The concept of single customer view is the future in customer service. Why? Because it resolves a very real challenge with customer communications.
In fact, consider how many channels customers use to interact with your business. They may send emails, call agents, tweet at your corporate account, and so on. All these interactions happen at different times and with multiple people – and often, an employee involved in one interaction isn’t aware of the other interactions.
This represents a missed opportunity to offer excellent customer service. It may also lead to confusion, missed information, and frustration among customers and your various internal teams.
These are exactly the problems that a single customer view helps solve.
A ‘single customer view’ or SCV (often called unified customer view or UCV) is a way to keep aggregated, holistic information about your customers in a single place. All your interactions with a customer, along with data like preferences and demographics, can be stored and viewed in one page or file. Gone are the data silos that make customer conversations and reporting so difficult.
Single customer view is important because it’s the only way to create holistic customer profiles (or 360 view of customers) that will help you offer streamlined experiences to customers.
For example, consider this: you have interactions with customers across multiple touchpoints, departments, and people. But, 76 percent of customers expect consistent interactions across departments. How do you consolidate the information from these interactions to avoid misalignment and loss of information?
You guessed it: a unified view of the customer is the answer. It helps you offer an omnichannel experience and forge better customer relationships.
A single customer view can help you:
These abilities will help you inform:
That all sounds pretty good, right?
When the volume of data or the headcount of your business is low, you may find that a spreadsheet can do the job. As you grow, you might rely on many marketing, sales, and customer support tools and integrations to create the most accurate view of your customer data.
But, this method is difficult to scale – at some point, you’ll need dedicated software to start creating a single customer view. Make sure you’re on the same page with other executives and departments, and discuss your goals.
An easy solution would be using an e-crm for a unified view of the customer (e-crm stands for “electronic customer relationship management”), or another similar platform. For example, you can use a platform to unify information from disparate systems, such as web analytics, an e-commerce system, customer support software, and more. This way you’ll have a single place for your employees to access and analyze customer information.
To make sure you choose the right software, do your research. Do the systems you already use have this functionality? If not, do they integrate with a system that does? Pricing, UX/UI, implementation time, and the customer service of the vendor are all important factors to consider.
During demos or trials, pay particular attention to how customizable and easily analyzed the unified customer view is. Ask sales reps to show you a single customer view example so you can better understand how the interface works.
When you implement a software that can help you set up a single unified view, you don’t want to lose data. You will need to create a data migration and data integration process or integrate entire old systems with new.
As a first step, identify all your data sources (e.g. your data warehouse) and evaluate the data quality in each one. Then, you’ll know what kind of data you need to integrate and which will be part of your dashboard. It’s a good opportunity to rethink your data management practices, too, and apply improvements when needed.
One issue to be wary of is how well-built a software and its single customer view analytics are. If the UCV gets more confusing the more data you add, then that software will not serve your business well in the long-term.
So, make sure you know what you want to track from the beginning and account for future needs when choosing your software. After all, you want a UCV to make it easier to understand your customers, not harder. With the right software at hand, you’re one step closer to turning your business into a customer favorite – and that’s an exciting possibility to pursue.
Nikoletta Bika is an experienced content marketer, writer, and editor, with degrees in business and people management. She writes about data, tech trends, AI, and more.
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Thank you Josephine! Any particular piece of the content that caught your eye?