Dick Bourke of Scorebuddy introduces six ways in which you can improve the customer experience from the contact centre.
Customer Experience (CX) is often classified as an intangible concept, a concept from which it can be difficult to extract actionable insight.
Sometimes organisations which don’t have a systematic method of measuring and improving the quality of CX in the contact centre can fall into the trap of perceiving their customer experience as one of three rankings: good, bad, or indifferent.
For companies that recognise the importance of CX, an abstract concept deeming success or failure just isn’t good enough. These companies want quantifiable results that can be measured and managed with one goal in mind: to improve customer experience.
How Great CX Is Effected
A company cannot build a call centre, staff it, train it, and then ‘walk away’ hoping that everything simply works out for the best. Success (or failure) must be measured at every level so that improvements can be made, and results need to be reviewed regularly to ensure that customers are satisfied, and that revenue continues to grow.
By not measuring the level of CX in the organisation in a consistent and systematic manner, the company is essentially blind to whether they are serving their customers properly or not. Worse yet, without a solid system and process in place, it’s impossible for compliance managers to know if the company is compliant with the relevant regulations – something that can cost a company in hefty fines or even bar them from continuing to operate.
In our current, fast-growing economy where many companies are delivering quality products and services, CX can become the key differentiator between two competitors. It’s the make-or-break factor that increasingly impacts a company’s success.
Did you know that, according to NewVoiceMedia research, in the US alone, companies lose more than $62 million a year due to poor customer service?
A positive customer experience is crucial to business success and can be especially important when looking at CX for contact centres where customers might have their first interaction with a live person in the customer journey. It’s that simple.
Measuring CX for Success
So, what are some ways in which CX can be specifically measured for optimal success?
1. Set Measurement Goals
We firmly believe that good decisions can only be made with consistent data. It’s necessary to step back and look at your call centre holistically. How does it fit into the larger company’s operations? What is the company’s mission and objective? What are the contact centre’s goals? Then begin to drill down into how each phase of the customer journey ties into a measurable experience.
Possible measurable areas of consideration might include:
- Abandon rate, Call wait time, Length of call, Number of calls answered, First-call resolution, Customer satisfaction
- Rapport, Tone, Effective questioning, Careful listening
You know your company, your call centre, and your goals. It is essential that you map out a plan for what success in the contact centre should look like before moving forward.
2. Quality Starts in the Home
Companies with call centres are automatically in the business of communication. It is impossible to expect that agents will clearly communicate with customers if you are not clearly communicating with your agents first.
Now that you have your goals in place, you must actively and consistently share those goals with your call centre agents. This transparency will earn their trust and support.
Let them know what you’re aiming to accomplish and why you are measuring the moments you’ve chosen in the customer journey. Consider empowering your employees by suggesting they suggest what should be measured. Ask them: what metrics matter most to your success?
3. Perform Quality Assurance Monitoring
If you’ve communicated your goals, and your agents understand and support them, call centre assurance monitoring should be a more seamless process. Either way, using QA in the call centre is essential to making CX improvements, and will prove a far more successful measurement tool if you have employee buy-in.
Evaluators should receive regular training on how to interpret the data, customer interactions, and agent messaging, and how CX is monitored. They need to have a thorough understanding of the company’s and call centre’s goals so that they know what to listen for and measure. Evaluators should be encouraged to annotate their evaluations with coaching tips and to remain flexible and open to discussion.
Yes, we’re in the business of measurement and precision, but we cannot deny that some grey areas exist. Open dialogues and iterative process development will give evaluators and agents more ownership of the CX improvement process.
4. Ensure Your Agents Are Emotionally Intelligent
We know that customers rate quality better when agents employ customer-oriented behaviours. CX improvement in call centres depends upon agents and their associated behaviours. A good call centre agent is able to:
Anticipate customer requests – A call centre with measurement and quality management in place will be able to recognise trends and pinpoint patterns along the customer journey. When an agent can anticipate customer requests, they shorten the time that it takes to resolve a call. The customer feels connected and cared for, resulting in overall greater customer satisfaction.
Deliver explanations and justifications – Providing facts, explanations, and justifications helps to provide customers with greater context. More knowledge helps customers understand what is happening, why, and how it can be resolved. Over-communication can be encouraged. Ensuring that customers have the facts, thoroughly understand the situation and challenges at hand, and are prepared for the next steps will help improve the emotional connection between agents and customers for better contact centre CX.
Educate customers – Teachable moments about your company’s products and procedures can and should be shared with customers when appropriate. Customers will likely appreciate leaving a customer service call with more knowledge than when it began. With proper training, call centre agents should have deep knowledge about corporate objectives and strategies. They should be encouraged to share this knowledge as advisors, promoting a consistent message that improves CX.
Provide emotional support – A little empathy goes a long way in most relationships, and the relationship between call centre agents and customers is no different. Listening and letting customers know you hear and understand their challenge puts them at ease and connects with them in a way that encourages them to be more optimistic about the outcome.
Offer personal information – Personal information can be a basic tool in the agent’s kit. Call centre agents should be encouraged to discuss things like the weather, their city, new company initiatives, and other personal anecdotes as appropriate. Keep in mind that customers call to talk to a person and not to a machine, so being personable is always encouraged when aiming to create an emotional connection.
5. Reduce Customer Effort
Reducing customer friction and effort to make things easier for customers has been shown to increase sales. Improved customer experience leads to higher levels of engagement, improving retention as well as sales conversion rates.
Temkin Group research shows that companies that earn $1 billion annually can, on average, expect to earn an additional $700 million within 3 years of investing in customer experience.
A well-crafted call centre strategy is designed to proactively deliver the best customer experience, so you can drive more sales and create more loyal customers with high lifetime value.
Your customer service team can increase the likelihood of a positive customer experience. They can:
- Offer to call back at a more convenient time
- Understand the customer more quickly by listening intently
- Avoid a customer having to repeat themselves
- Offer to provide any information or material after the call
- Solve customer issues the first time they contact you
6. Invite Agents to Self-Score Their Experiences
Want measurable results? Invite your call centre agents to self-score some calls. Enable your team to own this part of the process and become part of the CX improvement process.
This does not need to replace the manager’s QA scorecard for the call, but can be used as supplemental resources; these self-assessments naturally lead to more impactful dialogues between managers and call centre employees. They shed light on discrepancies and help to tighten up those seemingly less tangible, or quantifiable, parts of the business.
Perhaps, most importantly, they give call centre agents a voice, an opportunity to express their ideas and thoughts in a formal, efficient, and productive manner. Something that can only help an organisation’s CX improve.
Many call centre success strategies focus on their own call centre agents. But keep in mind, the focus ultimately isn’t on the agents, managers, or even business leaders. The objective is to make and keep satisfied customers. Happier, more effective call centre agents lead to satisfied customers, and happier customers ultimately lead to greater revenue, especially when looking at the lifetime value of a customer.
Key Takeaways for Contact Centre CX
If your company is truly motivated to push the needle in favour of a quality customer experience, take the following actions:
- Set goals
- Determine and share what success means for your call centre and to your company
- Empower your evaluators and call centre agents, and communicate frequently with consistent messaging.
- Be sure to invite your agents to be part of the decision-making and scoring process.
This blog post has been re-published by kind permission of Scorebuddy – View the Original Article
For more information about Scorebuddy - visit the Scorebuddy Website
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: Scorebuddy
Published On: 21st Mar 2019 - Last modified: 26th Mar 2019
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