It’s All About Experience
In today’s cutthroat competitive environment, how your customer experiences the services you deliver is the ultimate differentiator. Leaders who can think creatively about delivering new, high-touch customer service systems and experiences will carve a new pathway in an industry that – put bluntly – is often viewed as a commodity.
Watch the sixth episode of Dennis’ final ten installments of Digging Deeper as he highlights the importance of providing an innovative experience to your customers, trade partners, and employees alike. We’d love to hear your thoughts; what has helped differentiate your company? Please share with us in the comments below.
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Good morning, everybody, Dennis Engelbrecht with The Family Business Institute where We Build Better Contractors. And
Digging Deeper again, we're on number six of our 10 keys to construction company success, and today number six is it's
all about the experience.
All right, so what am I talking about? Well, we've talked about this before, but a couple of fellas, Pine and Gilmore, wrote
a great book called, The Experience Economy. And what they've noted is that the way our economy works has changed
over time, and we've gone from the things we've grown in the earth to those commodities to producing goods, to
becoming a service economy. And their theory is now we're moving on to an experience economy or have already moved
to an experience economy. And there is evidence for that. If you just think about a couple of things that happen. How
much are we willing to pay to fly first class versus economy? It's oftentimes four or five times to get that experience.
There are folks like Starbucks where you go, and you pay $7 for a cup of coffee that has maybe 10 cents of ingredients in
it. Those beans that went into making those coffees and a few other things that they dress them up with of course, and
flavor them with. But basically, people are willing to pay for that experience. And it's actually quite true in construction as
well. Relationships, preference, loyalty, those are all built on perceived value. Value, but perceived value. And the
perception part of it may be as much as the actual nuts and bolts value of it. We've talked about construction being largely
a commodity. Basically, you can take any project out there and there's any number of companies and any number of teams
that can get that built. The ability to build is really just the entry fee for construction these days. So, it's about how you do
business perhaps more than what you do.
And so how you do business, how do you treat your customers? We talked about relationships last week. Relationships
are certainly key to the experience, but the number one thing is trust. The owner or your customer, whether that's the
general contractor or on down the line in construction, the number one thing I think is trust. They want the ability to sleep
well at night knowing that you've got this. Now, again, it takes your skills and your abilities, your people to be able to have
this to be able to produce that result, but how do you make them feel?
How do you make them feel that they believe in you, that they trust in you, that they can sleep well at night? And there's
a number of ways to do that. It's how you give them information. It's how you go about your business with confidence.
It's how you react and respond to their requests, both from a time standpoint, but also how you solve problems. All of
those things are part of the experience that they have in dealing with you, and that's part of how they develop that trust
that they want so that they would rather deal with you, even though it might cost them a little bit more, than to go try an
untried commodity or someone who doesn't perform quite as well in terms of the experience side of that, giving them as
good an experience as they can get. I always found it interesting in construction, we start with business development a
lot of times, move through pre-construction estimating. Then the job gets transitioned to the construction people. Well,
a lot of times we fail to communicate all the things that happened before.
What are the owner's hot buttons? What are the end user’s hot buttons that they're concerned about? What does quality
mean to them? There are a whole lot of questions that have been answered along the way, or perhaps they haven't been
answered, but all of that is very important knowledge for the construction team to understand so that they can deliver
the best experience again to the customer as they go through that. So, capturing that knowledge and communicating that
knowledge is very important to giving your customer the best experience. How do they want their information? Are they
visual learners or they want a whole lot of detail? When you go into your monthly owner architect meeting or if you're a
trade contractor, you go into your weekly meeting, how do they want to be communicated with? Do these folks need all
the detail behind it? Or do they want the big picture? How do you communicate that, you can be more effective if how
your customer wants it?
I think there are several areas where the lessons of The Experience Economy apply. And it's not just at your customer level.
It's also at your subcontractor supplier level. What's the experience we're getting? If a subcontractor doesn't get in a good
experience with your company, maybe they're not being paid on time or it's too difficult to get paid or they don't like the
way your superintendent treats them when they're out on the job, whatever it is, if those subs and suppliers are not
getting a good experience, it's likely you're not going to be serviced as well with estimates and budgets. You may get a
factor on top of it. I know when I was a subcontractor, certain customers got a higher price because we were afraid of
working with them or didn't want to work with them or felt like they were going to more likely punish us in the end.
And so, everybody doesn't get the same price. So, the experience people get is important to that. Your employees. How
much churn do you have in your organization? What is the employee experience? Starting right from their interview into
their onboarding, what's their initial manager like? What is the experience of working for your company? So, if you want
to take the lessons of The Experience Economy, my recommendation to each of you is chart these three things. First, what
is your customer experience journey? What does that journey look like? What are the touch points? And then look at each
of those touch points and see how you could improve them, make them better, make them more customer compatible.
Make them more individualized toward each customer because your customers are certainly different. Next, chart your
subcontractor supplier experience. What does that look like? What does it take to get paid?
How do they get paid? Do we put them through having to supply us with six different estimates and budgets and then
give them no preference? What does that look like? What is your subcontractor supplier journey with your company? And
again, each of those touch points, how can you improve them? How can you make them better? How can you individualize
them? They call that mass customization in the book, but how can you individualize those things and still be efficient in
your company?
And then finally, chart your employee experience. What does that look like from the start to, again, interviewing coming
on board and what does it look like day to day? How do your employees get communication? How do they get involved
in the company? All of those things, right down to your company picnics and all of those sorts of things. What is the
employee experience and how can you improve on that? If you charted those three sort of experience curves and tried to
look at how you could improve them, I think you'll be a better construction company for it and you'll have more success.
So, remember, it's about the experience.
Dennis Engelbrecht, Digging Deeper.