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For Better CX in 2022, Focus on Closing Your Feedback Loops
If you go the extra mile and seek
personalized, timely, insightful feedback from your customers, you can identify
and improve contact center operations—and strengthen customer loyalty
Contributed by Matt DiMaria
What defines good customer experience? When
the customer experience (CX) is positive, customers walk away from every
interaction with a brand feeling happy and satisfied. Those interactions
include marketing campaigns that are thoughtful and well executed, shopping
experiences that are efficient and pleasurable, simplified buying processes,
effective post-sales and support options, and the ability to connect with
company representatives anytime, anywhere, using any device.
As we seek to measure CX, customer service
professionals often think in terms of customer-satisfaction outcomes. For
metrics, post-interaction surveys—such as CSAT, NPS, or your own variant of
these—can gauge CX success for the brand overall or specifically for the
contact center.
The problem is, the generic surveys for
measuring CX focus on the past, not the present. They provide delayed insights
into our customers' journeys, and general information about the interactions,
solutions proposed, and representatives who were involved. If we cannot quickly
identify where we are falling short of our customers’ expectations and feed the
lessons back into our organization, we will limit our potential to improve CX.
How can we address timeliness—seeking a
customer’s experience immediately after an interaction; and personalization—by
including key, relevant details of a customer’s interaction?
To answer this, let’s take two examples that
illustrate how timely, personal, and relevant surveys can identify specific
areas that need improvement, provide pointers to enhance operations and CX, and
boost customer loyalty.
Meet Joan: she
needs help with an invoice
Let's start with Joan. She’s a long-standing
customer who contacts her cable company to challenge a line item on her bill.
She identifies herself in the IVR and selects the billing department. After
waiting 10 minutes in the queue for an agent, she hangs up. Understandably,
Joan is angry that she couldn't connect with the company and resolve her
problem. She resolves that when she next finds the time to call back in and get
the problem corrected, she’ll also make sure to comment on the company’s poor
customer service.
I’m going to go out on a limb here and say
that Joan is probably not expecting to hear back from that finance department anytime
soon. If we took her NPS pulse, she’d probably indicate that she’s a detractor.
But it’s an unfortunate part of her journey, and within minutes of her hanging
up, her incomplete call and status as a high-value customer is noted.
The next day, when Joan calls back, she’s put
through to Wendy, who is ready to assist with her billing question and quickly
rectifies the billing problem.
Directly after this call, Joan receives a text
message inviting her to provide her opinion about the billing department’s
responsiveness. It asks her to rate Wendy’s response to her billing problem and
her opinion of the company’s commitment to resolving her issues.
The survey recognizes her long-standing
relationship with the company, addresses her by name, includes Wendy’s name and
the nature of her billing problem, and the steps Wendy took to resolve her
problem. It also asks her how the company might improve its customer service:
Faster connection with an agent? Easier callback options? How could they
improve their invoices?
After completing this survey, she’s no longer
angry — in fact she’s impressed that the company quickly reconnected to close
the loop on her billing problem. And the survey itself reinforced the company’s
attention to detail and dedication to a good outcome. Quite possibly, this
experience has created a long-lasting impression on Joan — one that she may
share with others.
Meanwhile, the cable company has made some
valuable observations. The survey goes directly to Wendy's boss, who can now
advocate for a virtual queueing service to remediate the long hold times. It’s
also sent to the product and experience design teams, who discover that there's
a system-wide issue with an incorrect bill, and make immediate corrections to
help all customers like Joan — and mitigate the possibility of more frustrated
customers calling in.
The key success factors here are timeliness,
personalization, and the instantaneous application of customer feedback.
Without waiting weeks to see trends, this company can mobilize changes based on
real-time feedback. In terms of sophistication, this is several notches above
what most companies are aiming for with their customer surveys — but new technology is making it easy for
any company to implement just this approach.
Meet Ed: he’s got
an urgent technical issue
Ed is a repeat-purchase customer. His
electronics product has stopped working and Ed has been searching the brand’s
website support pages to figure out how to fix it. After 12 minutes of
fruitless keyword searching and “did this page answer your question?”
frustration, he finally gives up and calls support. He spends 15 minutes
waiting for an agent, and an additional 20 minutes online with the agent to
diagnose the problem and set up a store visit for a product exchange. Ed is
frustrated that it took so long but happy, overall, that his problem is closer
to resolution.
Because we can track Ed’s interactions with
the brand, we have some useful details about his experience: the product, the
problem, the time he spent searching the support pages and the search terms he
used, his hold time, and which agent he spoke to. We also know what actions the
agent recommended during the call to diagnose the issue, what the agent
determined is causing the problem, and that we’ll see Ed soon in a retail store
to exchange the product.
Once Ed completes his call, we send him a
voice survey that focuses on the product exchange and his opinion of the
overall experience. From this, we discover that Ed was frustrated that he had
to walk through five different processes with the agent on the phone — he could
have done this on his own in the digital self-serve channel. We also learn that
Ed had to be escalated to another rep because the first one didn't have the
knowledge to answer his problem — it was the more skilled rep that determined
he needed to go into the store for a replacement.
With the right tools, these survey results
deliver timely feedback into a Slack channel with digital teams, so they know
they need to add two or three more articles to cover processes performed over
the phone. And the team also sees that, for this issue, the customer needs to
be routed immediately to a tier two rep after confirming that they've done the
troubleshooting processes on their own.
This brings drastic improvement to digital
containment (customers like Ed will have more self-serve troubleshooting resources
next time) and improve average handle time for the agents, since there's now
documentation about this issue and the steps needed to replace the product.
And, since agent time is the most costly part of customer service, this
instantly reduces operational costs.
Plan for
responsive CX in 2022
As you plan your customer-feedback initiatives
for 2022, think about how you might add more timeliness, relevance, and
personalization to your surveys. Review what your team has learned about
meeting your customers’ expectations during the pandemic. Think about how you
will meet customers in their preferred channel (phone, text, chat, email, or
web). And, lastly, consider what process changes you should make to close
customer-feedback loops faster and improve your operations in response to
recent (not delayed) feedback.
AUTHOR BIO
With a tenure steeped in B2B software and IT,
Matt DiMaria is focused on bridging the artificial and human aspects of CX
technology as the CEO and president of VHT. Overseeing products Mindful and
Survey Dynamix, Matt is propelling his company and the customer experience
industry toward a philosophy of “customer in control,” acknowledging that
brands, agents, and customers can all meet their goals with satisfaction,
efficiency, and a positive outcome.