Experts of Experience - #60 Storytelling 101: CMO of LG Electronics Shares the Key
Episode Date: December 11, 2024Is the commoditization of technology ruining the customer experience? Can Artificial Intelligence be characterized as “Affectionate Intelligence” if it’s designed to respect a consumer’s bound...aries? Louis Giagrande, CMO of LG Electronics USA, dives into these hot topics as he discusses the challenges of maintaining brand value in a market flooded with cheap alternatives. Plus, he explains what companies can do to stand out and how LG is breaking down silos and fostering collaboration to enhance customer experience.Key Moments:00:00 Introduction01:43 Human-Centered Innovation at LG03:59 Voice of Customer Program Enhancements06:04 Game-Changing Data Sources07:30 Integrating Marketing and Customer Support08:56 Challenges in Cross-Functional Collaboration10:30 Impact of Executive Alignment 11:25 The Next Phase of LG 13:24 Customer-Centered Innovation 14:47 Proactively Providing Customer Solutions16:10 LG’s Philosophy and Brand Story21:37 Key to Identifying Campaign Effectiveness24:25 Basics of Integrating Customer Feedback 26:23 The Power and Purpose of LG Nova32:04 B2B Segment Focus Brings New Opportunity 34:29 Challenges in the Home Appliance Industry40:36 What We Can Learn from Chewy’s Customer Service42:45 Advice Every CX Leader Must Hear–How can you bring all your disconnected, enterprise data into Salesforce to deliver a 360-degree view of your customer? The answer is Data Cloud. With more than 200 implementations completed globally, the leading Salesforce experts from Professional Services can help you realize value quickly with Data Cloud. To learn more, visit salesforce.com/products/data to learn more. Mission.org is a media studio producing content alongside world-class clients. Learn more at mission.org.
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In the past, we had good reviews on our refrigerators,
our laundry, our TVs, but now it's like, wait,
what does this company stand for?
So reinventing the brand,
committing to telling the brand story
has been a big part of our development
of where we're going in the last two years.
What got us here won't get us there.
Telling the story of what this brand means
so that people feel connected,
we want to feel like we are a part
of something in that. And it's not just a product that we put on our counter, but it's
actually something that's here to help us live a better life.
Hello everyone and welcome to Experts of Experience. I'm your host, Lauren Wood. Today I am joined
by Luis Gigrande, the chief marketing officer at
LG Electronics USA. Today we are going to explore how he's leading a
transformative shift in the customer experience at LG, leveraging innovation,
new market expansion, and a redefined brand vision to strengthen LG's connection with both customers and businesses.
Before we dive in, I just want to share a quick little PSA for everyone who is listening.
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Now let's dive into it.
Lewis, how are you doing today?
I'm doing great, thank you.
And yourself?
I'm very, very well.
So I'm really excited to talk all about LG.
And in our prep conversation,
you told me that you have over
1400 products on your website. Is that correct?
Product pages, yes.
Product pages.
Of course, you know, variations and accessories and everything. But the point is the product
portfolio is broad for sure.
Which is huge. And you also shared that the way that you would design these products is
really built on the premise of human-centered innovation. And so I shared that the way that you would design these products is really
built on the premise of human centered innovation. And so I'd love to talk a little bit about
what human centered innovation really means at LG and how that's a differentiator for
you.
Yeah. Now, it's one of the things we take the most pride in is that, and it's really
one of the core brand values that we have is that there's a lot you can
do in our space in terms of making innovative products.
And sometimes we do have products that have innovations that is more for the fun of it.
But most of the products innovations are really tied to your consumer pain points and things
that consumers are asking for.
We have a really robust voice consumer,
social listening platform.
We're always looking at what consumers are saying
is a challenge with not only our products,
with competitors' products.
I like to start with dishwasher
because it's such a category
that most people don't talk about.
But just from listening to consumers' feedback
on dishwasher usage, the things kept popping up.
It was very loud. So if you ever had a dishwasher that was in the vicinity of where you're watching
TV, the TV always had to be increased in volume. There would be promises of a wash and dry cycle,
but things would never really quite dry. It would take so long. So if you're like,
you want to do a quick wash if you're in the middle of a party
and whatnot. So, you know, last year, we came out with a
dishwasher one hour washing dry that was super quiet and
addressed these issues. And, you know, right away, you saw, you
know, great success for that product. And it's, it's not a
surprise because we're addressing, you know, what the
con what the consumer needs. So, you know, we could have done something fancier with the outside of the product or whatever, but
just hitting on the innovations that really are consumer driven is very key to us and
something that our factories are very good at.
