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Craig Borowski

I first began investigating customer experiences in 1984. I was nine years old and fascinated with robots. With no robots around, I found the next best thing: Interactive Voice Response (IVR) telephone systems. I spent hours dialing the toll-free numbers of big companies, pushing buttons and navigating the then-new technology. It felt like talking to a robot, just as it does today whenever I dial an 800 number and an IVR picks up. Some things never change!

But some things do. Jumping forward to the early 2010s, the software industry was undergoing a major change. SaaS was beginning its rapid takeover of the software industry, and new SaaS products were popping up daily. I had a front row seat as a software analyst for Gartner, the IT consulting firm.

In Gartner’s Software Advice division, I analyzed new SaaS solutions, including those for:

  • Customer service
  • Customer self-service
  • Chatbots and Live Chat
  • Journey mapping
  • Call centers
  • Call center analytics
  • Knowledge management
  • Survey and opinion-gathering
  • IT Services Management

Though software has been central to my research, my focus has always been on how that software improves or detracts from customer experiences and customer relationships.

Over the last decade I’ve published in a wide variety of industry and business-strategy publications, including a 2015 piece in the Harvard Business Review What a Great Digital Customer Experience Actually Looks Like.

In recent years I’ve held managing editor positions for a variety of business and IT-strategy sites including The Motley Fool and Digital.com.

The Technology I Use
I’m a big fan of Airtable for managing publishing workflows. It provides the right balance of functionality and flexibility. Google Docs is my preferred word processor, mainly because it’s lightweight and streamlined. It seems to have 1/10th as many functions and options as Microsoft Word yet, somehow, it’s 10X more enjoyable to use!

Craig