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You are at:Home»Technology»Emotional intelligence in CX: why connecting with customers matters more than ever

Emotional intelligence in CX: why connecting with customers matters more than ever

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Posted By sme-admin on February 19, 2025 Technology

The 2024 Forrester Customer Experience [CX] Index paints a concerning picture of the current state of CX, with performance continuing to drop for the third consecutive year.

This is particularly evident in key areas such as effectiveness, ease, and, notably, emotion.

As customer experience becomes a key competitive differentiator for brands, the question emerges: why are so many failing to truly connect with their customers on an emotional level?

The emotional gap in CX

In the Forrester report, one of the most troubling insights is the decline in the emotional aspect of CX. This is the component that influences customer loyalty more than anything else, yet it often gets overlooked in favour of efficiency or product features.

According to the report, nearly 40 per cent of brands have seen a significant decline in CX quality, indicating that many companies are failing to resonate emotionally with their audiences.

The rise of automation, AI, and mass personalisation tactics has ironically created a gap where customers are now craving more meaningful, authentic connections.

Why emotional intelligence matters

Emotional intelligence [EI] within customer experience is no longer a ‘nice-to-have’ – it’s essential to long-term success.

More than simply delivering the right product or solving a problem, EI is about understanding the emotional triggers and needs of your customers and responding with empathy and insight.

Customers today don’t just want solutions – they want to feel understood. Brands that master this emotional connection can drive stronger customer loyalty, positive word-of-mouth, and deeper emotional engagement.

The 2024 Forrester CX Index confirms that customers want brands to connect with them beyond transactional interactions and create an emotional resonance where they feel genuinely valued, seen, and heard.

This sentiment is supported by research from Harvard Business Review, which finds that emotionally connected customers are more than twice as valuable as highly satisfied customers. They are more loyal, more likely to recommend the brand, and less sensitive to price fluctuations.

Strategies for enhancing emotional intelligence in CX

To bridge the emotional gap in CX and meet growing customer expectations, brands need to focus on several key strategies.

Human-centric design

Emotionally intelligent CX begins with understanding the emotional needs of customers at every touchpoint. By leveraging customer journey mapping that incorporates emotional states, brands can identify moments where empathy is needed most. This approach ensures customer interactions feel human and relevant, especially in high-stress scenarios such as complaints or service failures.

Artificial Intelligence [AI]

Another key strategy is Artificial Intelligence [AI]. As AI continues to shape the future of CX, businesses should be utilising it to enhance human connection, not replace it. AI can analyse sentiment, tone, and context during customer interactions, enabling brands to deliver more personalised and empathetic responses. But it’s essential to maintain human oversight to ensure the AI’s understanding aligns with the customer’s emotional needs.

Active listening and feedback loops

An emotionally intelligent brand listens attentively to its customers and acts on their feedback. Beyond automated surveys or passive feedback collection, active listening involves regularly reaching out to customers for insights and showing them that their opinions matter. When customers see their feedback being acted upon, it builds trust and strengthens the emotional bond.

Empowering frontline employees

Frontline employees are often the first line of emotional connection with customers, and equipping them with the training, tools, and autonomy to respond empathetically is crucial for enhancing EI.

Giving customer-facing teams the freedom to solve problems creatively and emotionally, within company guidelines, can result in deeper, more positive customer interactions.

Personalisation with a human touch

Personalisation should never be purely data driven. While AI and data can give you insights into customer behaviour, the key to emotional intelligence lies in making interactions feel personal, relevant, and human.

For example, if a customer has previously interacted with your brand through a service issue, acknowledging this history with compassion in future interactions shows that you care and are invested in their satisfaction beyond the transaction.

Looking ahead: the 2025 CX landscape

Forrester’s 2024 CX Index suggests 2025 could be another year of mediocrity for many businesses unless they undergo a significant transformation. The focus needs to shift from just streamlining processes and automating interactions to integrating emotional intelligence as a core strategy in CX efforts.

The report has revealed a concerning decline in CX quality, and brands must evolve quickly to address these issues. As we look ahead to 2025, those that focus on understanding and connecting with their customers at an emotional level will have a distinct competitive advantage.

Ian Nicholls is CEO of Explic8

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