Are your customer service representatives happy in their work? Are they proud of what they do? In my experience, it is rare to get a positive answer to these questions. Believe it or not, a YES answer leads to higher customer loyalty and customer satisfaction. What do companies have in common that have motivated and satisfied customer service representatives? They have appropriate metrics.
Examine two call centers in the same company. In the first call center, customer service representatives were managed primarily by first call satisfaction. If the customer called about an issue, they were to have that issue resolved in one call, hopefully by the first person who answered the call. This aspect of the call was measured internally as well as via customer satisfaction surveys. In the surveys, customers were asked if they had ever called about the problem before and how many times. The results of this survey question were the key metrics of success for the call center. The management did everything possible to encourage the service representatives to solve every issue on the first try.
We conducted Voice of the Employee studies. We asked customer service representatives what was getting in the way of resolving issues. What tools did they need? What policies or strategies were getting in the way? The employees were encouraged to develop their own individual tools and crib sheets to enable first call satisfaction. The employees began meeting in teams to discuss how to improve the statistics (remember Quality Circles from the 1980s?). These employees developed specialties, on their own, so others knew whom to speak with to resolve a particular difficulty. The employees felt empowered. The customer service representatives felt as though they owned the figures depicting first call satisfaction. The customer service representatives knew the management would support them in whatever they attempted as long as the goal was to meet the customer needs on the first attempt. The call center employees were motivated and happy in their jobs.
How did they handle call volume? Did the focus on customer satisfaction on the first try slow them down? The answer is that the focus was first call satisfaction, but the secondary focus was to satisfy the customer as quickly as can be reasonably accomplished. Do not make the customer feel hurried. Relax and meet their need, but develop tools and procedures to make sure the primary goal of first call satisfaction is accomplished, then satisfy the customer as quickly as possible.
Contrast this call center with another in the same company. In this second call center, the primary metric was call volume. Customer service representatives were graded daily on how many calls they handled. This metric created some abhorrent behavior. In one instance, I witnessed a customer service representative pulling his phone chord in and out of the wall rapidly, connecting and immediately disconnecting with dozens of customers in a few minutes. When surveyed, the customers felt hurried. The customers often were hurried off the phone without having their issues completely resolved. What did the customers do? They usually rejoined the queue of waiting customers, but now they were irritated, sometimes angry! The average length of call was the dominant metric for everyone in this call center, the individual customer service representatives, the supervisors and the call center manager. The proverbial whip was being cracked constantly. No one in the call center liked their job.
When the customer satisfaction data were obtained for the second call center, it was found that over 40% of the calls were not satisfied on the first try! Imagine how much more efficiently your call center would operate if you could eliminate 40% of the calls! What system is satisfactory from either the customer viewpoint or management that has 40% rework? The first call center had a rework score of under 10%, trending downward.
The most dramatic effect of using the different metrics in the two call centers was that many of the employees in the second call center asked to be transferred to the first! The customer service representatives felt that they could take pride in their work and enjoy the working environment. The calls in the first call center tended to take longer than the second. However, the length of the call was trending downward rapidly as the customer service representatives developed tools and expertise. Their calls tended to be 10 to 20% longer, but there were many fewer calls! They had very little rework.
What do you believe? Do you believe that customers are much more concerned with what happens after you answer the telephone than how many rings it takes for you to answer? If you believe that premise, do your metrics reflect that belief, or are you still using call volume as your primary measurement of a customer service representative? Are your call center employees, your major voice and face with the customer, happy with their jobs and making the customer feel the pride and joy the employees have in their work? Make sure meeting the customer's need on the first try is the #1 priority.
Which of these two call centers would you rather manage?
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In this industry call center customer satisfaction (Csat) is king. If you are not focused on customer satisfaction then you're dropping the ball. Call center certification is your first step towards improving your Csat. http://nearshore.com/2012/04/bpo-success-lessons-from-coach-cal.html
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