In
July 2011, Tealeaf reported that after surveying more than 120
attendees of Forrester’s Customer Experience Forum, 84% felt that
putting a mobile customer experience strategy
in place is just as or more important than customer experience for
fixed websites. Eight months later, Tealeaf is capitalizing on this
sentiment by introducing a new version of Tealeaf CX Mobile, a complete mobile customer experience management solution.
Mobile Adoption, Expectations Demand CXM
As we all
know, mobile adoption and expectations for mobile experiences have been
increasing dramatically. Additionally, mobile devices are displacing
desktops/laptops as the primary means to access the Web. In Pew Research
Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism’s State of the News Media 2012,
we learned that 52% of Americans who own laptops also own a smartphone,
and 23% of them own a tablet device. What does this mean? It means that
it’s time to execute a mobile customer experience strategy.
Strategize, Implement
With Tealeaf CX Mobile,
customers have access to advanced customer experience analysis across
mobile channels, including mobile web sites, native iOS and Android
apps, hybrid apps and the growing number of apps and sites built in
HTML5. By seeing their sites and apps through the eyes of their
customers, Tealeaf CX Mobile helps businesses understand, respond to and
optimize the complete mobile customer experience.
Tealeaf CX
Mobile provides documented evidence of customer struggles and the
ability to quantify the business impact of customer challenges. Among
the types of information captured include:
- In-screen actions, including orientation, pinching, and scrolling
- Enhanced mobile browser replay to re-create problems and optimize functionality
- Device-level data, such as device type, browser version or operating system
- User behavior analysis (sequence of events, screen logs, server calls)
Capturing these insights make it easier for companies to drill down to
understand the context of every interaction, just as you would for a
desktop experience. As mobile interfaces and experience become part of
the normal customer experience, it isn’t that we need to ditch
everything we did to optimize the web experience, it’s just that we need
to apply them appropriate to mobile.
No comments:
Post a Comment