Developing a New CCO Organization For Dell – During Their Merger With EMC, with Karen Quintos – CB37

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Bliss Dell-EMC

Episode Overview

Karen Quintos is the EVP and CCO of Dell Technologies, which came about as the result of Dell and EMC merging, which created the world’s largest privately-held tech company. Karen is a great leader, but I also thought this conversation was interesting because of the merger aspect, the tech industry aspect, and the privately-held aspects. Mergers can be common, but not at this size — and most CCOs probably don’t operate under a merger in their career, via sheer numbers. Karen’s perspectives on all this throughout the interview are very interesting.

About Karen

From her LinkedIn:

Karen Quintos Jeanne Bliss podcastMy approach to marketing and business leadership can be summed up in two words – customer inspired. It’s the common thread woven throughout my career and my proudest achievements in business.

As CMO of the world’s only truly integrated technology solutions provider, I have conversations every day with customers about how technology is reinventing not only business, but the marketing discipline. It is among the biggest challenges facing organizations today, and one Dell is uniquely positioned to solve. It’s also a personal passion of mine to share what we’ve learned at Dell about the value IT can bring to modern marketing. But it’s just one of many:

I am a champion of women in IT and in business. I sponsor Dell’s largest employee resource group – Women in Search of Excellence – to foster a corporate culture of support and advancement for my female colleagues.

I am passionate about entrepreneurs as the world’s No. 1 source for jobs and innovation. Technology is more often than not the key ingredient to help propel them from startup to success. The Dell Women’s Entrepreneur Network, which I host annually, is a great example of how we’re bringing together high-growth entrepreneurs for networking, insights and access to cutting-edge IT.

The Four Major Steps

In the new capacity, Karen had four major focal points:

  • Define the role of the CCO
  • ID priorities and create focus areas
  • Engage the leadership team
  • Evaluate and give herself feedback

Define The Role Of The CCO

This is the first part of our discussion. Here, we speak a lot about the types of research you have to do when you elevate to a role like this, especially at a merged company of this size. Some of her first actions included:

  • Speaking with thought leaders (Karen and I did a working session together with her team last fall, too!)
  • Road shows where she spoke with anyone who interacts with clients
  • As many client conversations as possible
  • Bring in data — but be sure to target the data, and not just collect everything (which can confuse people)

Identify Priorities

This is a real problem for companies, especially as they get bigger. Karen and her team identified 10 priorities, which were subsequently grouped into three focus areas. Those were:

  • Design solutions to deliver high-value to, and earn advocacy from, the key customer segments of Dell Technologies
  • Build out and continue to enable customer analytics and insights; the goal here was both being able to understand customers but also to use the analytics gleaned for top-quality service
  • Expand corporate responsibility, giving, and entrepreneurship. How can Dell Technologies partner with customers on not just revenue plays, but higher-purpose missions?

Now we have the role defined and priorities set. It’s time to engage the leadership team.

Engaging The Leadership Team

Karen needed buy-in on the 10 priorities grouped into the three focus areas above. She knew that a lot of executive-level discussions would be anecdotal, but wanted to have a quantitative/qualitative basis on top of that. That’s where the big data/analytics side came in. She had numbers, but also stories/anecdotes, and was able to get the 10 priorities and focus areas approved. This, in turn, became the initial customer experience road map.

Now, she meets with the rest of the leadership team bimonthly. The goal is to have conversations and engage around the priorities, including seeing if anyone has questions, etc.

One big thing we discussed here is the idea of “culture work.” It needs to be easy for other people in the organization (individuals or departments) to (a) understand what you’re doing but (b) be able to reach out. Karen wants to make sure her team isn’t silo’ed and can work with other teams, other executives, and front-line management. It’s not just about specific CX metrics. It’s about what the company needs and how CX fits into that.

Feedback Loops

Karen evaluates constantly. Since she’s been in the role, for example, she has three key “wins” in her opinion:

  • Metric improvements
  • The thrill of creating a new organization
  • Bringing together the organization under this new mission

She also sees three major areas for improvement:

  • Considerable amount of time is required to communicate goals and priorities; can this be streamlined?
  • Constantly trying to define out the new organization
  • The amount of effort at correcting immediately, early-on opinions

As we’ve all faced, many of the challenges come from communication issues. Those are always very hard to fully tackle.

The Pay It Forward Question

What does Karen know now that she wishes she knew then?

  • Unite the surveys
  • Unite the data fields
  • Unite the way data is captured and reported
  • A one-company view of rich customer data is extremely powerful!
  • The external customer is crucial, of course, but if you don’t focus on the internal organization, you will encounter hiccups
  • Communication is absolutely crucial and essential to everything a company, and the individuals within it, are trying to do

At the very end of the interview (if you want to scroll forward), we talk a bit more about the Dell-EMC merger too.

Republished with author's permission from original post.

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