Brief
Powering Up the Customer Experience in Utilities
Powering Up the Customer Experience in Utilities
Understanding what matters most to customers helps identify areas for improvement.
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Brief
Understanding what matters most to customers helps identify areas for improvement.
Utility executives in the US may have come late to the customer experience revolution, but many now are embracing it with the fervor of converts. Until a few years ago, most utility customers had no alternatives for buying electricity, and utility leaders didn’t view customer satisfaction or loyalty as among their most important issues.
All that has changed rapidly as utilities race to deliver the levels of customer experience that their customers have grown accustomed to expect. In a digital era in which customers expect a seamless one-click experience, the sense of urgency for utility leaders is fueled by three factors.
Utility executives know that they are very good at large capital projects, such as building power plants to meet the electricity needs of a growing community and operating a complex grid on a 24/7 basis. But many tell us that they are less confident when it comes to the “software” of their organizations, such as developing a customer-centric organization focused on measurably improving customer experience on a continuous basis and going beyond purely organizational structure to policy and process redesign, changes in accountabilities, governance, metrics and ways of working.
To be sure, these may be new muscles for many utility executives. They can learn, however, from the examples set by industry leaders in the utility space and beyond who have shown how to focus on consumer needs to drive superior economic performance.
The first step is finding your starting point. What is your customer experience today? How does it compare with other utility players? More important, how does it compare with customers' expectations? For years, utility executives have talked about the need to become more customer centric, but the average Net Promoter Score® in the utility sector is about the same as the US Postal Service—and well below that of potential disrupters. Indeed, for some large US utilities, these scores actually declined after they launched programs to improve the customer experience, underscoring the need for such metrics to feed into a larger system that focuses every part of the company on earning customer loyalty—like those in place at customer experience leaders such as American Express, Amazon, USAA, JetBlue and others.
Similar to these firms, utilities can develop a clear understanding of the factors that leave their customers happy or frustrated and find ways to act to improve them. Not all customers or customer episodes are created equally, so a fine-grained analysis of customer interactions can deliver insights about which ones companies can address (see Figure 1). For example, one US utility found that it was able to increase revenue and improve customer experience by allowing customers greater choice in how they pay their bills—for instance, picking their own due dates, installment billing, flat-rate billing and so on. The efforts have paid off with measurable improvements in cost, better revenue, fewer write-offs and increased customer satisfaction. Additionally, the utility enhanced the employee experience and made it easier and more enjoyable for the frontline team to meet their customers’ needs.
With a better understanding of what customers want and reliable metrics on how well they are delivering against it, utilities can set out to improve the customer experience. Many, however, make a few common mistakes along the way.
The easiest way to miss the mark on customer experience is to talk a lot and do little. Too many senior executives across industries pay only lip service when they need a real commitment that is backed by measurement and programmatic changes to the operating model. Executive teams falter in other ways, too.
A handful of forward-looking utilities, however, are making real progress by putting their customers at the center of their strategies. Our analysis reveals that these leaders adopted the following four principles to ensure a customer-centric approach.
Following a broad improvement program that adheres to these principles can have dramatic effects. One integrated utility in the US that previously focused on cost reduction had to broaden its agenda after regulators took it to task for poor reliability. Senior executives revived the company’s historic emphasis on customer service, spearheaded by a performance improvement program that set targets for reliability and service operations. This program relied heavily on data analytics to identify potential areas of weakness in the grid, and to measure customers’ tolerance for minor outages. Over time, the company has become one of the highest ranked utilities in terms of customer satisfaction, cost and economic value creation.
Challengers that promise a better product and better customer experience are disrupting the utilities business. There is real risk to both the top and bottom lines of many players in this sector. Unhappy customers will become lobby groups that petition to deny utilities the ability to invest new capital in infrastructure and instead support policy changes that preserve the economics of their regulated utility. Unhappy customers also cost more to serve.
Set against these threats, some leaders are showing how to improve the experience of their customers. But it’s clear that everyone in the industry will need to follow in their footsteps. Any utility executive embarking on this journey can begin by considering a few questions.
Assuming steadfast intent, armed with the right data and enabled by the right operating model, utility leaders can approach this journey with greater confidence than they have in the past.
Corrie Carrigan and Chris Jarrett are partners with Bain & Company’s Customer Strategy & Marketing practice; they are based in Chicago and Atlanta, respectively. Pratap Mukharji is a partner with Bain’s Utilities and Renewables practice. He is also based in Atlanta. Michael Short is a Bain principal with the Energy & Natural Resources practice, and he is based in Houston.
Net Promoter®, Net Promoter System®, Net Promoter Score® and NPS® are registered trademarks of Bain & Company, Inc., Fred Reichheld and Satmetrix Systems, Inc.