To build deep customer empathy, embed every new employee—regardless of role or seniority—with a real customer for several days. Their sole task is to solve one real problem, creating an immediate, visceral connection to the company's purpose.
To cultivate a culture of high agency, frame ultimate responsibility as a privilege, not a burden. By telling new hires 'everything's your fault now,' you immediately set the expectation that they have control and are empowered to solve problems. This approach attracts and retains individuals who see ownership as an opportunity to make an impact.
The same marketing funnels used to acquire paying customers can be directly applied to attract and 'close' new employees. This reframes recruiting from a siloed HR function to a core marketing activity, allowing you to leverage skills you already have to build your team.
Frame employee training as an investment, not a cost, because 'growth follows people, not plans.' Train your team beyond the technical aspects of their job to focus on building genuine human connections. This approach transforms a transactional service into a loyal community, turning your staff into powerful growth multipliers.
Ask every team member, "How do you make the company money?" For non-revenue roles like a camera operator, frame their contribution in terms of preventing costly mistakes (e.g., wasted footage, delays). This fosters a deep understanding of their impact and gives their work more meaning.
Brainstorming cannot reveal the true friction in your customer experience. Following JetBlue's example, leaders must regularly become their own customers. This practice uncovers how high-level decisions inadvertently create flaws in the customer journey that are invisible from the boardroom.
Brands meticulously map the customer journey but often ignore the employee experience. To build a strong culture, apply the same brand principles to every employee touchpoint—from the job offer to their first day—to ensure everyone is aligned and delivering on the brand's promise.
Most engineers only interact with customers during negative events like outages or escalations. To build customer empathy and a product mindset, leaders must intentionally create positive touchpoints. This includes sending engineers to customer conferences or including them on low-stakes customer calls.
Standard questions like 'What's your biggest pain point?' often yield poor results. Reframing the question to what work a customer would offload to a new hire bypasses their pride or inability to articulate problems, revealing the tedious, high-value tasks ripe for automation.
A new hire's first project was planning a major event happening in three months. This trial-by-fire approach is an effective onboarding method, forcing rapid learning of company systems, team dynamics, and external vendor management, which quickly and effectively integrates the new person into the team.
To truly understand a B2B customer's pain, interviews are not enough. The best founders immerse themselves completely by 'going native'—taking a temporary job at a target company to experience their problems firsthand. This uncovers authentic needs that surface-level research misses.