BigCat Research
What need or expectation does the customer experience start with?
Customer experience begins not with the first contact, but with understanding what needs and expectations the customer comes to the service with.
A customer does not come to a product or service just to make a transaction; He comes with a need he expects to be solved, an anxiety he carries, and an expectation of value in his mind. If the organization designs the journey without knowing this starting point, it may miss the real expectation even if it improves the right touch point. Research establishes the first question of the experience from the customer's context.
Understanding what need or expectation the customer experience begins with is the first step in designing the service journey correctly. This issue requires careful reading of the relationship between real moments on the field and written expectations. Customer or employee experience often consists of not a single event, but the sum of successive small contacts. Therefore, the study should distinguish which moment increases trust, which moment creates unnecessary waiting or uncertainty, and which team can change this area.
This study should read together customer interviews, first contact records, reasons for calling and applying, sales or service data, and employee observations. The numerical breakdown shows the direction; Field observation explains how the application flows, and employee and customer narratives explain why this flow occurs the way it does. When the sources are read together, the singular complaint and the recurring pattern are separated, and the solution is described at a more accurate level.
Two customers performing the same transaction may come with different expectations; One may want speed, while the other may expect reassurance, explanation, or counsel. This reading Which touch point determines the perception of trust, convenience, speed or value, How does the organization behave in the event of a problem and how does this behavior affect repurchase intention, Which stage in the journey is rapid improvement, which stage is strategic design requires and In which component does service quality decrease: process, people, environment, communication, speed or problem solving gives a more complete framework; because each one makes another moment of the experience visible. The goal is not to thicken the report, but to clarify which theme will actually be changed. When the findings are correctly linked to the title of standard, training, process, environment or authority, teams can proceed through the same table.
How does the need become visible?
The customer does not always state his need directly; The question format gives clues to hesitation, retrial or comparison behavior. At this point, research should widen the distance between the moment experienced by the customer and the step taken by the team. If the score, comment and observation point to the same place, the topic takes direct priority; If resources are separated, it must first be understood why they are separated.
When research systematically collects these signs, the starting point of experience becomes clear. Ownership should not be left blurred at the end of this reading. If the issue is standard clarity, the central team should take responsibility, if it is behavioral practice, the field manager should take responsibility, and if it is system load, the technology or operations side should take responsibility.
Good reporting in this section shows the case study and numeric sign together. If a customer narrative is to be chosen, it should be explained why it is typical; If a point is to be used, it should be written which contact it is associated with. Thus, the finding becomes both readable and appropriated by the application team.
Where does expectation take shape?