And you were telling me earlier that you've recently made updates to your voice of customer
program.
Can you tell us a little bit about what inspired that change and what it looks like now?
We're really proud of our team that's working on this.
I don't want to say his name because I don't want anyone to poach him, but I'm keeping
on the DL for those who understand what I'm saying.
But the leader, that team in general has done a fantastic job of really aggregating feedback.
You know, there's so much data out there right now. In fact, I think we've moved into a point
where there was a time when you were always struggling to get the right data and getting
data. Now you're almost like struggling with what to do with all the data that's available.
It's almost too much.
Yeah. And that's really been a guiding principle from our CFO in North America.
He doesn't want to see data in the morning.
He wants to see data insights actions.
And it's totally right.
And it's like, so this platform we have is aggregating 12 to 13 different data sources
from product reviews on our site to product product reviews on retailer sites, to social listening, every call to our call center,
every chat that's going on.
I mean, any interaction that we can capture
that's either on our platforms or public is being pulled in.
And, you know, I mean, there used to be a time
when you'd like, I wonder what consumers would think
of this or how they feel about this product. And you do a focus group and you're, you know, four hours talking to 12 to 15
people. And now, you know, in four hours, we could really pull up the sentiment of like
40,000 people in the last two weeks, with all various data sources and inputs. So it's
really been such a fantastic tool for us. It feeds, it tells us exactly what we have to do.
There's no more like guessing. It's like, oh, this is what a majority of consumers are saying.
That's what we'll do. Whether it's a content creation or a change in our process, it's just been so helpful. What are some of the data sources that you're using
that you weren't using previously
that you found to be really valuable?
Of course, we'd use the call center data
and our support group to understand pain points.
But I think it was used previously more of like,
how do we expedite fixes or how do we,
and now we're using it to like get in front of things
to be more proactive.
So I think that's been such a great tool.
When we were doing our pre-call,
I mentioned that we saw like a bump in laptop returns
in a certain period of time
from our direct-to-consumer platform.
And we were able to look it up,
just from this VOC platform to find out
there was a mixture of like our 17 inch laptop,
which is a really, it's a great laptop,
but it actually doesn't fit
into some people's laptop bags.
And they weren't ready to swap out
their favorite laptop bag,
or they were seeing sales go on
the next week after they bought it.
And instead of, when they would call the call center,
they were calling to return it and buy and
rebuy it and we're able to cut off that step by
just giving them the credit for the sale.
I really think bringing that in has been super helpful.
We've also found a nice way to balance our survey data
with our other data which gives us a nice combination of perspectives.
Yeah. You're highlighting something that is just music to my CX ears, which is the collaboration
between customer experience, customer support, and marketing. And when you really marry those two
teams and we look at the insights and the wealth of knowledge that is coming through customer service,
we can not only improve the experience for the customer, improve the marketing messaging for the customer, but also create products and think about how these products will impact the customer in a more meaningful way. Yeah. If you're not marrying up marketing and support
at this point, you're falling behind because it's,
like you said, just so integrated.
There was a time, I'd been with LG almost 15 years
and with the marketing team, there was a time
when on social platforms, they'd be like,
oh, that's a break fix issue.
Here you go, social, here you go, support team.
And then like, oh, that's a non-break. Here you go, social, here you go, support team. And I'm like, oh, that's a non-break fix conversation.
And it was literally like, all we were doing was triaging
and separating and that was it.
And now we're, we have people within our marketing team
that's having daily conversations with the support center
and regularly pulling it in.
That's especially gonna be helpful as we're growing
our DTC e-commerce platform.
This isn't just about breakfast,
it's about delivery and the experience,
the experience of interaction, transaction.
Fully.
What challenges have you experienced in this?
Because at the same time,
as we create these deeper connections,
we also create often more complexity.
And I think a lot of the reason why we've stayed in our own lanes is because it's
easier to stay in your own lane instead of merge the highways.
If you know what I mean.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, you hit on a big challenge.
I think most companies are dealing with this prioritizing customer experience
really means breaking down the walls between groups within
companies.
