In a recent article, Jeff Toister discusses how self-service
(websites, portals, automation, etc.) has made things easier, but it also takes
out the human factor in the customer experience. The more technology is used to
streamline the customer journey, the less interaction people experience with
friendly customer service agents. People want the customer experience to be
easy and fluid, but there will always be times when customers are frustrated
with a product or service and need empathy and validation from real, human agents.
Toister offers and elaborates on the following five ways companies can humanize
their customer service:
2) Find creative ways to make connections
with customers in ways you normally wouldn’t. Toister gives examples in his article.
3) Increase call center agent staff and put
emphasis on first contact resolution to reduce time constraints and pressure on
agents.
4) Develop your agents’ connecting skills
with the “10 and 5 Rule” and the “Five Question Technique”. Learn more about
these techniques here.
5) Scripting is necessary much of the time,
but Toister points out that requiring agents to follow strict scripting can
remove the human touch from the customer experience and could potentially cause
more issues than the customer initially had prior to calling the company.
Toister’s recommendation is to create procedures that allow for conversational
communication.
Why Human Agents Are Still Necessary In The Customer
Experience
Toister’s five points
shine a light on ways companies can humanize customer interactions in an
increasingly automated self-service world. However, the reality of pain and
frustration needs to be taken into account with the customer experience. How
many times have you, or someone you know, called a company because a product or
service wasn’t working correctly only to become more frustrated that before due
to an interaction with an automated response or an IVR system? Technology can
be a great thing and help make contact centers more efficient, but in moments
of anger and frustration, customers often need to talk to a human agent.
Human contact center
agents can help frustrated customers more than automated service bots. By
making customers jump through hoops, companies often agitate the problem
further and make the interaction terrible when the customer does finally reach
an agent. When a customer calls fuming because they’re unhappy with a product,
service, mistake, etc., they aren’t asking for simply a solution to their
issue, they’re seeking empathy and a listening ear. Contact centers with agents
who have been trained using real-world examples and immersive techniques will
be equipped to handle intricacies of human communication and offer the right
help for individual situations. In addition, contact centers that allow their
agents flexibility with their customer conversations without requiring strict
adherence to scripts will see an overall happier customer base.
This blog post is based
on an article from Jeff Toister of Toister Performance Solutions, Inc.. To read the original article, please click the
link below:
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