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OperationsIs Your Web Site Driving the Wrong Calls?Your web strategy may be to drive calls into the call center so that you can serve the customer or ultimately upsell the customer. Your web strategy may also be driving call volume that you do not want. In a recent experience, we encountered an organization where the web was driving unwanted call volume into the call center. How did we know? The moment the call center representative understood the reason for the call, she directed us back to the web site and walked us through the self-serve process we could not find which was the reason for the call. The reason we called the toll free number in the first place, was that the web transaction type we were looking for could not be found anywhere on the site. In fact, the transaction function was there but buried three clicks deep in a sub-menu that bore no resemblance to our need.
Posted: January 31st, 2008 under Customers. Where Are You?A story in Headliners outlined Minnesota’s interest in legislating choice for customers calling an offshore call center. The legislation would force the call center to transfer the call to a call center located in the U.S. for service if requested by the customer. As with any type of legislative effort like this, there are numerous dimensions to it. We will comment on only one of the dimensions - poor customer experience.
Read more » Posted: February 3rd, 2007 under Customers. CallCentreOps Forum: share advice, get answers from peers. Leading in a Union EnvironmentYou have just been appointed the manager of a call center with a unionized staff. One of the first things you learn is that the call center has a large number of union grievances and a buildup of management/union conflict. Where do you start? Or better yet what steps can you take to help prevent it from getting to this point? Posted: January 28th, 2007 under People. Boredom and Employee RetentionStaff boredom can be a leading reason for high turnover in a call center. Our experience is that this is one of the most difficult issues to solve. The difficulty is driven by two key factors:
Posted: January 28th, 2007 under People. Celebrating Success in Your Call CenterWe come to the end of another year of call center operations. How has it been for you this year? Depending what industry your call center serves it may have been the best year ever or a year of adjusting to a new set of realities. Regardless of the realities of your call center this year, we recommend that you look for every opportunity to recognize the accomplishments of your CSRs and other call center staff. Recognition is a very powerful means of having a healthy call center operation. It is important to recognize success even if it isn’t a normal part of what your company does. Break the mold.
Read more » Posted: January 28th, 2007 under People. Customers are Volunteering Their Time For YouThose of you in the non-profit sector have lots to teach those of us in the for-profit sector. One important lesson is the value of volunteers - without them a non-profit can’t survive. Here is a customer service story that teaches all of us to value our customers as ‘volunteers’.
Read more » Posted: January 28th, 2007 under Customers. The Unseen CustomerThe growth in the number of call centers world-wide has been remarkable. Depending on the source, the estimates range from an annual growth rate of 15% - 20+%. There does not appear to be an end in site as more companies recognize the strategic value of call centers in an e-commerce world and as the focal point for web-based customer transactions, email management and the traditional phone call! Posted: January 28th, 2007 under Customers. Managing Customer ComplexityCall centers respond to customer needs in real-time. The need that any given customer may present when contacting the call center vary in proportion to the complexity of the function of a call center. Regardless of the complexity of your call center, you need to have processes in place to respond to complex customer needs. The complex customer call may happen infrequently. Inevitably a customer with a complex or unique need does call. How do you respond? Do you have a process to respond to that customer in a timely way even though they present a unusual need?
Read more » Posted: January 28th, 2007 under Customers. Two Products, Two Call Centers and Two ResponsesCallCenterOps.com uses a web hosting company to provide this site to you. The growth in the site has resulted in us having to sign-up for a new service with the current web hosting company we use or find something else. This weeks article focuses on missed opportunity and the role the call centers of two companies played in breaking it and making it for CallCenterOps.com.
Read more » Posted: January 28th, 2007 under People. Watching the CustomerA best practice within call center operations is that the “management team is responsible for collecting and analyzing ‘voice of the customer data’ and for using this data to communicate and demonstrate daily their commitment to delighting customers first time every time.”
Read more » Posted: January 28th, 2007 under Customers. |
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