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Customer
Service and The Human Experience
By Rosanne D’Ausilio, Ph.D., President,
Human Technologies Global, Inc.
Historically, customer service was delivered over the phone or
in person. Customers didn’t have many choices, and switching
to competitors was cumbersome. Today, these methods are but two
of the many possible touch points of entry for any given interaction.
With all the options the Internet brings, competition is literally
a click away. If, as has been reported, 65% of your business comes
from current customers, then in order to stay in business, you
best focus on winning the satisfaction and loyalty of those customers.
With
continued attention on customer service, customer retention, and
lifetime value of the customer, it is no surprise that contact
center operations continue to increase in importance as the primary
hub of a customer’s experience. The contact center is still
the most common way that customers get in touch with businesses.
In fact, Gartner reports 92% of all contact is through the center.
While
much attention has been focused on the technology and benefits
of providing multiple channels for customer contact, little consideration
has been directed to handling the human part of the equation—training
Customer and Technical Service Representatives to field more than
just telephone communications. With the explosion of e-commerce,
the need to reinforce keeping the human element in the equation
is paramount. Certainly now more than ever before in history,
customer-centric service is a necessity.
Twenty
five years from now customers will still be human beings, still
be driven by desires and needs. Virtual environments do not create
virtual customers. Except for the simplest transactions, some
customers still need to be connected with and nurtured by a live
person. Amazon.com has learned this. They employ hundreds of traditional
customer service representatives using phone lines to help customers
with questions that cannot be dealt with online.
With
the ability to handle simple transactions available by using sophisticated,
self-service technology, customer calls, faxes, and/or e-mails
are more complex, more complicated, sometime even escalated, heightening
stress levels.
At
the same time, research has identified the Customer Service and
Technical Representative as one of the ten most stressful jobs
in America today, with job stress costing employers an estimated
$300+ billion yearly in absenteeism, lowered productivity, rising
health insurance costs and other medical expenses (up from $200
+ billion just ten years ago.) A recent NIOSH study reported that
50% of employees view job stress as a major problem in their lives--double
from a decade ago.
Lines
of demarcation have blurred and change is rampant in today’s
center. Why? Because of our cell phones, voice mail, faxback,
PDA’s, and e-mail. We are now more available and accessible
than ever before. The lines are no longer clear as to where our
jobs or projects begin and end—they can follow us home again
and again.
In today’s competitive marketplace there is little difference
between products and services. What makes the difference--what
distinguishes one company from another--is its relationship with
the customer. Who has the awesome responsibility for representing
themselves, their companies, perhaps their industry in general?
Front line representatives.
The
ability of a company to provide human-to-human connections--back
and forth live communication--continues to be critically important.
The fact is voice is the most natural and powerful human interface,
real time or otherwise. That isn’t going to change any time
soon. To the customer, people are inseparable from the services
they provide. Actually, the person on the other end of the phone
is the company. It is no wonder, then, that companies with superior
people management, invest heavily in training and retraining,
reinforcing the human element.
Yet customers still leave. The latest statistics on why are:
This
means that 65% of your customers leave because of something your
front line is, or is not, doing.
This
is the good and the bad news. It’s bad news because that’s
a high percentage. On the other hand, it’s good news because
there is something you can do about it—it resides on the
human side.
It
is agreed that people, process, and ‘state of the art’
technology are what make companies work. For me, the people process
is most important. After all, it’s the people who truly
make the difference.
Never
lose sight of the fact that we are human beings, not merely ‘human
doings.’ The fact is 70% to 90% of what happens with customers
is driven by human nature, having nothing to do with technology.
Technology is meant to enable human endeavors, not to disable
them.
Extraordinary
service or lack thereof, separates the good from the great companies.
As more and more organizations are turning to the contact center
as a strategic player in the competitive landscape, it is in the
throes of re-inventing itself to step up to the plate and become
the heart of a company's customer facing operations.
Empathetic
Responsiveness
The ability to put yourself in another person’s shoes and
see their point of view—not agree with them, not make them
right and your company wrong—but hear what they are saying.
After all, basic needs of all of us are to be heard and treated
with dignity and respect.
