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Customer Care in Your Call Center
By Gary Dupont
September 2004
In many organizations, the customer focus is relatively
straightforward: provide substandard service to your customers and they will
ultimately leave to go to your competition.
The concept of providing exceptional service should be easily recognized.
Let's face it, replacing lost clients is a costly endeavor.
Clients are a teleservice company's most valuable asset.
Client retention is essential to ensure long-term financial viability.
The "customer service techniques" we have used in the past are no
longer sufficient. Simply providing
dedicated access points for premier clients and dedicated account teams for
problem resolution is no longer enough to sustain client loyalty.
Contact center managers must be aware that clients are becoming
more savvy and that clients are the ones in the power position.
Everyone in the organization, including upper management, must be
committed to three things: (1)
creating a "customer service culture" throughout the enterprise, (2)
embracing change, and (3) encouraging thinking outside the box to meet
individual client needs. Since this
a process, it must evolve over time.
This article will touch on current and future initiatives that we
at MSI (MASCO Services Inc.) use to measure and create change in order to
enhance the customer care experience:
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External
"Benchmarking Studies": Since
we were unable to find any benchmarking studies (similar to Jon Anton's
Benchmark Portal) that include telemessaging companies, MSI created a set of
criteria to measure ourselves against other hospital telemessaging call
centers in the Boston area.
We contract with independent market research firms to measure such
indices such as speed of answer, tone of service, time to process the call,
and accuracy.
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Remote
Monitoring: An outside vendor
performs daily audio quality audits and provides daily feedback to the
contact center manager. The
manager then uses the information to coach the representatives.
The Association of Teleservices International's (ATSI) standards
are applied to all calls.
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Internal
Service Observations: Call center
managers perform monthly audio/visual monitoring of each customer service
representative (CSR). An online
grading form is used to apply all ATSI quality standards to this process.
A representative scorecard including monitoring scores and other
individual metrics is produced and reviewed with each representative.
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CSR
Self-Review: CSRs listen to several of
their calls recorded at random, rate the calls, and discuss their
impressions with the contact center manager. We have found this to be
an extremely useful tool.
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Spot
Checks and Mystery Calling Program:
An outside contractor makes calls at random and rates the handling of the
call.
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Client
Surveys: Several times
a year, we survey our clients verbally and in writing.
We want to ensure client loyalty and verify that our service remains
at a high level so we solicit views, gather feedback, assess future
requirements, and rate complaint resolution.
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Clients have the option of taking the survey online, via email, or
by hard copy. Responses are sent
directly to an outside firm where they are tabulated.
We also conduct verbal surveys. Negative
comments are dealt with expeditiously and follow-up is conducted with the
client.
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Project
Implementation Teams:
Whenever we have a new campaign, major initiative, or client we make every
effort to involve a staff member from each shift throughout the process.
His or her insight is often invaluable.
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Incentive
Program: Quarterly, CSRs in good
standing are eligible for a monetary payout up to $600.
The scorecard used with the program consists of two global measures:
one of them is always service level plus individual representative metrics
such as productivity, quality, and schedule adherence.
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Client
Problem Resolution:
Clients are provided escalation procedures to resolve issues and to
facilitate the communication flow in both directions.
We want to "close the loop" and track follow-up steps.
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Pre-Employment
Testing: MSI uses the
ATSI pre-employment testing program in conjunction with targeted
interviewing techniques. We plan
to add a client service aptitude component soon.
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Training: A comprehensive initial training program has been
developed that includes online exams and HIPAA training.
The process is measurable and tangible.
After 60 days, all associates go through "Service Excellence and
Patient Sensitivity Training."
Changing organizational culture is evolutionary and occurs each
time we make contact with a client. The
dynamics of that interaction reinforces the culture.
Each component mentioned in this article is based on basic customer
service concepts. We look to
strengthen our relationships with our CSRs, our current clients, and our
prospective clients.
The shift from traditional customer service to a customer-focused
organization reinforces behaviors centered on the customer and their needs.
Over time, the transition to a customer-focused organization will yield
competitive advantages in the marketplace.
Gary
DuPont is Director of Telecommunications and Customer Care at MASCO (Medical
Academic and Scientific Community Organization, Inc.).
You can learn more by visiting www.masco.org.
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