Operating a business in 2020 is challenging in ways that few of us could ever have predicted. Rarely have we seen change occur with such magnitude or velocity. Customer-demand fluctuations, fractures in supply chains, workforce disruption, and rapidly evolving government policies have stressed organisations all at once.
Meanwhile, customer anxiety levels have soared and their priorities have shifted. In the COVID-19 era, many customers have less money to spend. They are concerned about the future and increasingly want to engage digitally with organisations. This is true in both B2C and B2B scenarios.
Before the COVID-19 outbreak, customer service experts were already emphasising the “experience” of customers over the service itself. Matt Dixon, an authority on sales, customer service, and customer experience, talks of the “effortless experience” and how it’s the new battleground for customer loyalty.
Today’s customers aren’t looking for prolonged engagements. They want organisations to eliminate frustrations and make interactions quick, effortless, and effective. This is more important than ever during the pandemic, when we’re all dealing with stress in multiple aspects of our professional and personal lives. If customers must expend what they see as unnecessary effort to receive support, they will ultimately spend less, leave earlier, and share negative word of mouth more readily.
Moreover, when customer spend is constrained and budgets are under prolonged pressure, businesses must renew their focus on operational efficiency.
So how do you deliver effortless customer experiences while simultaneously reducing cost and boosting productivity?
The following three strategies will help organisations meet all three goals.
Focus on solving problems, not adding channels
Because many organisations believe choice is the key to satisfaction, they often focus on providing multiple channels of engagement for their customers. This omnichannel approach fails on many levels.
Research shows 84% of customers care more about the ultimate solution than about the channel on which they engage. Furthermore, customers tend to be less loyal when they are switched from one channel to another during a service interaction.
The emphasis needs to be on effortless experiences that solve problems. Orchestrate work so customers don’t have to engage with a service rep. This leads to faster problem resolution. So much the better if the resolution can be fully automated through non-human workflow.
However, don’t stop there. Find opportunities to drive proactive customer service and inform customers of an imminent problem (and a corresponding solution) before it even happens.
Customers tend to be less loyal when they are switched from one channel to another during a service interaction.
And where human involvement is desired, or perhaps preferred, arm your agents with the knowledge they need to resolve issues quickly, presenting them with rapid workflow pathways to get work done.
One of our global film and media customers decided to augment their customer service channel strategy by building out workflows so they could solve problems at scale more quickly for more than 50 million customers worldwide.
While it was important to offer this support, the real win came from shrinking resolution times.