I
think of a call as an ABC process. ‘A’ represents
the customer presenting their question, request, complaint or
problem. ‘C’ is the ultimate resolution. Most times
‘B’ is either skipped or left out—because of
metrics, calls in queue, or simply because you know the answer
before the customer is even finished speaking. ‘B’
is where the agent acknowledges what they hear—be it upset,
anger, frustration, or fear. Or, a simple ‘thank you for
taking the time to call and bring this to our attention.’
After all, if a customer calls in to complain, you have the opportunity/challenge
to turn them around. If they don’t call, and only complain
to other people, you have no opportunity. Does going through ‘B’
take longer? Not at all. It allows you to move the customer to
a more productive interaction and close the call. I’ve heard
many customers repeat their opening paragraph (A) over and over,
while at the same time the agent is trying to get them to resolution
(C). Red alert! Red alert! Acknowledge what is behind the words
and you will move them quickly to ‘C.’ I believe you
can’t go from A to C without going through B.
If
all customers wanted just the facts (and some do), they could
ascertain the information online. Most customers (people) want
the human interaction, someone to hear them, someone to care.
A simple, “I’m so sorry that was your experience.
My name is Rosanne and I’m going to do my best to help you
right here and now.”
Self
Service
When asked the question in a recent study, “What is the
biggest barrier your company encounters to self-service effectiveness?”
only 14% of the customers replied they don’t know about
it.’ This means that the 86% who do know about it and attempt
to use it (1) find it too hard to navigate, (2) can’t find
the answers, and/or (3) don’t trust the system or the answers
they do find.
Research
shows that customers prefer to deal with companies who are the
most consistently accessible. When customers experience a level
of service from email and chat support, for instance, that equals
or exceeds voice support, then and only then will they gladly
migrate to those channels to resolve their problems and inquiries.
To increase customers’ satisfaction, be sure to:
1) Phone: Have a ‘zero out’ option on your system
2) Website: Have your phone number or a button to speak with a
human
3) E-mail: Rephrase the issue in the opening paragraph.
Purchasing Process
In an interview with Delia Passi Smalter, the former publisher
of Working Woman and Working Mother magazines, we found very interesting
statistics regarding female demographics (Incentive Magazine,
2003). It seems that women are making over 85% of consumer purchases
and influencing more than 95% of total goods and services. Smalter
distinguishes the purchasing process women and men go through.
The biggest one, she says, is that women need to feel more of
a connection to the CSR; they need to trust the corporation and
the brand. Price becomes secondary. Women take in a lot of information,
including recommendations from friends and family, company and
brand reputation, feelings about her contact person, and how the
brand will impact her life. Not so for men. Men take a systematic
approach, allowing outside influence to some degree, but mostly
they are focused on price.
One
of the most influential documents in the world, the U.S. Constitution,
begins with "We, the people..." Yes, ‘we
the people’ are what makes the difference.
About
the Author:
ROSANNE
D'AUSILIO, Ph.D., an industrial psychologist, and President of
Human Technologies Global, Inc., a full service training and consulting
organization which specializes in profitable call center operations
in human performance management. Over the last 20 years, she has
provided needs analyses, instructional design, and customized,
live customer service skills trainings. Also offered is agent/facilitator
certification through Purdue University’s Center for Customer
Driven Quality.
For
10 years prior to starting her own organization, Rosanne had responsibility
for marketing, budgeting, promoting and ultimately producing domestic
and international computerized trade shows in the US, London,
Belgium, and Frankfurt. She inaugurated, created, trained and
directed a telemarketing on-site staff (which today would be called
a ‘call center’).
She sits on the Editorial Advisory Panel
and is a columnist for Call Center Manager’s Report, and
represents the human element on the Advisory Board for an Italian
software company. She authors numerous articles for industry newsletters,
her web e-newsletter, magazines and trade publications, and is
a much sought after dynamic, vibrant, internationally prominent
keynote speaker.
She is also author of best seller, Wake Up Your Call Center:
Humanizing Your Interaction Hub, in its 3rd edition,
and the latest, hot off the press, Customer Service and
The Human Experience.
web
site: www.human-technologies.com
e-mail: rosanne@human-technologies.com
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