And the biggest one being the support center, which is like for us, it's like a different
headquarters in Alabama.
We're headquartered here in Northeast.
So it's like, you have to break down these walls.
So that's a challenge.
Now you're starting to creep into each other's, you know, R&Rs and the race, each arts look different and, you know, collaboration has to be a lot more than just
the handoff via some sort of triage tool. It's like, what are you doing? And even to the point
of like training the chat agents, training the call centers on how to have a brand voice
that's consistent throughout.
And there's a lot that goes on.
And that's been a challenge.
I think the good part is we have alignment
all the way up to our CEO in Korea.
So it's the most aligned I've ever seen LG
and that's what makes,
that's one of the most exciting parts of things.
But the challenge is making it, you know, putting it to action.
Yeah.
Breaking down as well.
I think that because of the difficulty that we're talking about, that executive alignment
all the way at the top to say we are going to take on the challenge of cross-functional
collaboration and integration into our systems and our ways of working,
it's worth, the juice is worth the squeeze, basically.
And we acknowledge that it's not going to be a cakewalk.
It's probably going to be somewhat challenging.
We'll need to invest in that collaboration.
And so I, it's something-
Trial and error.
Trial and error.
Oh, completely.
Because this is new to so many, you know,
people who've been in LG 30, 40 years,
you know, very bright, you know,
sales product focused, you know, people,
and you're now being asked to like reinvent an org chart
that's been relatively, you know,
similar for the past 20 plus years.
Yeah.
But what got us here won't get us there.
And that is a great segue into what
I would love to now talk about, which is, what's
the next phase of LG?
It feels like you're really at a turning point right now.
So tell us a little bit about that.
A lot of positives for us right now.
I just brought up the fact that alignment
from our most senior leader on down is there.
That's fantastic.
This year we became the number one home appliance brand
in the US in both units and dollars.
So we've always been one of the top brands
and this year we broke through.
We're still like the number one in OLED,
over 50% market share.
But we've hit a point where we really have to rethink our company,
because there's only so far you could take a hardware business.
And if you've heard or if anybody's seen like last year's CES or our CEO spoke or even any press announcement,
the step for us that we have to take has become what our CEO is calling a smart life solutions company. Going from the simplest way to explain this
is going from like a singular transaction
that happens once every five to 10 years
to a customer experience that's happening
on a day-to-day basis.
And we have the hardware that we spoke earlier
about having such a wide portfolio of products.
We're gonna have the hardware in homes in every room in the home
from the kitchen to the basement,
the living room, the bedroom.
We have the products in the homes and now how do we get them all
to get to what was that initial vision of connected homes, smart homes.
That's really where we're going as a company.
And what we talked about earlier about shifting the orgs
around to really focus on customer experience,
that's small changes compared to what we have to do
to really become a solutions company.
You're fantastic when it comes to hardware,
but taking that next step is a big step.
And what does that require?
What are you looking at in terms of different ways
of working and also different ways of designing products?
We'll hear a little bit more of this,
yes, about our take on AI.
We refer to it more as affectionate intelligence
versus artificial intelligence.
I love this so much.
Yeah, and the reason we're making that distinction
is we want to find the right balance So much. Yeah. And the reason we're making that distinction is,
we wanna find the right balance of proactively supporting and helping customers in their home
and not crossing the boundaries we all worry about
with AI, right?
So when you're talking about the,
what does it mean when we're designing products
or thinking about the future of products?
It's like, when it comes to the washing machine,
giving early detection, if we notice filters are clogged
or a connection with the water isn't right,
or just even letting people know when the laundry is done
so they could swap it out.
Simple little things like that
that will help people in a day to day,
all the way up to like when autonomous vehicles start
becoming more regular, the car becomes another room in your house, in your home, right?
In a sense. So what you're watching, what you're doing in your home can seamlessly be
brought into the car experience, whether it's watching something or you're on a Zoom like this,
and you're like, you're just saying, switch to the automotive platform.
It's a lot of servicing the customers, making life seamless, proactively providing solutions
to customers. We call it, for the kitchen, we call it zero labor. How do we make the kitchen experience
So how do we make the kitchen experience less of a chore
and more enjoyable? So this is what we're talking about
when it comes to our vision.
I'm just thinking about the Jetsons right now
and how I never thought that that would be a reality
in my lifetime, but here we are.
