By
Chris Bauserman
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Date Published: January 16, 2019 - Last Updated September 08, 2020
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Comments
The shift from traditional call centers to modern omnichannel contact
centers can feel as different for both agents and customers as the shift
from in-store retail to e-commerce. The virtual ‘cockpit’ of the modern
agent now includes automation and artificial intelligence (AI), analytics,
intelligent omnichannel solutions, and a bevy of digital channels – all
becoming standard-issue for supporting exceptional agent-customer
interactions. In fact, according to the latest findings of the
NICE inContact CX Transformation Benchmark Study
, digital channel usage is up significantly. And among U.S.-based
consumers, the use of email doubled and online chat tripled between 2017,
and 2018.
A growing reliance on digital channels can increase the risk of losing the
human touch that makes the agent’s role so effective in building
exceptional customer experiences. Take email, for example: it might be a
convenient way to request information from an agent, but if the issue isn’t
resolved quickly or there’s a frustrating back-and-forth email chain, that
negates its convenience and reduces the personal touch. Sometimes we just
want a quick and easy “water cooler” conversation. As agent-assisted
digital channel use grows, due to speed, convenience, and personalization
potential, it’s all the more important for agents to remember to infuse the
human touch into each quick exchange.
Here are three ways that agents can continue to make personal, one-on-one
connections with customers while engaging through digital channels:
1. Find your voice in non-voice channels
Even before the explosion of digital channels, email has been an important
part of customer service strategies. As customers put a higher value on
convenience, the low effort required to fire off an email via a mobile
device and wait for an agent response has made it a significantly more
attractive channel. But, it isn’t perfect. While email is the second most
preferred channel, only 28 percent of global consumers are highly satisfied
with email, and email’s Net Promoter Score® stands at -9.
The reason for this disconnect may not be surprising to anyone who has
dealt with the fallout of a misinterpreted email: it can be significantly
more difficult to interpret tone or intent via written channels. What might
read as a low-priority issue from the agent’s perspective could be quite
the opposite for the customer on the other end. Modern contact centers are
using text analytics to detect more urgent matters that come in via email,
and proactively move that customer inquiry to another channel so that an
agent can jump in. As a general rule of thumb, being overly communicative
is a strong counter for the misinterpretation possible within non-voice
digital channels.
Also, don’t be afraid to inject your own voice as an individual as opposed
to strictly following the script. NICE inContact customer Vera Bradley has
a group of agents dedicated to chat and text who enhance their personal
touch by sharing emojis, as well as product images. Their customers share
product photos as well, and agent excitement about these digital channels
is strong. When the customer is able to connect with you as an individual
through your unique communication style, they’re more comfortable doing the
same.
2. Be proactive and productive
Regardless of which channel the customer starts with, the number one
priority of any customer is the effortless and speedy resolution of
inquiries. As I mentioned above with email, it is not always best for the
customer to stay in the original channel they used to contact you.
Customers expect you to suggest the best channel to service them – even if
not the channel the customer initially chose.
Elevating from an email, social or text message conversation doesn’t always
need to move to a voice call to be effective. Chat often hits a sweet spot
for both customers and contact centers – consumers can quickly multitask
while chatting, and agents can reasonably handle 3-4 chats at any given
time, improving efficiency and cost for the contact center (as opposed to
the 1:1 engagement via voice). In fact, chat is now the third most used and
preferred channel; 44 percent of global consumers are highly satisfied with
chat and the channel has a strong Net Promoter Score® of 21. Being a better
resource means adjusting per what the customer finds convenient, while also
ensuring everyone stays proactive and productive.
3. Leverage AI as a support mechanism
While AI continues to be the hot technology on every contact center wish
list, it is not yet a runaway success with customers. In fact, 79 percent
of survey respondents said chatbots and virtual assistants need to get
smarter before they are willing to use them regularly. Furthermore, 66
percent disagree that chatbots and virtual assistants make it easier to get
issues resolved.
That said, AI does have an important role in injecting the human touch into
the digital experience. Take chatbots, for example. When chatbots are used
to quickly authenticate the customer, gather relevant information and
answer basic questions, this can optimize agent productivity and enable
them to focus on meeting nuanced and unique customer needs. However,
managers need to take a single, narrow and realistic approach, building
from the ground up. Start with a focused pilot. Test and learn quickly,
then iterate and expand from there.
Critical to this is integrating the feedback from your agents. What is
their experience? What efficiencies can be created or processes improved?
AI is often a top-down initiative. Executives might be the ones pushing for
how the team is leveraging AI, but the people on the front lines are the
ones with the insight. The pay-off is bottom up.
Balancing Technology and The Human Touch
The most powerful customer experiences live at the intersection of
technology and humanity. Contact centers have more tools and technology
than ever that sit between customers and agents. Applying these innovations
to give agents more ways to automate and service more customers faster,
while also injecting an authentic voice on the other end is what will
create engaging and ongoing customer relationships – at scale.