Tune in as we share real-talk conversations between women working in CX and those influencing the CX agenda from the periphery too.
Clare Muscutt talks with Lauretta Campestre about contact centre technology and empowering agents through conversation analytics.
“As a woman, I didn't behave, act, or talk like my male counterparts. Oftentimes, I was the note taker, or the one coordinating beverages, but the silver lining… I was in the room, I was hearing the conversations, and she who controls the pen controls the actions.”
Clare Muscutt talks with Anna Noakes Schulze about the future of Web3 customer experience and the Metaverse.
“There’s a fundamental shift at work here. Web 2.0’s focus was on capturing people’s attention by any means possible. Web3’s focus is capturing investment and loyalty.”
Clare Muscutt talks with Serena Riley about challenging gender bias for the future generation of women leaders.
“I was always waiting for other people to tell me when I was ready to move up but when I realised that I could take the reins and be the person I wanted to be, everything changed for me.”
Clare Muscutt talks with Hayley Pugh about graduate careers, digital transformation and omnichannel Customer Experience.
“… because of digital, we now expect brands to provide constant support, personalization and ease – brands really have to live up to those expectations now.”
Clare Muscutt talks with Airship’s Strategic Services Lead, Jennie Lewis about the challenges faced by women in Customer Experience technology.
I mean, it's not easy [for women in tech] For years I'd go into meetings where I was the only woman in the room, like it would just be a bunch of Engineers and me. I think, the two biggest things I ran into were folks, taking credit for my work— Having people just, just straight-up take credit for it. That, and then really getting dismissed during some of those meetings. You know, in some cases one of the guys that I had a little joke where I would say something and we had a customer who would just be like... “No, that can't possibly work”. And then ‘he’ (my account management friend) would repeat the exact same thing I said and it was accepted….. The sexism is mind-blowing…..