Beyond Likes: Why Fostering Customer Love is the Key to Sustainable Business Success Incremental improvements are insufficient for lasting business growth. Research author Marcus Buckingham argues that the only way to achieve truly impactful and sustainable performance is by cultivating deep emotional connections with customers, leading them to not just like but love a company's products or services. This approach, rooted in designing positive experiences, can drive lasting behavioral change and achieve extraordinary outcomes. The conversation explores why this is crucial, how even basic offerings can inspire devotion, and the evidence supporting this powerful strategy. In the competitive landscape of modern business, companies that focus solely on incremental improvements to their products, services, or even the employee experience may find themselves expending effort with minimal lasting impact. This perspective challenges the conventional wisdom, asserting that genuine performance breakthroughs are not achieved through minor tweaks but by cultivating a profound emotional connection that transforms customers into devoted advocates. The argument is that true success lies in making customers not merely satisfied, but deeply in love with what a company offers. This sentiment is amplified by insights from researcher and author Marcus Buckingham, who posits that the traditional methods of incentivizing customer and employee behavior—through goals, corrective feedback, pricing strategies, or loyalty programs—often yield only temporary changes. Buckingham emphasizes that sustainable, long-term productivity and resilience, whether from customers or employees, are driven by the experiences people have. He introduces the concept of being in the business of experience making, where the design of these internal experiences is the true mechanic of behavior change. This shifts the focus from optimizing processes and systems to understanding and designing the emotional journeys of individuals. The evidence, bolstered by meta-analyses of sentiment data, demonstrates a strong, causal relationship between positive experiential feelings and subsequent outcomes. As sentiment scores increase on a linear scale, the impact on outcomes like repeat visits, productivity, and loyalty is not a consistent, proportional increase; instead, the data suggests a more nuanced, perhaps exponential, relationship where extreme positive experiences unlock disproportionately greater results. The core of Buckingham's argument, as discussed with Adi Ignatius, is that companies need to move beyond simply delighting customers. The goal is to foster a deep emotional bond, akin to love, that transcends transactional relationships. This requires a strategic focus on designing experiences that resonate deeply within the individual, prompting sustainable and productive behaviors. While some industries, like food, fashion, or technology, may seem more naturally suited to inspiring passion, Buckingham suggests that this level of devotion is attainable across diverse business sectors. Even seemingly basic products or services can inspire profound connection and loyalty when the underlying strategy is centered on creating exceptional and memorable experiences. The conversation highlights that understanding and operationalizing experience design is a capability that many organizations have yet to seriously embrace, despite its profound implications for achieving extraordinary business outcomes and building resilient, thriving enterprises. The evidence points to a critical juncture where a company's focus on the internal, emotional landscape of its customers and employees becomes the most powerful lever for achieving sustained, exceptional performance