Your customer doesnât differentiate between your advertising and your app and your customer support agentsâall of it is your company. Your brand. All of it is one thing.
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Your productâs story is its design, its features, images and videos, quotes from customers, tips from reviewers, conversations with support agents. Itâs the sum of what people see and feel about this thing that youâve created.
And the story doesnât just exist to sell your product. Itâs there to help you define it, understand it, and understand your customers. Itâs what you say to investors to convince them to give you money, and to new employees to convince them to join your team, and to partners to convince them to work with you, and to the press to convince them to care. And then, eventually, itâs what you tell customers to convince them to want what youâre selling.
And it all starts with âwhy.â
Why does this thing need to exist? Why does it matter? Why will people need it? Why will they love it?
4.4. You Can Only Have One Customer
âRegardless of whether your company is business-to-business (B2B) or business-to-consumer (B2C) or business-to-business-to-consumer (B2B2C) or consumer-to-business-to-consumer (C2B2C) or some-yet-unimagined acronym, you can only serve one master. You can only have one customer. The bulk of your focus and the whole of your branding should be for consumers or businessânot both.
Understanding your customerâtheir demographics and psychographics, their wants and needs and pain pointsâis the foundation of your company. Your product, team, culture, sales, marketing, support, pricingâeverything is shaped by that understanding.
For the vast majority of businesses, losing sight of the main customer youâre building for is the beginning of the end.
Your company is an organism; its cells need to divide to multiply, they need to differentiate to become something new. Donât worry about what youâre going to loseâthink about what youâre going to become.
The process of convincing someone to buy and use your product needs to respect the customer, needs to understand their needs at different points of the user experience. You canât just shout your top ten features at people in a billboard and a website and packaging just like you canât simply hand someone your rĂ©sumĂ© at an interview, then lunch, then on a date. Sure, youâre giving them important information, but different moments in the journey
require different approaches.
Your message needs to fit the customerâs context. You canât say everything everywhere.
If you want to build a great company, you should expect excellence from every part of it. The output of every team can make or break the customer experience, so they should all be a priority. [See also: Chapter 3.1: Making the Intangible Tangible.]
There canât be any functions that you dismiss as secondaryâwhere you casually accept mediocrity because it doesnât really matter.
Everything matters.
And itâs not just about you.