Yeah, you're 100% right.
That's in essence a fun way of looking at it, for sure.
It's like connecting the products, having.
But that's why it was important for us
when we were establishing this vision.
One of the big steps we had to do was evolve the brand
and make the brand communicate what the brand stood for,
because allowing a brand into your life
in the sort of way where we're integrated in,
like you're saying, we're rosy telling you
that your kids need to be picked up at four o'clock
and we'll have food ready when you get home.
Customers really aren't gonna just,
in the past we had good reviews on our refrigerators,
our laundry, our TVs, all right, I'll buy it,
it's good reviews, it's a All right, I'll buy it. It's good reviews.
It's a good price.
It's worth it.
But now it's like, wait, what does this company stand for?
So reinventing the brand or better yet, committing to telling the brand story has been a big
part of our development of where we're going in the last two years.
Tell us a little bit more about that. What was the real, like, the philosophy and
the influence of this new brand story that you're telling?
As I mentioned, as we started to think about moving beyond being a hardware company and
being solutions-based and recognizing that, you know, the brand is going to play a huge
role, it already plays a big role, but even a bigger role as we evolve. We were
noticing that in the US over the past 10 years, we've doubled our revenue. We've had significant
growth in sales and we've seen good improvements in our product brand metrics. When we looked
at corporate brand metrics, it was somewhat stagnant over those 10 years. And it wasn't a surprise because we really were allowing, um,
people to experience the brand through our products. You know,
so if you're a refrigerator owner,
you're seeing LG through the eyes of, of the refrigerator and what it brings to
you. Or if you're a gamer and you're looking at ultra gear gaming monitor,
you're experiencing LG that way. Thankfully, as I mentioned, we make fantastic products that are always well reviewed. So
sentiment was pretty positive about LG, but there still was a gap in what LG stood for in the brand
affinity you want. So two years ago, really beginning of 2023 and to 2022, we set out the US and was working,
I mean, it was really driven by Headquarters team
because the US market is so big,
they welcomed us into the process.
And what I loved about what they did is
even though the press really said
LG launches a new brand identity,
what they really did, which was very smart,
was harness what was there, what do we stand for? And so the new brand identity was really us saying, we're going to commit to telling the
brand story to exposing customers to what the brand is about. And you've seen a lot of improvements.
We're LG, our slogan is life's good. And what that is, is like a promise
to really champion positivity and optimism,
not just in your life, but your work life, your personal life.
So that's really been the foundation of what we've done.
We've made a lot of progress in that.
So it's a very long answer, but it's,
the main thing where you're seeing the results
is Interbrand this year noticed a difference
from last year, this year, where they value your brand value
and it's a 40% increase in our brand value,
really based on the fact that we're exposing consumers
to our brand and opening up what we stood
for and LG is now in the interbrand top 100 brands in the world as of this year. So it's
nice to see the fruits of labor paying off, but even more encouraging that we're seeing
it in the brand, we're seeing it in our own brand metrics, a lot of improvements in the
perceptions of the brand.
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Well, congratulations.
I'm sure that feels really good to say,
oh, okay, there's recognition for what we've been doing.
But I just want to highlight the importance
of storytelling here.
And it is, the first thing is always having a great product
that works well, that people enjoy,
that solves the customer's problems.
But there's also, in what you're describing, this really important piece of telling the
story of what this brand means so that people feel connected to it.
And I can only imagine that as we become more and more connected to our technology, that
our homes become connected, our technology becomes connected
to each other within our homes and all of that, that we want to feel like we are a part
of something in that. And it's not just a product that we put on our counter, but it's
actually something that's here to help us live a better life.
Yeah. We are now entering the 12th year of being the number one selling OLED TV. There
was a point where all manufacturers having trouble mass producing OLED screens. They knew
how to produce it, but the failure rate with the way they were doing it was just too high
to make it a viable product. And at one point, LG took a different path to manufacturing
than what you're seeing the competitors take. And that was a very bold, you know, like, optimistic
kind of approach to this, you know, that's you put in your job, you know, so you're not going to get
fired for following everyone else's path and they're all failing, we all can figure it out.
They, you know, they took and it produced an incredible run in our industry
to be the sole manufacturer of a certain technology
for 10 years, it's just unheard of.
We're a fast follower copycat industry where,
oh, that's a great idea and we'll bring that in next year.
