Skip to main content

Customer Service - How to Turn a Poor Experience into a Positive One

Use Customer Service To Turn Unhappy Customers Into Happy Ones
Turn unhappy customers into happy ones
With mobile phones taking over our lives and conversational interfaces becoming ubiquitous there is certainly a new level of demand arriving at customer service centers. Customers do not accept a mediocre service experience anymore. With their smartphones they have the means to get to customer service with nearly no delay and they are certainly willing to use it.
And they do it.
In this situation customers are often already feeling some frustration or disappointment because they couldn’t achieve what they wanted to achieve in the first instance. They already had their taste of a suboptimal customer experience.
Frustration, disappointment – customers’ negative emotions towards a brand have a corresponding negative impact on the business. Customers just might go buy somewhere else. After all, in times of smartphones this has become simpler than ever.
The support center now has best chances to add the feeling of being disrespected and outright anger into the mix.
Or it can create a feeling of relief, of being respected, valued, even some satisfaction; this in spite of having come into the need of asking for support. Here the service agents have the opportunity to create a positive customer experience out of a poor one – one that will overlay the negative one.

Use Customer Service To Create Positive Emotions

Tangible Benefits of Investing into good Experiences
Source Sitecore/Avanade
Which one is better for the company – and the company’s bottom line? The answer to this question is pretty obvious. Inmoment Research recently released a study that clearly established links between positive experiences and positive outcomes for a company. And this was not the first study finding that investing into positive customer experiences results in positive outcomes for the company.
A 2016 study by Sitecore and Avanade showed a number of tangible business benefits that can be related to this investment.
The open secret is that there is an easy way to turn a customer who is on the edge into a satisfied and happy one. This way works around recognizing what the customer values:
·      Their time
·      Their channel
·      Getting their issue resolved
This way clearly involves the smartphone. After all this is the switchboard of their lives and in all likelihood also the device where the issue occurred.

Go Social? No Way!

You may say: “Go social! Twitter, Facebook! People go there all the time! And they are getting fast and efficient help there!”
Do they? Most customers aren’t getting fast and efficient help on social networks. Only few do. Mainly those with loud voices, because of having large follower numbers.
And why are people resorting to social media? They use them as a last resort after the traditional ways didn’t work.
In other words, because they are disappointed, frustrated and likely even angry. So they act as derailers of the brand, instead of being brought on the way of becoming promoters or even ambassadors.

Resolve Issues Fast, The Customers’ Way

This is where conversational interfaces, messaging and mobile in-app support come into the picture. This combination allows a customer to directly cut through to efficient service instead of repeatedly iterating through information they have already given before. Via the app the customer and many of the interactions (s)he did before the incident are already known. An agent can get to work directly, maybe even supported by a bot as a copilot, or even an autonomous one.
The emotional advantage starts right in the beginning. In most of the cases the customer is already known and can be addressed by name instead of being in the need of introducing him-/herself. And due to the information that is already available the issue has been routed to the right service agents who in turn can get right at work when the ticket arrives on their desk.
And this may very well be before they even reply, thus giving themselves the chance to be equipped with relevant knowledge and perhaps already a solution suggestion.
As a result the customer feels treated respectfully and with appreciation of his/her concerns and time.
Now, it is an illusion that every call center has enough staff to be able to immediately react to every incident and inquiry customers may have – ideal but an illusion.
There is nothing worse than the electronic equivalent of holding music and the repeated statement that “your call is important to us”! Its mere existence actually proves the contrary.

Use AI to Improve the Experience

This is where AI and machine learning, exposed by chatbots take center stage.
In a supportive role the AI can already supply the agent with possible solutions to the incident at hand before the agent takes up the issue. These solutions can get derived from the FAQ, internal documentation, a community, or from previous incidents that dealt with a similar topic. The ranked listing of suggestions can then be presented to the agent by a chatbot as part of the conversational interface that is used in between customer, service agents, and the technology.
This already has the potential of significantly speeding up the resolution process, thus addressing what the customer values. It is a better engagement model that likely creates a positive experience – maybe a little wow moment.
When enough trust has been established to the AI, the chatbot can get into an autonomous role and engage with the customer before an agent takes over. The human agent then becomes the escalation point for issues that the system cannot resolve without human interaction. To get into this escalation the bot could offer and schedule a callback by a person or simply do a handover to the next service level after informing the customer about the necessity for this.
In this model even an explicit FAQ can be made obsolete as the chatbot can serve as a front end to it.

The results?

Conversational interfaces, alone or supported by chatbots have a profoundly positive impact on the business. The main benefits are:
·      Customer service is addressed the customer way
·      Faster incident resolution
·      More satisfied customers who have a better customer experience
Satisfied customers have more positive emotions about a company. A positive base is more likely to perceive an engagement as positive, which means it turns into a positive customer experience. And positive customer experiences create positive business outcomes.

