Our Perspective
What this means for leaders navigating growth, change or transformation in their organisation.
The Real Job
Leaders don’t need more channels; they need choices that concentrate impact. Treat touchpoints not as a long list to manage, but as a few decisive moments where customers change their minds. This reframing links brand to outcomes you can measure and leads to better trade‑offs: you stop chasing presence and start designing influence. In our experience with mid‑market leadership teams, the switch from “everywhere” to “where it matters” reduces complexity while lifting commercial performance.
Leadership implications:
- Budget follows moments, not departments, so prioritisation becomes clearer and less political.
- Governance shifts from campaigns to decision-point accountability.
- Measurement moves from activity counts to behaviour change at those moments.
Decide Where To Win
Not all interactions are equal. Four repeated moments, across most categories, shape outcomes more than any other. Name them, then set the intent for each—what do you need the customer to do or feel next?
- First impression: Does your promise land in under 10 seconds?
- Active evaluation: Do buyers find credible, comparable proof on their terms?
- Onboarding: Do new users reach first value quickly and confidently?
- Renewal: Do you make staying easier—and fairer—than switching?
Once these are explicit, brand and commercial goals stop competing; they reinforce each other.
Build The Rhythm
Moments need an operating rhythm to stick. Give each moment an owner, a cross‑functional squad, and a single scoreboard so reviews are about decisions, not opinions. Keep it light but consistent; intensity beats volume.
- One owner per moment with delegated authority.
- A monthly review using one shared dashboard (conversion, time to first value, resolution time, recommendation rate).
- Clear handovers between teams so the customer narrative doesn’t break.
- Quarterly learning notes that codify what works and retires what doesn’t.
This is how brand lives in the organisation week to week, not just in campaigns.
Make Proof Visible
Customers judge brands at stress points, not in generic awareness. Publish service standards, show live response times, surface independent reviews, and invite a score for key moments—then demonstrate how that feedback changes what you do. Visibility isn’t theatre; it’s how trust compounds.
The arms race in experience is real: InMoment reports that 81% of companies plan to compete primarily on customer experience, which means credibility at these moments is becoming the practical differentiator. Treat proof as part of your design, not an afterthought. When you do, touchpoints stop being background noise and become a continuous signal of reliability that buyers can feel—and act on.
Sources: