Banishing Complexity – 5 Ways to Turn Theory Into Practice

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Ross Daniels at Calabrio shares his top tips for overcoming contact centre complexity to enhance customer and employee experiences.

In my last article I discussed how to keep things simple in contact centre operations and introduced the importance of incorporating a human-centred approach to operational thinking, processes and technology. Now it’s time to take a look at how to translate theory into practical steps for success.

A Big Opportunity to Do Things Differently

When Calabrio invited CX Consultant and Practitioner Clare Muscutt to present at a recent webinar, she asked delegates about the state of digital transformation for customer service in their organisation.

Although the majority (51%) had already deployed digital technology to support their customers, only 8% believed their digital service to be ‘awesome’.

While the pandemic has accelerated the uptake of digital technology, making it a rewarding and effective tool for driving both the customer experience (CX) and the employee experience (EX) can be a challenge for contact centre leaders.

At the same time, the explosive growth in digitalisation presents a unique opportunity to do things differently and find a better way forward.

5 Ways to Banish Complexity

Here are five ways to get started. The first four are based on Clare Muscutt’s innovative human-centred model. The fifth reinforces the importance of gaining stakeholder buy-in, training and how to fully maximise the wealth of data that exists in every contact centre.

Combined, these five steps provide an integrated approach to overcoming complexity:

1. Discover

Start with a meaningful baseline.

This means spending time listening to the right people and collating critical data points like complaints or service KPIs to truly understand where you are and what you are trying to achieve. Talk to customers, hold employee focus groups and speak to the Board. Review what technology is being well used and received and what other new innovations might be worth looking at.

2. Define

Use all the data you have for customer journey mapping.

Ideally, conduct the exercise with other people – think of everyone who is affected by or can influence customer journeys. This is great for engaging people across the whole organisation and they will become more engaged and likely to come up with better ideas.

Remember to map the impact of these customer journeys; for example, ‘what will it cost to fix the root cause in terms of tech or training versus return on value?’ Aim for low cost, quick win ideas that have the maximum impact on customers, employees and the overall business.

3. Develop

Develop these ideas. However, visualise the target experience and test with users before changing anything to save time and money and get it right first time. Then, create an ‘experience blueprint’ that illustrates what organisational changes need to be done to turn your vision of the target experience into reality.

4. Deliver

Utilise learning from the testing period and integrate it into a plan that includes timelines, clear measures of success and is communicated effectively.

5. Deploy

Finally, consider the latest advancements in AI-driven analytics. They help overcome complexity by translating raw data into powerful business intelligence from a customer, employee and operational point of view. Gain buy-in from IT and senior decision-makers by promoting the benefits for example:

  • The latest speech, sentiment and predictive analytics can combine to harness valuable data that gives a complete view of all customer interactions, whatever the channel.

This provides contact centres with the real-time data they need to identify specific customer pain points and moods, anticipate future needs and re-engineer complete customer journeys quickly and efficiently.

  • Combine speech and workforce management systems to build a smarter, more effective contact centre where agent skills are fully maximised and training is efficiently scheduled during quieter times so staff can concentrate 100% on their customers.

Add employee sentiment analysis to the mix and quickly identify where agents are dealing with unhappy and distressed customers or even where agents themselves need extra training or support.

  • Why not introduce desktop analytics to better support home-working agents? These really get beneath the bonnet of the technology that serves frontline agents.

It is possible to detect what applications are being used during customer interactions and then unearth any slow or badly designed applications or integrations that make agents’ lives harder than they need to be.

Above all, remember that addressing complexity is a continual process that needs to be refined as customer, employee and business needs change.

For more information about Calabrio - visit the Calabrio Website

About Calabrio

Calabrio The digital foundation of a customer-centric contact centre, the Calabrio ONE workforce performance suite helps enrich and understand human interactions, empowering contact centres as a brand guardian. Calabrio ONE unites workforce optimisation (WFO), agent engagement, and business intelligence solutions into a cloud-native, fully integrated suite.

Find out more about Calabrio

Call Centre Helper is not responsible for the content of these guest blog posts. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author, and do not necessarily reflect those of Call Centre Helper.

Author: Calabrio

Published On: 4th Feb 2022 - Last modified: 8th Feb 2022
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