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During one of our recent World of CX virtual breakfasts, we had the opportunity to learn from Mandisa, a seasoned CX leader who reminded us that strategy without humility, curiosity, and alignment is just noise.

Her reflections were a powerful call to approach Customer Experience not as a silo, but as a connector, a translator, and a business driver. Whether you’re leading CX, influencing change from within, or building your business with service at the core, these lessons are a reminder that meaningful impact starts with understanding people, context, and strategy.

Here are 10 takeaways from her session that truly stood out:

  1. Transitioning from operations to strategic leadership requires openness to coaching, mentorship, and personal development. Great leaders don’t pretend to know it all; they invest in their growth and allow themselves to be guided.
  2. CX is not the center of the universe; it thrives when it collaborates with other business functions. Respecting and aligning with broader business goals makes CX relevant and impactful.
  3. Instead of pushing CX onto businesses, immerse yourself in their world. Understand what keeps leaders up at night, then co-create solutions that support their objectives.
  4. Delivering value means understanding the unique context of each organization. Ask what content decision-makers consume, what influences them, and how local or global their mindset is, and tailor your CX approach accordingly.
  5. Executives don’t care about CX jargon. They want results. Tie CX initiatives to hard business metrics, market share growth, financial performance, or cost reduction, to gain credibility and buy-in.
  6. Passion is great, but to be taken seriously, especially in a corporate environment, you need data-backed, stakeholder-informed business cases. Learn to speak the language of the boardroom.
  7. After conferences and trainings, avoid overwhelming yourself or the business with sweeping changes. Pick one broken process, fix it, and let that success tell the story.
  8. Africa needs serious minds solving serious problems. Time is precious, and we owe it to future generations to work purposefully, challenge policy, and reshape systems.
  9. CX leaders must act as bridges between departments, helping others achieve their deliverables. When you understand others’ accountabilities, you become an asset, not a silo.
  10. Formal qualifications help, but those who endure in CX are the ones who embrace continuous learning. The CX landscape is ever-evolving, and only agile, open minds will keep up and lead.