|
Needless to say, Sears took
fast action to improve its call center (as well as its entire
customer service organization). Today, it ranks amongst the
best. But this story begs the question, “How well would
your call center perform on national radio?” There are
several things you can do to avoid call center hell (and the
wrath of a radio broadcaster looking for a good story at your
expense):
- Get help with IVR design (Interactive
Voice Response). IT staffers typically aren’t
trained to design interactive dialogue for customer service
applications. Get help from professionals that have experience
developing interactive voice response solutions that are
useful, usable and engaging.
- Evaluate solutions wisely.
Coming from a vendor, this next point may sound self-serving,
but it’s good advice: get collective internal agreement
on your needs from the business, the telecommunications
manager, customer service managers and agents before you
go to any vendors. If you don’t, solution providers
will inevitably use the situation to mold your needs to
their products. Develop a scorecard that will objectively
(and comprehensively) measure the vendor’s ability
to deliver on your customer service initiative.
- Adopt an Outside-In Approach.
Most organizations present themselves to the public through
their own eyes (commonly known as “Inside-Out”),
which doesn’t always match the needs of the customer.
Present menu options that match the reasons customers call.
Many people use the “grandmother test” to validate
their thinking. For example, telling callers to “Press
1 for Accounts Payable, 2 for Accounts Receivable, or 3
for Shipping” is not grandmother friendly. Another
example; customers perplexed over unauthorized charges may
not consider their issue a billing problem, rather an issue
related to fraud. Think these scenarios through.
- Present Options. Customers
like to feel they are in control of their relationship with
you. If your call center puts callers in queues with long
wait times (more than 2 minutes) give them an option to
leave a voicemail with a preferred callback time. Or, let
them know where to find you on the web or where to send
you email.
- Last but not least, link customer
service investments to business performance. Gartner’s
2002 survey of customer contact centers clearly shows: leading
companies expect investments in customer service to fuel
improvements in business performance. These same leaders
score highest in customer satisfaction. The “laggards”
focus on cost (not quality) and consistently deliver poor
customer satisfaction scores. Not surprisingly, the laggards
are also spending more money per call (Reference, “CRM
in the Contact Center: Prioritizing Investments” Gartner
Measurement, October 2002).
|