Six Good Self-Service Habits to Get Into

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Jeremy Payne takes us though his top tips for boosting the success of a self-service scheme.

In today’s digital age, customers want fast, efficient and effortless service, making self-service an increasingly important part of the communications mix.

According to a recent report from Zion Market Research, the global self-service technology market accounted for US $15.70 Billion in 2015 and is expected to reach US $37.75 Billion by 2021, growing at a CAGR of around 15.8% between 2016 and 2021.

Yet, self-service within businesses today takes many forms. It can encompass everything from web-based FAQs to Google search and from knowledge bases to online discussion forums and traditional automated voice-based interactive voice response (IVR) systems – to name but a few approaches.

With so many of the approaqches to pick and choose from, it is easy to get self-service wrong. But, you can also reap significant rewards if you get it right.

Here we outline six habits of self-service that you could benefit from getting into.

1. Deliver Outbound Notifications

Few businesses want ranks of contact centre agents permanently assigned to dealing with incoming enquiries. It’s expensive and time-consuming to focus on sorting out issues after they have already become problems, rather than proactively heading them off.

Delivering outbound notifications, typically by text message, email alert or through an app, can help you get on the front foot, keeping customers informed and freeing up agents to focus on more complex concerns.

It’s an approach that works best with standard processes with predefined parameters, less well where those processes are open-ended and variable.

That said, there are many examples of organisations getting into this habit and doing it well.

  • A bank sending alerts to your phone if someone logs into your account using a different device than normal is a case in point.
  • Airlines use mobile apps to alert you to boarding gates and times, eliminating the need to deal with inbound enquiries.
  • Dental practices can issue reminder text messages in bulk to keep patients informed, saving time and effort for the customer and the practice alike.

To be truly effective though, these kinds of alerts need to be a two-way interaction. It needs to be easy for your customers to follow through with a response.

A message sent to a dental patient, for example, needs to make it easy for that customer to respond and say: “I can’t make that time now. I want to rebook, or ideally confirm they can still make it”.

The ability to make things quick, easy and as effortless as possible for the customer is key to a good customer experience.

2. Provide Continuously Updated Automated Voice-Based Options for Customers

When they are designed well and continuously updated in line with the business’s customer engagement model, these solutions, known as interactive voice response (IVR) systems can be one of the most powerful self-service tools, enabling customers to quickly and easily resolve routine queries.

It’s important to ensure you are continuously reviewing the design and functionality of your system though.

Many companies today have IVRs in place, but have not redesigned or reviewed them to see whether they are functioning correctly for some time. That’s a mistake.

After all, if you have got contact centre agents, you don’t just hire them; train them once and leave them for the next five to ten years.

It is advisable to monitor and “coach” your IVRs in the same way you do your staff. You need to make sure menus are intuitive, that IVR tools can create statistics to inform you about usage levels and that you have people in place who can retune your IVRs when required.

Such an approach can be used across any vertical sector from housing to utilities and from financial services to telecoms.

Equally, the capabilities of the approach will benefit the delivery of many services from interacting with a collections company to booking an engineer to making a payment.

3. Integrate Self-Service with Other Systems

It’s important that your self-service channels are not operating in isolation. Making sure that you are integrating self-service with other channels is therefore an important habit to be getting into.

After all, if someone has been interacting with you via self-service and then wants to speak to one of your agents, that agent needs to know what they have been doing.

All too often, a lack of integration is made abundantly clear to the customer when they call into a bank, for example, and get challenged for their account number and then get challenged again when they speak to an agent.

4. Focus on Making your Customer Self-Service Apps More Visual

Any business needs to start thinking about seeing the world in the same way their users do. They need to place a premium on customer time.

That’s what the developers of the latest generation of mobile and visual IVRs that effectively use mobile or web-based apps to connect customers to self-service options, have done.

Often, they have learnt from the unwieldiness of the traditional IVR where typically users have to listen to five or six different options before pressing their choice and often undergoing the whole process again.

Using simple swipes left and right, mobile and visual IVR users can work much more intuitively on their devices and quickly speed their way to where they want to go.

It is so much more in tune with the way customers think and work these days and has potential applications across a wide range of vertical sectors from the largest telecoms provider to the smallest car dealership.

5. Identify and Fix Broken Customer Journeys as Soon as you can

Many businesses struggle to deliver fully joined-up customer processes.

Often, for example, if they have to redirect a customer seamlessly from an agent call to a voice IVR, they will struggle to do so and the business will be forced into the clunky option of sending them an SMS instead.

However, if an agent or even an automated system itself can identify that the customer journey is consistently breaking down at the same point with the same kind of customers, that should act as a ‘red flag’ alert.

This would effectively tell the organisation that a business improvement initiative needs to be put in place to streamline and strengthen the process.

The classic example is an ecommerce business realising their customers are running through the initial stages of the customer journey quickly but then loitering on the payments page for up to a minute before abandoning the interaction.

In such a scenario, the business might look to take action by delivering a chat window pop-up to highlight to the customer that they are here to help and ease the process that way.

6. Make Better use of Speech

In the consumer world, where devices like Amazon Echo, Siri and Cortana are increasingly ubiquitous, people are getting used to asking open-ended questions using natural speech and getting informed answers.

Businesses need to start harnessing that kind of capability within their IVR devices, which instead of being predominantly menu-driven will increasingly need to start understanding and responding to natural language.

The potential benefits in terms of operational efficiencies and enhanced customer engagement are significant. The technology is increasingly in place today.

A good example of what might be possible in the future is the commercial bank, embracing voice technology and prepared to put to one side the old directed dialogue and multi-menu systems.

This would be in favour of a new approach where the customer can simply speak the words “I would like to open a current account” and the bank will respond accordingly.

Positive Prospects

Jeremy Payne

It’s clear that in the new world of customer communications where delivering service 24x7x365 is increasingly a given, self-service will become an ever more important element of every business’s overall offering and an increasingly important differentiator.

Getting it right, though, is not always easy. Often, it’s a question of getting into good habits.

Taking account of these six key approaches outlined above should give businesses an excellent chance of making a success of their overall self-service approach.

To find out more, visit enghouseinteractive.co.uk

Author: Robyn Coppell

Published On: 14th Sep 2017
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