2022: Striking the Right CX and Security Balance

Secure Payments

14-01-2022 • 6 mins

The pandemic has forced many organisations to change how they interact with their customers. Many retailers, for example, adopted a direct-to-consumer approach, using apps and social media in place of physical outlets.

A significant number of organisations have retained remote workforces – or at least hybrid working – and these shifts have demanded a fresh approach to customer experience strategies, with an emphasis on delivering a seamless customer experience no matter where agents or customer services teams are located. Part of this is to ensure that security is woven into the heart of all customer interactions – particularly when handling customers’ card payments.

As we enter 2022, consumers want businesses to ensure their personal data, including payment information is safe, and businesses need to have a concrete game plan in motion to make consumers feel secure.

In this short episode, PCI Pal’s Data Protection Officer, Innes French, provides predictions that all CX managers should consider in order to strike a balance between providing a frictionless customer experience with the security measures that customers expect and compliance regulators will be auditing.

  • Reset and re-evaluate your security strategies
  • Stop fearing the unknown and focus on existing threats
  • Make payment security compliance a year-round concern, not an annual tick-box exercise
  • It’s time to get serious about making cybersecurity a CX priority

You Might Like

Darknet Diaries
Darknet Diaries
Jack Rhysider
Double Tap
Double Tap
Double Tap Productions Inc.
Acquired
Acquired
Ben Gilbert and David Rosenthal
This Week in Retro
This Week in Retro
Neil from RMCretro - The Cave, Chris from 005 AGIMA and Dave
The Vergecast
The Vergecast
The Verge
TechStuff
TechStuff
iHeartPodcasts
RNIB Tech Talk
RNIB Tech Talk
RNIB Connect Radio
Hard Fork
Hard Fork
The New York Times
Waveform: The MKBHD Podcast
Waveform: The MKBHD Podcast
Vox Media Podcast Network