The program is running. The teams are executing. The milestones are being hit. What is harder to know, from inside the execution, is whether the change is landing in the experience of the customers the program was designed to serve. The customer experience does not always keep pace with the execution.
Gregorio Uglioni works on that question. As host of The CX Goalkeeper and advisor across the DACH region and European Union, he works with Chief Transformation Officers and program leaders responsible for delivering customer experience change across complex organizations. He works in German and English.
Atlas³ harvests and evaluates the conversation surrounding your organization as the program runs, month by month, in the market’s own words, against the fourteen measures that show what customers are actually experiencing. The outside view, current, while the program is still in motion.
When a program produces real change, the market conversation surrounding the organization reflects it before internal reports do. Atlas³ harvests that conversation as the program runs and evaluates it against all fourteen measures, aligned to the outcome the program was designed to produce.
Four questions the complete picture answers.
The customer experience is the test of the program. Atlas³ reads whether the program is landing across all fourteen measures: Reach, Interest, Understanding, Trust, Satisfaction, Momentum, Visibility, Stability, Quality, Fairness, Economic Impact, Adoption Strength, Switch Risk, and Community Noise.
Programs hold where the work moves cleanly from one team to the next and customers feel it. They slow where teams are moving but the customer experience has not yet followed. Atlas³ locates both, showing where what customers are saying confirms progress and where the experience has not yet reached what the program intended.
Customers describe whether the organization has changed in the channels they use every day. That language is the public record of whether the program is producing visible customer value. Atlas³ evaluates it as it forms.
Atlas³ shows whether the program is gaining momentum or beginning to plateau. The trajectory gives a Journey Operator the time to act while the program is still in motion, before what the program is doing and what customers are experiencing drift too far apart.
What the market is saying about the program’s impact on customer experience, across all fourteen measures, month by month as the program runs. The outside view of whether the program is producing the outcome it was designed for.
Three formats depending on where you are.
Gregorio works with the organization over time, responsive to what customers are experiencing as the program runs. The Global CX Alliance supports both Gregorio and the organization by certifying Best Agentic CX Practices as the standard continues to evolve, and issues Alliance Certified to organizations that meet it.
Submit the form. Gregorio will return with a complete Atlas³ reading of what customers are experiencing as your program runs, traced to verbatim evidence since January 2026.
A place to know yourself in this work, find peers who share your approach, and walk a longer path.