As energy markets around the world rapidly change, incumbent operators face a host of challenges, from inflation and price volatility to talent scarcity. One of their biggest challenges is also one of the most urgent: building a positive customer experience (CX). This challenge has become even more critical as incumbent operators face new competition from suppliers who offer cheaper rates, sustainable products and an unwavering focus on superior customer experience.
So, how can operators stay competitive and build excellent customer experiences? They must reinvent the CX journey by providing integrated experiences built on trust and simplicity and reflecting the issues that matter most to customers.
Tech-led and insular investments have amassed a huge CX debt
Customers have had poor experiences with utilities organizations. Consequently, utilities rarely spark joy for them. Their most frequent interactions with operators relate to troubleshooting or billing concerns. Such issues are inevitable, and customers see them as necessities, occasionally even as nuisances. This often leads to customers not having a positive emotional engagement with utilities.
As a result, the choice of a supplier usually comes down to price, and customers expect service to be poor, no matter which company they settle for. Over the last five years, customer satisfaction with their utility digital experiences has remained stagnant while their tolerance for bad experiences decreases with every new digitally born service. Digital leaders give them carefully crafted experiences that continue to raise the bar. Consequently, customers expect efficient and pleasant experiences in all areas of their lives—and that includes utilities.
The mounting pressure of pace and demands on operators has led to years of short-sighted decisions with risk-averse, slow and mostly incremental CX improvements. New channels and new technologies have been layered onto each other, and this layering has restricted change and innovation. The result: a massive CX debt and an inefficient and ineffective patchwork of customer and employee experiences that frustrate everyone.
CX debt occurs in nine areas
Utility customers struggle with nine areas of engagement, ranging from their billing experiences to the availability of pain-free digital tools. While these are areas of frustration for customers, utility operators should view these areas as opportunities for improvement that they can focus on when designing customer journeys.