Mastering Executive Engagement
What’s Holding You Back? (Part 2)

In Part 1 of this article, we outlined two struggles to mastering executive engagement.

Struggle #1: Engage
Struggle #2: Realize the Value

And we introduced the first five barriers to engagement. Those that keep B2Bs from earning C-level customers’ time, attention, and deep interest.

Here, in Part 2, we continue with the second struggle. And we outline five more barriers. Those that can limit the business value that stronger relationships could (should) create.

(A reminder of the good news: You can overcome each barrier. If you want advice on overcoming a specific barrier, we’ll be adding more to this series soon. Be sure to subscribe.)


STRUGGLE #2
REALIZING THE BUSINESS VALUE OF ENGAGEMENT

Your goal: Transform your conversations and interactions into measurable value that the business cares about.

  • Stronger relationships = loyalty, advocacy, and expanded accounts
  • Better-informed, customer-oriented strategies = increased revenue and market share
  • New business opportunities = new revenue models, buyers, markets, and lines of business

And, then, attribute and amplify that value.

Barrier #1: Defining success.
Are your expectations clear and consistent?

The value of your engagement strategy depends on what you’re trying to change or improve. Do you—and your stakeholders—know and agree about what success looks like?

  • What, exactly, does the business care about?
  • How, exactly, do you expect these programs to contribute?

The trick: sales, marketing, and business leaders—and your customers themselves—will inevitably define success differently. (And then there’s the age-old struggle—measuring customer programs by revenue and other hard numbers.)

The result: Ironing out a shared definition takes deft negotiation and conscious effort. Without it, the results are bound to disappoint someone.

(Hint: Your customers’ definition will be paramount.)

Barrier #2: Acting on what you learn.
Are you proving that you’ve been listening?

Your customer programs create all manner of new conversations and interactions. The question becomes: What do you do with what you hear?

To act on what you learn requires:

  • people with clout and commitment
  • synthesis into insights your leaders and teams can use
  • communication by and to the right people
  • oversight, accountability, and metrics that influence behavior

It’s follow-through that will connect the conversations and interactions to actual value.

Barrier #3: Communicating.
Where is your communication breaking down?

Organizational silos, inadequate systems, or critical-but-uninvolved stakeholders cause poor communication. And disjointed communication erodes the value of your relationships in two major ways.

One, it prevents you from sharing and acting on what you learn (see barrier #2).

Two, it results in mixed or ill-timed messages sent to your c-suite customers.

By fixing these major breakdowns you and your colleagues may reinforce relationship gains. Rather than allowing faulty communication to undermine them.

Barrier #4: Committing to the long term.
Are you judging outcomes and pulling resources prematurely?

All strong relationships take time to expand and deepen. Engaging your executive customers is no different. Ad hoc events and one-off campaigns don’t return the same results as sustained relationships. (Even when effective in the short term.)

Patience can be at odds with today’s business environment. A break-neck pace of change. Quarter-to-quarter pressure. Constant disruption. Fickle attention spans. None of those foster a long-term view. It is easy for business as usual to interrupt and short-change relationship gains.

The key: Make the case for staying the course. And share—widely and unabashedly—customer input that reinforces your company’s commitment to relationships.

Barrier #5: Achieving a customer culture.
Is your company’s customer orientation a work in progress?

When it comes to being “customer-centric,” your engagement programs may outpace your organization.

Your engagement programs may focus on customers and relationships. But employees, incentives, operations, and systems may still orient toward brands, products, and transactions. That mismatch becomes a bottleneck. And can cap the value you’ll realize from stronger, deeper relationships.

As your customer culture matures, the value your programs can realize will increase, too. (Keep in mind, customer culture often requires systemic change that top leaders must drive.)

In the meantime, keep an eye out for what’s changing. And jump on opportunities for new customer-oriented initiatives. Momentum may increase sooner than you think.


Next Up: Overcoming the barriers.

If you want advice on overcoming a specific barrier, we’ll be adding more to this series soon. Be sure to subscribe. We’ll let you know when new posts are ready.

Related Stories

Always Recruiting: The Secret to a Successful Advisory Board

Posted by in Customer Advisory Boards

If there is one thing we have learned about Client Advisory Board membership recruiting it is that you are never done.  While the initial blast of recruiting needed to get your Board off to the right start  

Continue Reading »

CXO Perspectives: Leading Change Agendas

Posted by in Understanding the C-Suite

We share what we have learned about the state of digital transformation through our in-depth conversations with CXOs, and how the C-suite has moved beyond early debate to take action in five key areas to drive competitive advantage.

Continue Reading »

Customer Advisory Boards: How Difficult Conversations Drive Change

Posted by in Customer Advisory Boards

One of my first jobs out of university was working in the headquarters office of a local business with several locations. In this role, I worked closely with the customer service representatives, and we received feedback, questions, and  

Continue Reading »

Looking Back on One Year: An Interview with Mike Abbott, Thomson Reuters

Posted by in Client Interviews, Customer Advisory Boards, Featured

Mike Abbott is the Head of Market Insights, Global Thought Leadership and the Thomson Reuters Institute, which brings together people from across the legal, corporate, tax and accounting, and government communities to ignite conversation and debate. Mike and the Thomson  

Continue Reading »


Customer Advisory Boards

Customer Advisory Boards are powerful engines of engagement, insight, and business transformation. Make the most of yours.

Meeting Facilitation: Virtual and In-Person Boards » Taking Your Customer Advisory Board Meetings Virtual »

Learn More »

Engagement Strategy

Like any good relationship, customer engagement is a long-term, reciprocal effort. When done well, meaningful engagement leads to better business results, faster.

Engage Your Customers to Help You Stop Pitching » Getting to a Customer Engagement Mindset »

Learn More »

Understanding the C-Suite

Building C-level programs that are meaningful and bring value to you as well as to your c-suite customers is challenging. Veiled sales pitches won’t win the day with this audience. Deliver what executives want: ideas, inspiration, innovation, influence.

Building a C-Suite Client Experience Strategy » Do you Know What Your Customers Value? »

Learn More »