Give Your Employees the Freedom to Perform on Every Call

797
Filed under - Guest Blogs,

For those who talk to customers for a living, like advisors, traders, IT supporters etc, great conversations drive customer satisfaction.

However, customer satisfaction is under pressure. The customer journey is continually changing towards digitisation – chatbots answering questions and chatting via Whatsapp are already common tools – and involves more online and offline touchpoints than ever before.

The intended outcome of every customer conversation is customer satisfaction.

Worryingly, as more customers are prepared to escalate calls, calls are becoming increasingly more complex.

This is not without consequences: new research has revealed that satisfaction levels have dropped three years in a row (American Customer Satisfaction Index).

A recent study from Jabra, part of the GN Group, shows that increasing user mobility results in improved customer service.

What’s more, users are more cost-effective. The physical freedom of wireless enables employees to resolve customer calls more easily.

As a result, companies can successfully identify what matters in the customer journey over what doesn’t.

Doing so, service costs can reduce by up to 33%and revenue, per excisting customer, can double year on year (Harvard Business Review, 2014).

The speed of interaction and the quality of interaction increasingly go hand in hand.

Improved Productivity

The same study from Jabra has also revealed that a mobile solution like a wireless headset powers productivity – wireless workers are over 20% more productive compared to peers with corded headsets.

This is because of increased mobility, which allows workers to reach out for information from specialist colleagues to solve complex issues during the call.

However, even though almost every professional work tool has gone wireless since the 80’s in order to power productivity, 60% of call centric users are still tied to their desk via a corded headset.

Why do we limit the freedom of those who listen and talk for a living more than the average employee?

This is especially irritating to users as calls have become more complex and frequent interaction with colleagues is required to address both customer satisfaction and productivity.

For business who wonder if they should switch to wireless: the figures speak for themselves as 44% of corded headset users report their productivity is negatively impacted by being restricted to their desk (Jabra Call Centric Study, 2015).

Pain Points Include:

  • Restricted mobility impacts customer service experience: calls may not be resolved first time and customers may have to be transferred or called back for further assistance
  • Lack of mobility means calls may take longer and cost more than necessary
  • Background noise in the office can impact customer calls
  • Not being able to move freely impacts the quality of conversations on the phone

Wireless headsets offer an opportunity to enhance customer service while saving costs.

The ‘productivity way’ is paved for upselling to a wireless headset, where revenue possibilities are up to twice as high as for the corded alternatives.

This isn’t only the case when it comes to productivity benefits. The physical freedom of wireless also has a direct effect on customer satisfaction, allowing employees to more easily resolve customer calls.

Benefits Include:

  • Gain easier access to expertise during a call
  • Resolve more calls faster, first time
  • Reduce the number of escalations or call backs
  • Never miss a call by taking calls away from their desk

Who Would Benefit Most?

There are two main groups who can most justify moving to wireless: The Financial Advisor and The Call Centre Advisor.

The Financial Advisor

This group conducts highly valuable customer interactions over the phone.

Customers are calling about their pension or investment portfolio and calls are therefore of high value to the customer.

The ability to take calls around the office is key for these advisors: a missed call is a missed business opportunity. Calls often are highly complex.

Input from senior colleagues could be needed to solve the issue or a face-to-face meeting with a colleague in call or between calls is required to provide proper advice.

This group typically perform tasks and conversations away from their desk up to 40% of the day.

The Call Centre Advisor

Call centre workers generally sit at their desk for most of the day and they generally experience a high volume of calls of low complexity.

Handling as many calls as possible is usually the most important KPI for these employees and businesses.

Missed calls or bad quality can all lead to lower customer satisfaction and lost business.

This group is away from their desk for tasks and short meetings approximately 20% of the time.

However, when taking calls away from their desk – for example in a cubicle to reduce the noise around them – they will return to their desk/ PC to close calls.

Therefore, a flexible solution could be beneficial for them.

Complexity will rise

In some work spaces, the wireless experience is the new norm, but there is still a long way to go before this is the case across the board.

However, with a customer journey that is expected to become even more digitised and the rise of artificial intelligence as a first line of interaction with virtual assistants like Alexa and Siri, complexity will continue to rise.

The remaining calls that require human interaction will be of such a high level, that optimal performance on every one of these calls will be required.

The complex call will become one of the most critical factors for a business in their journey to improve customer satisfaction.

To find out more, visit www.jabra.co.uk

For more information about Jabra - visit the Jabra Website

About Jabra

Jabra Jabra gives contact centres a powerful way to satisfy more customers. Jabra headsets are designed to fit the unique needs of all types of contact centres, who want to exceed their customers expectations and deliver a superior customer experience, whilst ensuring productivity every day.

Find out more about Jabra

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: Jabra

Published On: 27th Jul 2017 - Last modified: 2nd Aug 2017
Read more about - Guest Blogs,

Follow Us on LinkedIn

Recommended Articles

Wooden cubes with numbers on a turquoise background.
29 Call Centre Metrics and KPIs
jargon definition
Contact Centre Jargon and Terminologies
How to Calculate Productivity in the Contact Centre
A picture agents looking at documents in a office
10 Tips to Measure and Improve Call Centre Productivity