Our benchmark research into next-generation customer engagement finds that the top priorities in customer service for companies are to improve the customer experience (said 74%)
Collaboration. Various established forms of collaboration are found in business systems, including file sharing, instant messaging, Web-page sharing, application sharing, discussion forums and unified communications that allow users to see who is available to take over interactions or confer with. Each of these has a part to play, but more innovative tools use Facebook-like social media techniques that enable employees to message each other or defined teams, share files, exchange ideas and generally collaborate on resolving individual or general customer service issues. They also facilitate sharing of performance recognition information, which can spur employees to perform better. Because these tools mirror personal social media use, they are likely to attract and be adopted by employees.
Customer Portal. Despite the popularity of newer methods, our research shows that many consumers still use corporate websites to look up information, find answers to questions, report issues and make purchases. However many company sites have not evolved from providing static information such as Q&A lists, and our research also shows that less than half of such visits are successful and force customers to use alternative channels. To match customer expectations, companies need portal systems that can personalize content and support dialogue with customers to help resolve their issues, for example, chat or interactive video.
Internal Mobile Apps. More employees engaging with customers today do so away from their desks; they include contact center supervisors, sales personnel and mobile customer service engineers. Each of them requires access to systems that provide alerts, advise of next best actions and supply information to help resolve customer issues. Companies therefore need systems that allow such employees to access these capabilities on their smartphones or tablets.
Mobile Customer Service Apps. These apps must attract consumers, often in forms much like games. They have to go beyond simply providing browser access to the enterprise website and at the minimum provide basic transactional capabilities; they must, for example, help customers look up the balance of an account, pay a bill, track a delivery or raise a service issue. As mobile app development capabilities improve, companies will need to do even more and enable customers to purchase goods or services, use self-service to resolve issues on their own or collaborate with customer service employees on voice calls, chat sessions or video calls. The key in moving forward is to connect such apps with internal transactional systems so they can display personalized information, remove the necessity for customers to re-enter data if they continue the engagement through another channel, and bypass system such as IVR so they can engage directly with the employee most likely to resolve their issue.
Social Customer Service. Our research shows that at present, most companies use social media for marketing, for example through a corporate page on LinkedIn or YouTube videos about its products. More advanced companies have created a team to track and respond to tweets about the company, but most of these are reactive and don’t support significant dialogue because of the confidential nature of much of the data that would need to be shared to resolve a customer issue. Others have set up social media forums where customers can engage with other customers to resolve their issues or gather information. Yet we find that companies over manage these interactions to interject with their preferred solutions. I believe that technical limitations such as accepting only 140 characters per post and insufficient security of information will prevent social media from having a major impact on customer engagement and expect companies to gain more success using less controlled forums.
Nevertheless, I do not doubt that each of these technologies can, if used properly, help companies innovate in customer engagement. But customer preferences will evolve along with technology; in particular the Internet of Things will rapidly expand human interaction with smart devices. So I believe rather than just making innovations in customer engagement, companies will have to find tools that enable them to disrupt the whole process. I think this will happen primarily through two technologies: self-service and analytics. I recently wrote that companies need to keep up with the digital age and match or even keep ahead of consumer expectations to engage through more digital channels and particularly to use these to resolve their own issues. As I outlined above this will mean that companies will have to improve IVR, make their customer portals more interactive and make their mobile apps smarter.
One instance could be visual IVR. As far as I can see most of these systems are actually smart mobile apps that are designed with menus and options that match customer expectations, rather than simply collecting information prior to a customer talking to an agent. Another is virtual agents. In simple terms this is voice-activated software designed to offer customers options that meet their expectations and provide responses personalized according to the caller and what he or she is trying to achieve. A third, the very latest advance in this area, is interactive video. It provides capabilities similar to those of virtual agents but presents the customer personalized information – for example, the latest bill – that can be used to guide the dialogue. In all these areas the application must be accessible through mobile devices, programmed with the customer in mind and connected with systems that can provide personalized information.
I have maintained for a long time that companies can’t improve customer engagement or customer service unless they know their customers, including what they buy, how many questions they
One new type of tool to provide such comprehensive views is real-time journey maps. They show the interactions a customer has with the company, the channels used and how the person crosses channels to complete each interaction. A key capability is to show the outcome of journeys, that is, not just the channels used but the outcome – perhaps a new sale, an issue resolved or an increase in customer satisfaction score. By looking at actual journeys companies can understand why they went the way they did and what must be changed to produce better outcomes, for the customer and the company. The most advanced systems include predictive capabilities, which can, for example, analyze past journeys and predict what might happen in the future.
Organizations that deploy these disruptive technologies will also be in position to change their business models so they engage with customer in new, more effective ways. Those that do can get ahead of the competition and improve business performance by exceeding customer expectations.
Regards,
Richard J. Snow
VP & Research Director