If I’m reading a book, I expect an analog experience. If I’m reading an e-book, I expect that experience to be different, even if the “medium” is still based in text. They may both be books, but they’re distinctive experiences that manifest different expectations.

If I’m staying in an inexpensive hotel, my expectation for my stay is different than if I had booked a posh suite in an exclusive hotel. I might tolerate things in a roadside motel that I wouldn’t at the Four Seasons. It’s a different set of implicit promises.

Expectations matter a great deal when it comes to the quality of any experience, any interaction. The danger area – or at least the challenge – is where expectations and experience don’t line up.

When that happens, whose fault is it? What leads to misguided expectations, or not delivering on that anticipated experience? How do you diagnose it, and what do you do about it?

This is why it’s so critical to understand what your customers *expectations* are for their experience with your brand. It’s not enough anymore for you to craft aspirations for your brand, or a vision for how you’d like to be seen.

It’s the perception and experience reality for your customers that’s defining you, and how well you level  expectation and actuality.

If there’s a disconnect between the way you see your company and the way people are talking about you, perhaps you’re in the midst of an expectation rift.

So the choice becomes: shift the expectation, or amend the experience. Each probably have their place, but I know which way I lean. How would you handle it?

Photo Credit: Daquella Manera, because it made me snicker

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