I'm a in-better rabbit hole diver and I love complex adaptive systems. Immersion comes from below. It does not come from above. The company I run right now, which honestly ventures, is completely, globally dispersed. Literally people get to do their own thing. We meet and do monthly. Those are more to share our excitement about what we're working on but very little about any command and control structure from above. This is the incredible thing. If it was a free service, it's like, you know, if it's like a Facebook thing or a Twitter thing, well, it's free. I'm paying my money for it."
After starting his career on a market stall in Essex, John Sills has spent the last twenty-five years working to make the world a better place for customers. John is the Managing Partner at the customer-led growth company The Foundation, and his writing has also been featured in publications such as The Guardian and Management Today. He joins the show to discuss his thought-provoking and timely new book The Human Experience: How to make life better for your customers and create a more successful organization. Important Links:
Show Notes:
- John’s time working on an Essex market stall
- Human vs functional customer experience
- What’s blocking the human experience?
- Why do leaders stay away from the frontline?
- Escaping Vogonization
- Does the human experience scale?
- The benefits of starting from first principles
- Why companies should empower their staff
- The link between curiosity, creativity & customer experience
- Why aren’t companies changing & why aren’t more startups disrupting?
- Are frictionless customer experiences desirable?
- The myth of customer loyalty
- Tech upgrades & immersion
- MUCH more!
Books Mentioned:
- The Human Experience: How to make life better for your customers and create a more successful organization; by John Sills
- The Genius of the Beast: A Radical Re-Vision of Capitalism; by Howard Bloom
- The Customer Copernicus: How to be Customer-Led; by Charlie Dawson
- The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy; by Douglas Adams