Our Perspective
What this means for leaders navigating growth, change or transformation in their organisation.
Loyalty Has Changed
The drivers of loyalty are shifting from convenience and price to meaning and consistency. Customers now benchmark every interaction against the best they’ve had anywhere, not just in your category. When the experience feels piecemeal, they treat the relationship as a transaction and move on. Motista’s Emotional Connection Report notes that people who feel emotionally bonded to a brand tend to be worth about three times more over their lifetime, which is a material performance advantage when compounded over years.
Emotion is not a soft idea here; it’s the decision shortcut customers use under uncertainty. If your promise is clear and the experience keeps that promise, the default becomes “stay.”
Design For Feeling
Start with a tighter brief: decide what customers should reliably feel at key moments, then engineer proof. That lens turns the brand from messaging into a management tool. It tells every team what to trade off, and why, when choices collide.
Translate intent into operational moves:
- Define the feelings that should anchor the journey (for example: reassured, understood, in control).
- Map three proof points per stage where those feelings must be earned.
- Remove friction that contradicts the promise, even if it’s efficient on paper.
From Signal To System
The fastest way to erode lifetime value is to make promises in communications that the service and systems can’t keep. The remedy is simple to say and hard to do: codify non‑negotiables, wire them into incentives, and give teams the tools to deliver consistently. We often see organisations unlock momentum when brand standards are written as operational rules, not slogans.
Institutionalise the connection:
- Set a small set of “always/never” principles that govern trade‑offs.
- Tie incentives to behaviours that create the target feelings, not just monthly volumes.
- Establish cross‑functional owners for moments, not just channels.
Measure What Lasts
If you only measure clicks and quarterly revenue, you’ll optimise for noise. Balance lagging outcomes with leading indicators of emotional health. Track what people do when they have options: do they return, recommend, and accept a fair price because they trust you?
Build a simple scorecard:
- Experience consistency: recognition accuracy, first‑time resolution, promise kept rate.
- Relationship strength: repeat purchase rate, referral rate, voluntary feedback quality.
- Economic signals: premium realisation and churn movement among emotionally connected segments.
Durable growth accrues to organisations that make emotional connection an operating choice, then keep proving it at the moments that matter.
Sources:
Motista Emotional Connection Report