A shakeup is taking place in the C-suite. It happens every time a game-changing disruption occurs in the marketplace.
Companies are introducing several new C-level positions: the chief customer officer, chief experience officer, chief design officer, chief innovation officer, chief insight officer, chief analytics officer, and chief digital officer.
The threads running through all those new positions are a piercing focus on customers, the imperative for companies to distinguish themselves on basis of their customer experience, and a desire to better understand current, emerging, and future demands to fuel innovation.
Those new C-level positions also reflect senior managers' conviction that those tasks require organizational capabilities beyond that of today's marketing departments.
Chief Customer Officer (CCO)
For example, the CCO (or the chief experience officer or chief customer experience officer) is charged with understanding and enhancing the customer experience across the entire customer journey. That begins with a potential customer's awareness of a need or desire; continues with his or her discovery of various companies' solutions; includes lead generation, nurturing, and potential purchase; incorporates customer service, ongoing engagement, and loyalty programs; and often includes collaboration efforts—co-creation, co-servicing, and advocacy—with customers.
Senior managers with extensive experience that span operations, quality control, marketing, and information systems are filling those roles. Their rich and varied backgrounds provide them with the credibility and networks to lead the effort across functions, business units, and broader partner ecosystem. The majority report directly to CEOs.
Chief Design Officer (CDO)
The CDO is charged with infusing design principles and methodology throughout the organization. In this instance, design is not about making products more beautiful or enhancing the cleverness of marketing. Rather, it is about expanding how strategy is developed with creative thinking and putting the customer, rather than the company, at the center of innovation.
A new role, the CDO position tends to be awarded to designers with years of product and process development experience, often gained in consultative roles with innovation firms like IDEO. Catalysts for change, CDOs are creative thinkers and strong leaders, skilled in running effective innovation processes, and able to inspire and equip everyone within the company to think like a designer. Most CDOs report directly to the CEO; some designers are CEOs.
Chief Innovation Officer (CION)
With responsibility for future generation of revenue and profits, today's CION is closely related to the CDO.
In the past, winning innovation strategies included incremental, share-taking enhancements or cost-saving reductions.
In today's environment, with competition coming from four corners of the globe, and the half-life of business models declining, companies must transform themselves into vibrant platforms upon which they can continually develop and test new products and services that may build or transform industries. The cultivation of purposeful networks of partners who share the costs, risks, and development of those offerings is central to this platform-based innovation strategy.
CIONs often report to the head of R&D or the CEO; in some instances, both the CMO and the CIO are accountable to the CION.
The roles of the chief insight officer, chief analytics officer, and chief digital officer reflect the growing importance of data and advanced analytics in companies' ability to offer a remarkable customer experience. The insight generated from data and analytics allows companies to prioritize consumers, predict what they may want or need next, and design and deliver individualized customer interactions across the customer journey.
Marketers are also able to test hypotheses about trends in their markets, categories, and adjacent spaces, and to evaluate their marketing efforts. Solid executive leadership is required to fill this role, as it demands the ability to build a broader analytics foundation than is available in most companies. That includes...
- Putting new technology infrastructure and tools in place to gather disparate data
- Coordinating data analytic efforts
- Building consensus around the focus of business analytics throughout the organization
- Being a champion and enabler of a more data-driven mind-set across departments
This person also has to be obsessed with customers and committed to driving business results with data in real time.