Companies are increasingly turning to automated solutions to navigate the demands of quality customer experience transactions. However, this new communication era is also leading to stricter compliance requirements associated with customer information.
https://www.theceomagazine.com/business/innovation-technology/why-compliance-and-customer-experience-are-vital/
As companies define their target maturity state and compliance road map, there is a tremendous opportunity for putting forth their brand as one that customers can trust. Come 25 May, the real beneficiaries will be companies that put customer experience at the forefront of their delivery plan and revisit data processing activities that are likely to cause most detriment to customers.
GDPR offers many avenues for companies to enhance customer experience and the core of customer centricity can be summarised into three facets, as below.
https://www.postonline.co.uk/regulation/3494571/gdpr-a-great-catalyst-for-enhancing-customer-experience/
If you’re not already well on your way to GDPR compliance, it’s unlikely you’ll be fully compliant by May 25. But, according to the statistics reported in our first article, you’ll be far from the only one.
While it’s impossible to know how such wide-scale noncompliance will be addressed, there will likely be a grace period in which organizations that can demonstrate they’re making a good-faith effort will get by with a warning and perhaps some guidance on how to accelerate their efforts.
https://www.cmswire.com/customer-experience/aligning-to-gdpr-realities-what-to-do-if-you-havent-started/