The FINANCIAL — New energy-market entrants and service providers from other industries — when it comes to delivering an engaging customer experience, according to a new study from Accenture.
In the face of disruption, these companies should invest to deliver a more satisfying customer experience and exceed liquid customer expectations.
As part of its New Energy Consumer research program, Accenture surveyed approximately 70,000 consumers across 36 energy retail utilities and six disruptor brands in multiple markets worldwide. The study, conducted by Accenture Research in partnership with Fjord, the design and innovation unit of Accenture Interactive, intended to identify how customers feel about their experience with these companies and measure their affinity for the brand across physical and digital interactions. Disruptor brands included firms in the retail banking, telecommunications home services, retail insurance and energy retail industries.
Respondents were asked to rate one of nine key moments of interaction with their utility, ranging from initiating their service and adding new services to terminating their service and receiving disruption notifications. The customer experience for each moment was scored on a 10-point scale, representing the aggregated scores from across six experience dimensions:
Authentic – Conveys distinct personality and stays true to self
Fun – Holds people’s attention in an entertaining way
Relevant – Creates relevant consumer touchpoints
Engaging – Identifies with individual needs and wants
Social – Connects people with each other
Helpful – Is intuitive, clear and easy to understand
Individual customer scores were aggregated to derive overall brand affinity scores for every moment, brand or region. The brand affinity scores indicate overall how connected customers feel to energy retail utilities and service providers from other industries.
The study found that traditional energy retail utilities’ score of 6.3, aggregated across all key moments, lags disruptor brands’ score of 6.8. For each key moment evaluated, the customer experience scores for disruptors were higher than the scores for traditional energy players, with the largest gap for receiving communications from their provider. With customer experience at the heart of value creation for these utilities, this is a cause for concern but also presents opportunities.
The study found that the 25 percent of customers in competitive markets with the highest customer-experience ratings (6.8 or higher) are 20 percent more likely to stay with their current brand, 37 percent more likely to recommend their energy retail utility and 22 percent more satisfied than other customers surveyed.
The need to improve customer experience is particularly important for utilities in competitive markets, which are under increasing threat from disruptor brands. Among traditional energy retail utilities, competitive brands were less loved than non-competitive ones across all but one key moment: receiving proactive communications from their provider. The largest gaps were noticed during moments of sign up, including initiating basic energy services or adding a new product or service.
Three transformational levers could enable mastery of customer experience
The study notes that while identifying the interactions that are most or least loved is important, the real value of the research lies in identifying the moments that matter — i.e., those that drive clear business outcomes. Based on an evaluation of customer satisfaction, likelihood to remain a customer, and likelihood to recommend a company to others, the study identified three key moments that matter the most across all energy retail utilities surveyed: service initiation, billing, and providing help with specific queries. It is here, the study notes, that these utilities should prioritize improvement.
The study also suggests three transformational levers that companies can use to deliver more satisfying, effortless and unique customer experiences, particularly in the moments that matter most:
Use artificial intelligence (AI) to enable intelligent service. AI can help improve customer satisfaction while reducing operational cost via the shift to digital. As consumers increasingly accept AI, energy retail utilities should use it to provide relevant and contextualized digital support.
Personalize with hyper-relevance. Energy retail utilities can execute a hyper-relevant experience through a variety of tools and techniques, including proactive alerts and auto adjustments of in-home technologies that take things off consumers’ “thinking list,” and personalized subscription services, for example.
Target for value, target for growth. Identifying further value in existing products and services is key, as is pursuing untapped value in new ones. Energy retail utilities must pivot wisely by recalibrating business portfolios to specifically target new customer preferences and opportunities.
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