doesn’t require abandoning KPIs. Rather, companies must augment internally focused goals with an outside-in view that provides insight on what creates value for customers. The answer: Customer Performance Indicators (CPIs), a set of universally desired outcomes that represent the science of how brands express and deliver what matters most to their customers. Gongos’ patent-pending Value Exchange Model connects Customer Lifetime Value (CLV -a primary KPI) with CPIs and proves moving the needle on CPIs enables organizations to gain more value from their customers.

The Power of Mobilizing Employees Around Critical CPIs

Imagine a hospitality company that is striving to increase their Customer Lifetime Value by increasing the number of stays per guest. Employees across the organization may understand and agree this will drive revenue, but apart from teams whose actions directly affect this metric, like marketing, promotions, and booking, it can be challenging for employees to understand how to create impact from their role.

What if the company understood that the customer outcome (CPI) that most drives repeat-stays was guests “feeling a sense of belonging”? Now the call to action for employees is, “How can we create a sense of belonging for our guests”. This added customer outcome context becomes a powerful catalyst in reframing a company goal to be more intuitive to employees across the organization.

Frontline staff could then be trained and empowered to engage guests in ways that increase their sense of belonging, while design and experience functions think holistically about optimizing the guest experience and environment. Marketing, sales, and community engagement efforts could center on the broader value that the company seeks to deliver to its guests. Even back-office functions could more easily connect their work to its external impact, from how HR creates a culture of belonging internally, to how Finance invests in capabilities that improve the company’s capacity to create a sense of belonging.

Ultimately, the business is still focusing on improving CLV. But it has given its employees a more accessible, human-centered ask, driving more impactful actions that will ultimately improve outcomes that are valued by the business and by customers.

Reframe Your Business Outcomes Through the Lens of Customer Outcomes

Finding New Motivators for Your Employees

How can you start to reframe your company’s goals through a customer lens to better motivate your employees?

  1. Identify the CPIs that drive growth for your business.
  1. Build employee understanding of the CPIs.
  1. Encourage behaviors that focus on improving CPIs.

For employees to help deliver your business goals, systems must be put into place to encourage and reward their behaviors and contributions.

What drives executives and what drives employees may not be as different as you think–ultimately, it is simply wanting to create meaningful impact. The Value Exchange Model unlocks the potential for companies to reframe their business goals in a more motivating way. By creating a path between CLV and CPIs, companies can now harness the power of their collective employees to create meaningful impact for their customers, in turn, drive value for their company.

As published in HR Daily Advisor.

Click here to watch Camille Nicita & David Robbins further explain the customer-centered growth possible through CPIs.