Self-Service Won’t Fully Replace Agents

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Richard Pinnington explains why agents are still vital to the contact centre in the self-service era.

There was a time, not that long ago, when self-service didn’t exist. Sure, you could usually fill your own car with fuel, but self-check-out? Nope. Email or FAQs available online to answer questions? They didn’t exist. We’ve come a long way in a short amount of time, in part due to customer demand for on-demand service. Now customers can do a lot of things themselves, when it is convenient for them.

All sorts of self-service customer service methods are available now: website FAQs, social sites, blogs, online customer forums, knowledge bases and the ubiquitous IVR. Love it or hate it, interactive voice response was one of the pioneering self-service functions available to customers. Talk about coming a long way!

Self-service offers some great benefits for customers – being able to find what they need, when they need it, regardless of “normal” business hours. There are benefits for brands to offer self-service as well, including cost reductions and improved customer satisfaction. But there are some questions or issues that self-service just can’t answer. And I wonder: Do self-service options have the potential to damage customer-brand relationships?

I say “I wonder,” but I think it’s possible. For instance, some brands rely solely on self-service and offer no options for contacting a real, live person. It’s not good customer service to assume that your brand can answer all questions or issues through a website FAQ, knowledge base or social channel. Customers may get frustrated and never return to your brand.

Sometimes you really need to talk to a person to get the help you need.

If your customers have exhausted all of the self-help facilities that you have provided before they contact an agent you can bet they have a very specific or complex request. That means contact centres are handling more complicated or challenging issues. And that means contact centres need Super Agents.

The skills of the Super Agent need to be greater and more diverse than they ever were with “scripted agents”. Super Agents need to be able to:

  • Quickly access information about customer history, orders, preferences and past contacts.
  • Engage with customers across any number of channels, from phone to live chat to social and more.
  • Instil confidence that they can resolve the issue – and follow through to ensure customer satisfaction.
  • Be empowered to make decisions and do what is needed to keep customers happy.
  • Have immediate access to supervisors, perhaps via a chat function in their contact centre platform, to secure support and approvals as needed.
  • Display a higher level of EQ, or emotional intelligence, to handle complex situations with possibly emotional customers. Empathy, remaining calm under pressure and constant communication are key.
  • Keep a positive attitude, regardless of the situation – people really can tell when someone is positive and smiling, even when not face-to-face.
Richard Pinnington

Richard Pinnington

Those Super Agents help transform the contact centre into a sophisticated “customer hub”. They won’t be called in for every issue, of course. Self-service, when handled well and backed up by a contact centre ready to step in for complex issues, can definitely save both brands and customers time and money.

The trick is to make it as useful as possible, and as simple to use as possible, to keep customers happy and helping themselves (and save your brand money).

With thanks to Richard Pinnington at LiveOps

Author: Megan Jones

Published On: 25th Nov 2015 - Last modified: 18th Dec 2018
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2 Comments
  • Hi Richard

    A great article that highlights the current challenges around correctly balancing self -serve with live agent interaction, and how brands need to keep the customers preferences firmly in mind when offering up contact channels. With Self-Serve being the buzz word ‘du jour’, it’s easy to be swept away by the promise of cost savings from reduced agent resource, increased online conversion rates and improvements to FCR. However, this needs to be balanced with the fact that more complex and challenging customer requests may still need a human-to-human approach that matches the expectations of the customer and best represents the brand values. There’s also the fact that any knowledge base or self-serve tool needs to be managed and controlled effectively, and this often means that ‘Super Agents’ are required to create and monitor the development of the self-serve platform in real-time. Most early adopters of self-serve tell the story that they invariably required more resources initially to develop the tool to its potential, and this meant that agents are needed to support the transition period and ensure the customer experience isn’t compromised. There are some self-serve solutions that have recently come to market (such as Cart Assist) that successfully blend and intelligently offer multi-channel, multi-lingual support alongside a ‘customer assisted journey’ with live agent interaction and this approach seems to tick all the boxes. However, like you, I truly believe that the rise of the ‘Super Agent’ has already started and will only continue to grow in demand.

    Steve West 26 Nov at 13:24
  • “Interesting article and we totally agree, at RSVP all our agents are ‘Super Agents’, the majority of our staff are creatives who have trained in vocal production for 3 years or so, and have highly developed communication skills. 80% hold a degree. Their training enables them to engage and build a unique rapport with callers from all walks of life. RSVP’s agents have a natural empathy that enables them to match to whoever they are speaking to. They are lively, motivated and talented, and able to act out a unique role for each client”.

    Louise Roberts 1 Dec at 10:40