If everyone is moving forward together, then success takes care of itself
Henry Ford's quote aptly contextualizes the nature of a successful digital ecosystem of e-commerce businesses in the present and foreseeable future. To be successful in today’s day and age, businesses need systems that connect dynamically in real-time, enable clear communications within teams, and help understand their customers. Without such clarity and synchrony, there would always be bottlenecks and gaps, which would eventually lead to lower productivity, ROI, and loss of business value. This is where businesses need a DXP.
As the name suggests, DXP stands for Digital Experience Platform and is an emerging category of enterprise software. It helps businesses provide a seamless customer experience across all digital touchpoints with a comprehensive view of their digital presence and execution. Right from creating and managing an online store, to managing other digital touchpoints such as email campaigns, social media, and mobile apps, a DXP’s architecture encompasses all. It can be considered a single product or a combination of multiple units put together to work.
While a DXP and a CMS are both tools that aid businesses in managing digital content, these differ on account of their purpose and build.
A CMS is the central content repository that supports creating, managing, and publishing digital content. It is the primary platform for the content which is then distributed across websites and other digital platforms. It allows for creating, managing, and storing a vast range of content types such as text, image, video, audio, and so on without needing technical skills.
Compared to that, DXP is a more comprehensive solution. It successfully combines the capabilities of a CMS with additional tools and technologies to create and manage personalized digital experiences across multiple channels and touchpoints. Its functionalities are not merely limited to website content management. It also extends to collecting real-time information, and processing actionable insights from data collected across mobile apps, email campaigns, social media, and other digital touchpoints.
In short, a CMS can be a subunit of a DXP, while DXP is a more comprehensive solution. With the right DXP strategy, it helps businesses embrace the ever-growing digital landscape by leveraging real-time information gathered from customer interactions.
With a better ability to adapt to new technologies, and connect with audiences as digital maturity increases or new technologies emerge, businesses can future-proof their model as well as drive better performance, engagement, and thus ROI.
By now it is well established that implementing DXP can help businesses improve their overall customer experience, drive sales and revenue, and gain a competitive advantage in the digital marketplace. But the story doesn’t end here.
Such great performance is enabled by a proper implementation. Therefore, the first step to implementing DXP begins with finding the right implementation partners. Someone who can ace technology implementations as well as is capable of understanding business needs. Being a digital experience company, we understand these nuances well. To explore what we can do for you, let’s start talking!