It is that simple.

Comments

Last Year's Top 5 Popular Posts

SAP CRM and SAP Jam - News from CRM evolution

During CRM Evolution 2017 I had the chance of talking with Volker Hildebrand and Anthony Leaper from SAP. Volker is SAP’s Global Vice President SAP Hybris and Anthony is Senior Vice President and Sales GM - Enterprise Social Software at SAP. Topics that we covered were things CRM and collaboration, how and where SAP’s solutions are moving and, of course, the impact that the recent reshuffling in the executive board has. Starting with the latter, there is common agreement, that if at all it is positive as likely to streamline reporting lines and hence decision processes. First things first – after all I am a CRM guy. Having the distinct impression that the SAP Hybris set of solutions is going a good way I was most interested in learning from Volker about how there is going to be a CRM for S4/HANA. SAP’s new generation ERP system is growing at a good clip, and according to the Q1/2017 earnings call, now has 5,800 customers with 400 new customers in the last quarter alone. Many...

How to play the long game Zoho style

The news On February 7 and 8 2024, Zoho held its annual ZohoDay conference, along with a pre-conference get together and an optional visit to SpacX’s not-too-far-away Starbase. Our guide, who went by Chief, and is probably best described as a SpaceX-paparazzi was full of facts and anecdotes, which made the visit very interesting although we couldn’t enter Starbase itself. The event was jam-packed with 125 analysts, 17 customer speakers, and of course Zoho staff for us analysts to talk to. This was a chance we took up eagerly. This time, the event took place in MacAllen, TX, instead of Austin, TX. The reason behind this is once more Zoho’s ruralization strategy, transnational localism.  Which gives also one of the main themes of the event. It was more about understanding Zoho than about individual products, although Zoho disclosed some roadmaps. More about understanding Zoho in a second.  The second main theme was customer success and testimonials. Instead of bombarding us with...

Reflecting on 2023 with gratitude - What caught your interest

A very happy, healthy and prosperous new year to all of you. This is also the time to review my blog and to have a look what your favourite posts of 2023 have been. With 23 posts, I admittedly have been somewhat lazy in 2023. Looking at the top ten read posts in 2023, there is a clear clustering about a few topics, none of them really surprising. There is a genuine interest in CX, ChatGPT, and vendors.  Again, this is not a surprise.  Still, there are a few surprises in the list! So, without further adoo, let’s hear the drumroll for your top five favourite posts on my blog – in ascending order. After all, some suspense cannot harm. The fifth place gets claimed by my review of ZohoDay 2022 – “ Don’t mess with Zoho – A Zohoday 2022 recap ”. Yes, you read that right. This is a 2022 post. The fourth place got claimed by another article on Zoho, almost one year younger: Zoho, how a technology company reimagines business software . It is a reflection on the Zoholics 2023 conference ...

Salesforce stock tanks after earnings report - a snap analysis

The news On May 29, 2024, Salesforce reported its results for the first quarter of the fiscal year 2025. Highlights are a total quarterly revenue of $9.133bn US, resembling a year-over-year growth of 11 percent a current remaining performance obligation of $26.4bn US a remaining performance obligation of $53.9B US an operating margin of 18.7 percent. diluted earnings per share of $1.56 The company reported a revenue guidance of $9.2bn - $9.25bn US for the next quarter and a full year guidance of $37.7bn - $38.0bn US, resembling growth rates of 7 – 8 percent and 8 – 9 percent, respectively. With these numbers, Salesforce ended up at the lower end of last quarter’s guidance on the revenue growth side while exceeding the earnings per share projection and slightly lowered the guidance for the fiscal year 2025. The result: The company’s share price dropped from $272 to bottom out at $212. The bigger picture Salesforce is the big gorilla in the CRM and CX industry. The company has surpassed ...

Zoho - A True Unicorn

End of January Zoho held its 2020 Zoho Days, an analyst summit, which I was happy to attend, along with more than 60 colleagues, as the only analyst from Germany, as it seems. Sadly, it took me quite a while to complete this – Zoho deserves a faster commentare. But hey, let’s look forward and get rolling. Zoho is a privately owned enterprise software company that has quietly evolved from a small software company in 1996 to an ambitious global player that serves the SMB- and enterprise CRM market with cloud applications. The company has a set of 45+ business apps with more than 50 million users, 10 data centres and counting, and is available in 180 countries. The company is profitable and maintained a CAGR of more than 30 percent over the past five years. But why quietly? Because Zoho managed its growth pretty unusually (almost) fully organically with only very minor acquisitions. Crunchbase lists one. Following this unique approach, which defies the tradit...