I mean, every year is a new line of products, right?
So for us to own OLED TV manufacturing for such a long time,
mass producing it, incredible story
and something we didn't really tell.
And now you're starting to see us
bring those stories to life.
And you mentioned this a little bit about Interbrand,
but I'm curious to know how do you measure
the effectiveness
of these campaigns in really driving the outcomes that you are trying to create?
Yeah, one of the biggest challenges, especially when it comes to brand metrics and tying it
back.
It's so hard.
Yeah.
I mean, what Interbrand did for us is we could always debate methodology and whatnot, but
they have a very solid formula for how they're measuring
brands.
So at the very least, we looked at that formula for how they're measuring it and said, oh,
there's a lot of great insights here on how to improve our brands.
Even down to, they look at how much the company, the employees themselves are aware or aligned to the brand vision and the
brand voice and whatnot and things like that.
Maybe we didn't prioritize, all of a sudden you saw us doing multiple internalization
events where we're talking about the brand sharing stories like we just talked about
even to each other.
It's a nice, besides the fact that you feel better
about where you're working,
because you're hearing these great kind of stories
about overcoming obstacles and challenges.
It also really starts to make you become advocates
and believers in the brand.
So, but to your question, I mean, we have multiple,
we have local brand trackers, global brand trackers, we have the
interbrand stuff. And by all metrics, we saw a lot of survey based data, of course, but we saw
lifts and willing to pay more for and brand preference affinity. We also have, I think,
a campaign going on right now for a whole appliance group. That's the perfect time for us to really,
now from a home appliance group. That's the perfect time for us to really, we became the most reliable home appliance brand based on consumer reports, you know, surveys and rankings a couple years ago.
And we've started really leaning into that. It's part customer experience, part, you know, a tough
time, you know, for the economy right now. So it was a great message that's resonating really well with consumers.
We typically have one of the higher price points,
but the products are a little bit more premium
and they don't break as much
as according to consumer reports.
So you're seeing like all this sort of coming into place,
all these things that were running in parallel paths kind of converging from
your growing with the brand means improving our
relationship with consumers because we're a D to C, the reliability,
which is like customer service, customer reliability.
So, yeah, it's it's all sort of convergence.
It makes it a very exciting time for us.
It grounds you for sure.
You mentioned something that I am curious to go a little bit deeper on, but it's really sharing customer stories internally.
Because I think that talking about those experiences, those pieces of feedback,
or the things that went well, or the things that didn't go well internally is so great.
What practices do you have on your team
to really share those stories, if any practices?
Right now, it's a little ad hoc to be completely honest.
It's like town halls, it's meetings.
It's funny because we've had a conversation about this.
Ideally, it's integrated into everything.
We don't need to have specific meetings to talk about this.
It should be part of every meeting.
But at the same time, you want to sort of expedite it a bit.
So we do have sort of breakout sessions,
but our CEO has us do like for him,
a monthly sort of recap on our voice of consumer tool
where we'll pick like five key topics
and just do deep
dives into it could be as simple as like delivery issues or vacuum features that it could go
all over the place, but it's getting us into this habit of pulling the data, drawing out
insights. And then the actions that come off of this is, in the room is everyone from supply chain
to product marketing, product development,
to regular marketing, to call center support.
So it just shows you how impactful listening consumer
can be when you look at all the different departments
in this room and during these meetings.
Yeah, it's that cross-functional understanding
that I think goes so far.
And it's something that, in my experience,
is it feels like a nice to have.
And we're like, oh, it takes time to have these conversations
and that and that.
But the result of it means we're thinking about the customer more.
And I find it can really drive innovation.
And speaking of innovation, I wanted to talk
a little bit about LG Nova. Can you explain to us what LG Nova is?
It works with startups and entrepreneurs, investors, to help empower them and bring
their ideas to light through partnerships. It really had a broad mandate,
but at the end of the day, it's really,
it's trying to sort of help push forward what's next
in whether it's hardware solutions, experience,
it's all about future focus.
Cool, so it's kind of the innovation incubator
where you're bringing different minds to the table, outside of people from outside of LG to come in and help think through what the
future can really look like.
Yeah. And LG is helping these groups or these teams or entrepreneurs in different ways.
But it's this idea that innovation can come from anywhere. And so it's not like it has to go through
the process that we've gone through
in developing our products in the past.
