customer experience & the call center
DESCRIPTION
All call centers deliver a customer experience. It just may not be what is desired. Colin looks at how call center can identfy, and build a roadmap to deliver the desired Customer Experience in this popular presentation that has been given on three continents.TRANSCRIPT
Copyright
TRG Inc.
"The Customer Roadmap, Customer
Experience and Customer Satisfaction-
Planning the Journey and Executing the Plan"
Colin Taylor, CEO
The Taylor Reach Group, Inc.
Copyright
TRG Inc.13/05/2011
The Taylor Reach Group
• Call/Contact Center Consultancy,
• Offices Toronto, New York, Atlanta, Sydney,
• Contact Center assessment, design,
improvement and operational management,
• 27+ awards for excellence in contact center
operation,
• 14,000+ agent desktops operating under TRG
designed operational models globally,
Copyright
TRG Inc.13/05/2011
Colin Taylor
• CEO Taylor Reach,
• 36 years in call/contact center operations, design, sales and executive management,
• More than 20 awards received on two continents,
• Publisher of Customer Reach newsletter with 11,000 + subscribers
Copyright
TRG Inc.
What is Your Customer Experience?
• Every company or organization delivers
a customer experience
• It may not be the experience we would
like to be delivering
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Definitions
• Quality Monitoring/Listening – individual
assessment of agent performance
against a set of criteria.
• Internal Quality – the roll up or
consolidation of Quality Monitoring
• Customer Satisfaction – What the
customer feels about their interaction
• Customer Experience - ...
5/13/2011
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Customer Experience Definitions
“The Experience of the customer when
buying or servicing the product or
service you have sold them”
“The designed interaction between a
customer and your organization”
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Where do we Provide this Experience?
Contact centers today handle more than just
calls: emails, chats, mail, SMS and social
media (Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn etc.)
Contact centers are not the only Customer
Experience „touch-points‟, other „touch-
points‟ would include in store, direct mail,
advertising, email marketing, etc.
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Is Customer Experience Important?
According to Forresters;
• 90% of senior executives rated it as
“very important” or “critical‟
• Only 11% said they were „very
disciplined‟ in their approach to
Customer Experience
Copyright
TRG Inc.
But What Can We Do About It?
The call centre or contact center will not define the customer experience
We can be held accountable to deliver the customer experience however
We need to understand what is expected by all parties to this process: Customers, Company and the Call Center
We must understand where these expectations are in conflict
Copyright
TRG Inc.
What Experience are we Supporting?
Copyright
TRG Inc.
How can the Center Impact the Experience?
The center does control:
– Service Level (ASA/GOS/Abandon)
– Forecast Volume
– Staff Scheduled
– Quality of the interaction
Speed of AccessEase of Access
• Informed,• Professional,• Accurate,• Helpful,
• Effective.• Efficient,• Logical,
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Customers‟ Progress
Marketing = Promise
Product = Delivery
A Customers‟ Progress
The
Customer
Experience
Marketing sets the customers expectationManagement sets Policies and ProceduresManagement sets Service Levels etc.
The call center is where these potentially apposing Points of View meet
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Customer Experience Definitions
“The designed interaction between a
customer and your organization”
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Who Defines & Designs Customer
Experience?
• In most companies- Marketing and Senior Management
• Marketing controls and drives Brand and defines the
Customer Experience
• Customer Service and call center rarely included in the
process
• So how do we as call center executives impact the
Customer Experience?
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Measuring the Customer Experience
In order to measure the customer experience measure it at each touch-point (calls, chats, in-store, emails etc.)
This is difficult as most organizations:
– Do not have a defined customer experience statement or definition
– Do not measure customer satisfaction (CSAT) or customer experience at all, not at all touch-points
– Do not measure CSAT in the same way for all surveys
Copyright
TRG Inc.
The Customer Experience Today
Identify messages provided to customers and
prospects
– Mission Statement, Vision, Values
– Marketing messages, communications
Discuss with Marketing the Brand Attributes (words
or phrases that characterize the brand)
Build Bridges with Marketing too create better
communications. This will benefit the Customer
Experience and also forecasting campaign
volumes
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Mission, Vision, Values
Watch words that convey expectations;
• World Class Customer Service (or similar),
• Access,
• Empowered Employees,
• Quality,
• Returns for our Shareholders,
• Satisfaction,
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Sample Brand Attributes
Arrogant, Authentic, Best brand, Carefree, Cares about customers, Charming, Daring, Different,Down to earth, Energetic, Friendly, Fun, Gaining in popularity, Glamorous, Good value, Healthy, Helpful, High performance, Intelligent, Kind, Obliging, Original, Prestigious, Progressive, Restrained, Rugged, Simple, Straightforward, Stylish, Tough, Traditional, Trendy, Trustworthy, Unapproachable, Up-to-date, Upper class, Worth more,
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Perceptions
People make decisions on emotion,
that are rationalize with intellect
“I’ve Learned that people will forget
what you said. People will forget
what you did. But people will never
forget how you made them feel”
Maya Angelou
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Understanding the Dichotomy
Marketing is creating advertising with the
purpose of making people feel warm,
fuzzy and engaged with the Brand.
