Customer credos, charters and public commitments: When are they a good idea?
Wednesday, June 16, 2010 at 8:08AM
Rob Markey in leadership

I'm in London this week visiting some clients, working with some Bain teams, and attending the Net Promoter Conference.  During some of my meetings, a colleague pointed out that NatWest had just published a "customer charter" with 14 aspirational statements (link).  Hard to tell whether it's fundamentally a marketing positioning -- their tag line is "Helpful Banking" -- or something more.  It is certainly plastered all over their consumer home page today.

It seems many companies are busy publishing similar public commitments to their customers.  Out of curiosity I did a quick search on Google for "customer charter" and came up with a pretty long list of links.  Here are some of the first that came up.  They are from all over the (English language) world.  A few are almost silly, others seem quite thoughtful.

As I buzzed through these, I found myself wondering under what conditions a customer charter is a good idea.  Among the more compelling rationale I have heard executives use to explain their intent in adopting a customer charter:

All of these reasons seem, on their face, pretty compelling.  There are other considerations, however, that might be worth thinking through.  For example: 

I'm not certain there's one right answer here.  But before making a big public commitment, I would personally be quite cautious.  I would rather the organization achieve consistent success creating Promoters and delivering against a set of principles before going public.  Too many leadership teams declare, without real conviction, that they will be "the most" "the best" and so on.  Do it, and then point out what you've done.  Or, better yet, create such a compelling experience that your customers point it out for you.

What do you think?  Does your company have a customer charter?  Is it any good?  What impact has it had?

Article originally appeared on Creating a culture of customer advocacy (http://www.robmarkey.net/).
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