So that's the root of it.
It's a pretty cool group.
I do the brand introduction to when we have new hires,
we have a new hire summit like once every two months.
And I always love talking to the LG Nova hires. We have a new hire summit, like once every two months. And I always love talking to the LG
Nova hires because they come in from California and to our headquarters and about what they're
doing. It sounds like a lot of fun. And it really it's so perfectly aligned to what LG brand is
standing for. It's like, you know, championing that sort of, you know, that optimism, positivity of new ideas
and new ways of doing things.
Sometimes we need to think outside of the box
in order to really find the next path forward.
I was listening to a podcast the other day.
It was with Eric Schmidt, the former CEO of Google.
And he was talking about how their innovation lab,
and I know Apple has an innovation,
a lot of companies have innovation labs.
But how they need to be in a different building,
separate from everyone else.
We have to like create that space of literally outside
of the box of the normal building to be able to think
about all these different ways of approaching perhaps
the same problem
but from a different way, a different perspective.
And I know LG has done some incredibly innovative things.
I was telling you earlier that I used to live in Korea.
I went on a student exchange there and I remember this is about 15 years ago.
And that was when they first started launching or talking about the flexible screen,
which I've seen incredible improvements on over the years of this concept of having a
screen that you can fold and bend and stretch. It is wild.
It's wild. I know. We had a TV that was rollable.
It would be just in a baseboard, it rolled up.
We have a monitor that for people,
one gaming, one more immersive,
the sides can come in.
Even more so, you might have seen,
we have a transparent screen TV now,
a transparent OLED.
It looks just like a piece of glass and then you turn it
on and it's like full HD, you know, OLED TV picture quality. And it's just, yeah, it's awesome. Last
year at CES, it won like, you know, numerous awards and it was reporters couldn't stop reporting on it. That was just a 55-inch model this year.
We'll be launching a bigger screen size.
The applications will probably be a little bit more on the B2B world.
We have a storefront that you always,
even like a restaurant, you want to show beautiful pictures of your food,
but also show the beautiful interior.
You can switch it on and off and do both.
But even in the home, it was the transparent OLED screen does is
it could look like a regular, you know, shelving unit.
And then all of a sudden it becomes a beautiful TV.
So that's awesome. There's a lot of cool stuff.
I mean, I am definitely of the generation
where I don't like having the black box in my house.
So I don't have a TV and I'm like,
I want it when I go to somewhere else,
I love having a TV, but I just don't like seeing it.
So I love the innovations around how we can make that
more just a part of my life instead of this reminder
of like watching TV.
Yeah, we have another product that fits into the mold you're talking about.
I do think TV, different form factors of TVs
is gonna be the future of television
and where brands like LG can differentiate
from the cheaper brands that are really commoditizing TVs.
But we have a product called a Stand By Me.
It's basically a battery powered TV on a stand with rollable.
So what we've done, like my wife wasn't keen on having a big TV in the bedroom.
So we have this Stand By Me Go.
It's just in the corner and when we want to watch TV, we just roll it out.
And it's like it's battery powered.
It's so easy to work with.
And then you just throw it back in the corner
and it could be for, you could use it sometimes
if you need like a second screen
when you're working on your laptop.
I mean, so there's a lot of different ways
displays will be evolving for sure.
Well, I am going to check that one out
because that sounds like exactly what I want.
I should definitely send you some footage.
Amazing.
So speaking of B2B, there has been a renewed focus Exactly what I want. I should definitely send you some footage. Amazing.
So speaking of B2B, there has been a renewed focus on your B2B segment.
How are you approaching that, especially when it comes to customer experience and marketing?
Yeah.
Well, again, we touched on it earlier.
How does the brand or how does the current organizational structure adapt to that? I mean, for us,
I've mentioned that we've had fantastic growth over the last 10 years. B2B offers an untapped
area for us in many ways. We're definitely a player in the B2B space, but it wasn't a focus
for us. It's becoming much more of a focus. You're going to see our overall portfolio,
even though it'll still be B2C, majority B2C, you'll see B2B taking up a larger part of our
revenue split. And B2B for us is a lot of different things. It's the builder market,
if home appliance, we're getting very involved in working with home builders,
So we're getting very involved and working with home builders.
It's commercial displays, storefronts, it's hospitals. I mean, there's so many verticals that we're working with and expanding.
