I’ve heard a lot of answers to the question “What is the difference between Customer Experience and User Experience?”, all of them long-winded.

 

Some of them have been very good answers – but needlessly complex, since there is, in fact, a very simple answer.

 

The difference between Customer Experience and User Experience is the difference between a Customer and a User, and the difference between a Customer and a User is that a Customer has a choice.

 

Your digital business is competing moment-by-moment for the customer’s attention with other digital businesses, other channels (TV, Radio, iPod, billboards), and now (on mobile internet) with the good-looking girl/boy sitting near them on the bus. Before the potential customer even thinks about doing anything an usability expert can measure, they are making a split second, emotional decision to give their attention to you.

 

I particularly like sharing this insight with senior marketers. It instantly transforms them from slightly-intimidated-by-Digital to smartest-guy-in-the-room. Because if there’s one thing marketers know about, it’s Customers, and the Consumer Decision Journey. By contrast, we in Digital Services were calling them ‘users’ a year ago - and still routinely refer to them as ‘visitors’ or ‘browsers’. Quaint, really.

 

“Oh, we have some visitors!

Should we make them a cup of tea?

No don’t worry, they just want a look around, they’ll be off soon.”

 

Anyway, the point is that the Customer Experience point-of-view allows us to access and apply years of excellent learning from the offline world and marketing science. It allows us to ask how a customer feels about completing an online task, rather than just worrying about how many clicks they have to make. More importantly, it allows us to stop feeling guilty about using emotive words like ‘cool’ or ‘kick-arse’ when talking about the visual and tactile interface.

Please feel free to share this post
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google
  • Live
  • Slashdot
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • TwitThis
  • BlinkList
  • Furl
  • Ma.gnolia
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • TailRank
  • YahooMyWeb