‘Experience’ the true path to transformation
17/10/2018
“If you want to study animals, don’t go to the zoo. Go to the Amazon.”

You need to take good care of top talent if you want to retain them

Working together brings results
Three key success factors for any kind of experience are purpose, community and empathy.Japan Tabaco International shared their Talent Management manifesto, which states that everyone has a role to play and individuals should understand their importance within the framework of the company:“Together, we treat all employees fairly and respectfully, ensure transparency of rules and standards, and empower growth opportunities.”They see the role of the manager as being as much about helping people develop as managing projects.
There is risk and opportunity behind the rapid introduction of technologies in the delivery of experience
- Risk: Technology often ends up as an obstacle to human-to-human interactions, which are key to a successful user experience.
- Opportunity: When combined appropriately, Small and Big Data can drive better experience for users as well as enhanced jobs and savings for providers.
The ‘experience economy’ is a key driver in global business
“The idea of the ‘experience economy’ was first suggested almost 20 years ago by Joe Pine and Jim Gilmore from Harvard Business School, who described the ‘inexorable shift away from selling goods and services to staging experiences as the next step in the economy's evolution,’” said Ricardo Martins, Managing Director, CEGOC Portugal, in his opening speech.“This year, we chose the theme of ‘experience’ to guide us through business transformation. What will companies do to make sure they provide positive experiences to their customers?” To survive in the ‘experience economy’, delivering memorable customer experiences day-to-day is a must. This can only be achieved by employees being made 100% ready and engaged thanks to inspiring human-to-human learning and employee experiences.Happy employees lead to happy consumers
“To make consumers happy, you need happy employees, and you need learners who know how to implement the promises of the customer experience,” says Simon Vuillaume, Director of International Projects at Cegos Group.“All this is in the context of constant change. The customer experiences change, the employee experiences change, so the learning changes. The challenge is to align everything and keep the customer at the centre, because without customers there can be no employees, and no learners! “Back in 1999, when Joe Pine and Jim Gilmore explained that we were entering the era of the ‘experience economy’, they also predicted the advent of a ‘transformation economy’. It seems to me that we are already there.”