And I think, you know, we're like, you know, the official TV
of the Dallas Cowboys and the New York Yankees.
So we're talking to them how to bring B2B displays into their arenas.
So right now it's a separate entity from what I'm working on.
But of course the brand stays the same, all the best practices that we're learning from
customer experience, a little bit different of how we're working with them.
But at the end of the day, it's the right message to people at the right time, right?
Delivering sometimes an unexpected, a very comforting experience throughout the whole, the right message to the to people at the right time, right? You know, delivering a
sometimes unexpected, a very comforting experience throughout the whole, whether it's a purchase
or transaction or ordering. So there's a lot of like best practices that overlap, but you know,
we're sort of developing that skill set right now.
Yeah, it's a it's in many ways another world. And at the same time, it's like you said, it's
providing the right message.
It's thinking about what that customer needs and wants and how do we deliver to it.
So that's exciting.
It also sounds like there's, I mean, just with the innovation that is happening in this
space, how can we be integrating products more into our lives,
as you said, like in our homes?
That is really exciting.
You've been making big improvements and waves
when it comes to your brand and your customer experience.
And I love to just look at the other side of things
sometimes, what are the challenges
that you're currently facing?
The big challenge that the industry,
well, there's two challenges that companies like LG are facing
now industry-wide.
The first goes back to COVID.
So during COVID time, a lot of non-breakage demand
was pulled forward, right?
So you had people who understandably
were like didn't lose their jobs and they were home
and they weren't spending money on gas or vacations or anything and like this would be a great time to to build the man cave or to redo
the kitchen or you know whatever so so much demand was pulled up and then after you know
covid sort of got better or loosened up people started shifting their discretional income into
what they were missing those few years. So vacations and other things.
Right now you're seeing in home appliance,
the largest percentage of purchases ever that are purchasing because something broke.
So demand is down and now you're seeing,
we call it distress shopper,
someone who's something's breaking or about to break,
as a counting of over 70% of home appliance purchases, where typically it's 60%, maybe even
a bit lower. Yeah. So the demand is down across the board, people are just buying less products,
less TVs, less appliances, which made our becoming the number one brand for home appliance even more impressive
because it wasn't just that we sort of got more, we were stealing share and grabbing share from others.
But now the second big challenge for a brand like this is the commoditization of television.
So we're five years removed from like people that when they were buying a TV was highly considered purchase, they research it, they figured out what they wanted.
And now you're seeing people that go to Walmart for eggs and milk and they see a 55 inch TV for like $200 and they're like, why not? So now if you're a video file,
if you really care about having a really good picture quality
and the best available,
we still win in that market most of the time.
But when you start, that's a sliver of people at this point,
a lot of people are,
we even saw the purchase dynamic shift where you used to say, I'm going to buy a new TV,
it goes in the living room, the living room TV moves to the bedroom or better to use the basement,
you know, and it was like this pecking order. And now that TVs have, you know, become much more
affordable, you're seeing people be like, well, why not, I'll just get that cheap 55 inch for the
third bedroom.
So it's the dynamic has shifted a bit.
So that's a bit of a challenge where we have to
address by really bringing more to our TVs.
And the first thing that we have, it's a very,
I think a big differentiator for us
versus the cheaper televisions,
is that LG smart TVs come with
something called LG channels, which is 300 free channels.
You just hook up the TV to the internet and you basically get something that I feel is
better than basic cable was, you know, when we were young.
Which is expensive now, by the way.
Exactly.
I'm like, how much does it cost to have cable TV?
It's insane. Exactly. I'm like, how much does it cost to have cable TV? It's insane.
Yeah, I know. And now you're getting enough. You just have LG smart TV and it's going
into a second, third bedroom. And you're like, I don't need a new cable box or
there's only so many YouTube TV connections I could have.
This is a LG is a great TV to have because you're going to have, like I said, 300
free channels for the life of the television.
It's not, you know, so that, so things like that.
That's what we have to figure out.
And it also makes us, you know,
we talk about moving away from hardware.
We have a partnership with NCAA right now.
And part of the partnership,
we have a channel on our smart TVs
that's unique to LG TVs.
It's called the NCAA Champions Channel.
We talk about championing the people who make life good.
There's so many schools, D2, D3,
there's so many sports programs.
Right now, majority of what we see on television is D1,
famous, more popular sports.