While when interacting with the call center
the customers may feel angry,
frustrated, misled, stressed and
unhappy
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Messages & Gaps
Hypothetical Mission Statement
5/13/2011
“To deliver World Class Customer Service to our
Customers, by providing access to our products and
services the way our customers want them, when they want
them, while providing a positive, enjoyable and productive
environment to our employees and delivering superior
returns to our Shareholders”
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Sample Brand Attributes
Accessible, Arrogant, Authentic, Best brand, Carefree, Cares about customers, Charming, Daring, Different,Down to earth, Energetic, Friendly, Fun, Gaining in popularity, Glamorous, Good value, Healthy, Helpful, High performance, Intelligent, Kind, Obliging, Original, Prestigious, Progressive, Restrained, Rugged, Simple, Straightforward, Stylish, Tough, Traditional, Trendy, Trustworthy, Unapproachable, Up-to-date, Upper class, Worth more,
Youthful
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Measuring the Gap
5/13/2011
Brand Attributes Delivered- Aligned Corrective action
Accessible
Cares about Customers
Daring
Different
Energy
Fun
Glamorous
Stylish
Trendy
Youthful
World Class Customer Service
Looks after Employees
Profits for Shareholders
5/13/2011
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Measuring the Gap
Brand Attributes Delivered- Aligned Corrective action
Accessible No- long wait times, IVR front end
Cares about Customers Not apparent- understaffed, long wait times, unfriendly
policies
Daring Perhaps, but not in a good way. More „daring‟ to deliver
sub par service while claiming to be committed to
superior service
Different Experience is the same as phoning your cable or
wireless provider
Energy Not Evident
Fun Not Evident
Glamorous Not Evident
Stylish Not Evident
Trendy Not Evident
Youthful Not Evident
World Class Customer Service No- poor access, understaffed, undiferentiated
Looks after Employees Center will have high occupancy and likely lots of
unhappy customers- this does not describe Looking
after employees.
Profits for Shareholders Possibly well aligned – Poor service can (but doesn‟t
always) cost less. But the profit can be at the expense
of brand erosion.
5/13/2011
Measuring the GapBrand Attributes Delivered- Aligned Corrective action
Accessible No- long wait times, IVR front end Improve Service level target and performance-
Improve forecasting and scheduling, add more staff.
Offer more channels (Inbound calls, emails, chats,
SMS, Social Media, Mail etc.), 7 x 24 hour access
Cares about Customers Not apparent- understaffed, long wait times, unfriendly
policies
Improve access, agent hiring. Training to reflect
desired attributes
Daring Perhaps, but not in a good way. More „daring‟ to deliver
sub par service while claiming to be committed to
superior service
Lose IVR,
Different Experience is the same as phoning your cable or
wireless provider
Lose IVR, Dedicate agent totake ownership to
resolve customers problem
Energy Not Evident Agent profile, hiring and training
Fun Not Evident Agent profile, hiring and training
Glamorous Not Evident Messages from designers on IVR and hold messages
Stylish Not Evident Messages from designers on IVR and hold messages
Trendy Not Evident
Youthful Not Evident Agent profile, hiring and training
World Class Customer Service No- poor access, understaffed, undiferentiated Be Accessible, set and met superior service levels,
set, measure CSAT- Offer customer to call back and
speak to same agent.
Looks after Employees Center will have high occupancy and likely lots of
unhappy customers- this does not describe Looking
after employees.
Measure you Employee Satisfaction, Employ metrics
that matter FCR, CSAT, Quality over AHT and ASA
Profits for Shareholders Possibly well aligned – Poor service can (but doesn‟t
always) cost less. But the profit can be at the expense
of brand erosion.
Better Customer satisfaction will increase long term
value and returns
5/13/2011
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Policies, and Processes
Don't be a barrier to your own customers
Examine how your internal policies,
procedures and processes and how
they impact on the customer
experience.
Identify those that are not aligned with the
desired customer experience.
Review with management potential
changes to the policies etc. To improve
alignment.
5/13/2011
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Designing the Customer Experience
Roadmap
1. Know what the current experience is,
2. Know how you are measuring the
experience,
3. Understand your policies, processes
and any negative customer impacts,
4. Plan changes and tests,
5. Measure improvements/reductions as
a result of tests,
6. Roll out positive changes and continue
other tests,
5/13/2011
Copyright
TRG Inc.
Customer Experience Design Process
Understand Discover Conceptualize Validate Implement
Iterate
What Experience do we want to deliver?
What are we delivering today
Gap Analysis. What has to change to create the desired Experience
Testing changes, measure customer reaction
Creating the training and collateral
Copyright
TRG Inc.13/05/2011
Questions?
Copyright
TRG Inc.13/05/2011
Contact Details
Colin Taylor, CEO
The Taylor Reach Group, Inc.
416-979-8692 ext 200
Email: [email protected]
Web Site: www.thetaylorreachgroup.com
Blog: http://callcenterperspectives.blogspot.com/
Twitter: @colinsataylor