If you stop to compare communication preferences of the past to those of today, you can’t fail to notice some major changes, especially in younger generations. Talking on the phone – fixed or mobile – is in decline, as many people now prefer text messaging, chat and social media. We rely on the Internet to search for websites, run mobile apps and use social media. We watch less TV in real time, preferring to watch what we want, when we want to watch it and to skip advertisements. The same applies to newspapers, with many people preferring to have the news they want to see downloaded to their smart devices. Today, any email from someone we don’t know goes straight to the junk mail folder, and writing seems to be becoming a lost art. This is the world of the digital customer. Companies have to support digital customers while continuing to support others who still make phone calls, send email and even write letters. According to my research into next-generation customer engagement, most companies are not yet prepared to meet the expectations of digital customers.
The first challenge is to support a range of channels of communication. The research shows that as many as 17 channels are now in play, with companies on average supporting approximately seven. However, of the channels currently deployed, the traditional ones are still the most common: the telephone (94%), email (92%) and letters and printed forms (78%). And although social media ranks fifth with 60 percent of companies supporting it, a long way down the list are mobile apps, social media forums, video calls and virtual agents. But simply supporting a greater number of channels is not the real issue. What customers increasingly expect is an omni-experience: consistent, personalized, contextual interaction across all channels. Similarly, the research shows that most companies are a long way from meeting those expectations.
Unfortunately, the research shows two more strategic changes needed before more companies can address these challenges. First, the changes that most research participants said would be most likely to improve customer engagement – deploy collaboration, redesign the customer portal and deploy more mobile apps – bear little relation to the top likely actions of companies, which are to find ways to avoid calls reaching the contact center, accommodate agent requirements in scheduling and compare performance across sites. All six of these goals are important, but to become more customer-focused, companies need to align their actions more toward improving the customer experience than operational efficiency. The same holds true when comparing the metrics companies said they want to improve – customer satisfaction, customer retention and number of net new customers – and those currently in use – average handing times, first-call resolution and quality scores. Again, all six are important, but companies need a balanced set of metrics that drive improvement in customer experiences while also taking into account operational targets.
Ultimately, one thing is certain: The digital customer is here, and as each younger generation grows up with smart devices, use of digital channels and self-service will become even more important. Our research shows that only the most mature companies are close to meeting these expectations; others need to put words into action and catch up quickly or risk missing out on key customer segments.
Regards,
Richard J. Snow
VP & Research Director