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Escalated but Satisfied
By Jodie Monger, Ph.D.
October 2004
All
contact centers have escalated calls that must be handled.
Your strategy to handle escalated calls is an extremely important part of
your customer service delivery plan. Clients
who have problems that have not been handled to their satisfaction are those who
can inflict the most market damage to your call center's reputation.
On average, each dissatisfied client will tell more than twenty people
about the experience. However, an
effective service recovery negates the negative effect and actually increases
loyalty to your company.
Whether
or not your contact center actually caused the problem, you are responsible for
it. How effective is your escalation
team? You must depend on them to
complete an effective service recovery and preserve the relationship (that is,
the asset base of your company). Research
indicates that customers who have had a problem that has been effectively
addressed are more loyal to the company than those customers who never had a
problem. This may be surprising, but
it underscores the importance of the escalation team to your company.
Quantifying
customer satisfaction with the agents that handle escalated calls often meets
with resistance. The automatic
reaction is that clients handled by the escalation team are already unhappy with
the situation and will certainly give low evaluations of the service provided.
The thought is that there is nothing that will make these people happy,
short of giving them free service. Unfortunately,
omitting the escalation staff from your caller satisfaction measurement program
and thereby not holding the team accountable to the caller evaluations of
services can be a costly mistake.
Callers
with issues that must be escalated are part of the reality within your overall
service delivery. This portion of
your strategy must be measured and must demonstrate continuous improvement over
time as expected for all teams. The
same post-call survey questions should be asked of the clients to ensure an
apples-to-apples comparison is possible across the teams in your contact center.
While
scores are not as impossibly dismal as you may expect, Customer Relationship
Metrics' research indicates that the scores will be slightly lower. This
may simply be a result of the client being transferred when the call is
escalated.

After
your post-call survey program has been in place for two months, you can quantify
the consistent gap in scores (if any) between the escalation staff and the first
tier agents. As with any team, the
goal and expectations for improvement are based on a calculated month-to-month
improvement to reach the year end goal. While
the escalation staff may have a slightly lower goal, it should be challenged to
stretch in the same proportion as any other team.
Considering the contribution to your call center's bottom line, you
cannot afford to overlook customer satisfaction measures for the escalation
staff.
Don't
underestimate your clients. They are
quite capable of understanding the underlying effectiveness of the resolution.
They will bestow scores accordingly.
Hopefully, your escalation staff is trained to solve problems, to think
outside of the box, and to even say "No," in a way that leaves the client
satisfied. You must measure the
clients' perception in order to prove the value of your escalation team and
the amount of revenue saved by them. Loyalty
is at stake.
Jodie Monger, Ph.D., is the President of
Customer Relationship Metrics, L.C. For
more information about completely automated telephone surveys, contact Jim
Rembach
at 336-288-8226, jim.rembach@metrics.net,
or call their demo line at 866-537-8500.
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