This channel is like playoffs and championships of D2, D3 of like rowing of tennis.
So it gives these athletes who work just as hard as like, you know, D1 athletes are just
as hard as football players, where 99% of them, there's no big payday at
the end of it. It gives them a platform where now they have their championships being broadcast
nationally through our smart TV platform. And it's, you know, so now we're bringing
content play into our hardware play. And even one more step further, we started creating unique content by ourselves for that channel.
So we have a series called the rivalries, which
is like finding these niche little rivalries in D2,
D3 schools that have been going on for 100 years
and doing like a docu-series on them to put on our channel.
So it's forcing us to rethink what
we can do to make our products more than just a good picture quality.
I mean, sometimes that competition
or the shifts in the market
force us to take it a step further
and really think about how do we provide more value
for the products that we are selling.
So I love that story because I never would have thought,
oh, LG is doing this, but look at that.
Like you said, necessity, right?
We have to find ways to differentiate
and it's creating some good stuff.
Completely.
So I have two last questions for you
as we wrap up on our time here.
And the first is, I'd love to hear about a recent experience that
you had with a brand that left you impressed. What was that?
Yeah, I remember, it didn't happen to me personally. I remember reading about a recent experience
a consumer had with Chewy, who's known for doing some great stuff. And it was like returning
dog food because the dog passed away and then Chewy responded with like,
you know, condolences and like a gift. Those are home runs.
I want to just say Chewy is probably the most common response that I get to that question.
Chewy and Apple, you know, but I think it just is such a testament to the way that Chewy not only
recovers if there's a mistake, but I think
most of the time it's either the customer's mistake or misfortune that Chewy just steps
up to the plate around.
They made that like part of their DNA from day one, which is where I think the advantage
while the companies are trying to recalibrate and restructure, changing KPIs from call times to customer satisfaction,
things like that.
Chewy's done a good job.
Zappos is another one that I,
if you haven't read Delivering Happiness,
I highly recommend it to anyone because that, again,
Zappos really pioneered, I think, in the space of making their customer service,
their marketing, Again, Zappos really pioneered, I think, in the space of making their customer service,
their marketing, because people will tell that story
of how the customer service agent that was helping them
pick the right pair of shoes or find the right dog food
went above and beyond their wildest expectations
to support them.
That is the type of referral and storytelling
that really goes so far.
The value of a story like that is greater than a two hundred
million dollar TV budget, you know, like advertising budget.
I mean, it's just like you get people thinking, oh, that brand goes
above and beyond.
You know, they they provide sort of a certain peace of mind.
That's so important. That's so incredibly important.
And my last question for you is,
what is one piece of advice
that every customer experience leader should hear?
You know, it goes back to, I think,
what we were talking about earlier is,
as you embark on this, it's really important
that you bring your most collaborative team leaders
to the table.
And unfortunately, you have people sometimes
that are very good at their job who are not collaborative.
You gotta have to put them in a corner
and still leverage what they do.
But that has to be a priority
when you're embarking on this journey is collaboration.
Even if somebody's maybe not the most strategic,
if they can bring people together
and get people working together,
that's the most important talent when it comes to this.
Because as we said, it's you're breaking down walls
that have been up for quite some time.
Collaboration is gonna make a break, if it works for you.
You are speaking my language.
I think that collaboration is one
of the most important things in our ability
to develop relationships with our colleagues.
It's essential to be able to get things across the line,
to be able to bring the customer voice into the company
in order to innovate through creating safe spaces for people
to come up with new ideas.
And I do think if I take what you just shared
one step further, will I agree that we want to make sure
that everyone in the room is collaborative,
that we really empower the people who are amazing
at bringing others together.
We can also teach collaboration. I believe that. That people can change even
if they don't want to. It is possible.
It definitely helps if your senior leadership is on board and is requiring it. I definitely
think it's a... But I agree with you. You have to check egos at the door sometimes with this stuff.
And I was talking to a friend the other day about like org charts.
And we were saying there's no there's no perfect org chart.
They're like the orgs work best when people have good relationships
and want to be collaborative.
It's these processes help and things help.
But if you have people that want to make it work,
usually you find a way to make it work and vice versa.
I could not agree with you more.
Well, Louis, thank you so much for coming on the show.
This has been such a great conversation.
Pleasure talking to you.
Really appreciate it.