Zum Hauptinhalt springen

Article 6 min read

A 3-pronged approach to creating (and scaling) legendary customer service experiences

The new world of customer service values relationships over fast transactions. But customer relationships are nuanced and complex. So, how can you continue to create great customer service experiences as your team grows and the complexity of your customer support operations increases?

Von Diana Silva, MaestroQA

Zuletzt aktualisiert: June 7, 2022

More than half of people have higher expectations for customer service now compared to a year ago, according to Microsoft’s State of Global Customer Service Report. But providing consistent, quality customer service is a challenge. You can’t simply automate or template your way to success. It’s an art and a science that requires masterful people skills, as well as constant digging into the data behind interactions (and setting goals along the way) to turn bland customer experiences into remarkable ones.

And then there’s the issue of scaling those remarkable experiences. It’s not an easy feat.

So, how can you consistently create and replicate the types of customer experiences today’s consumers expect? It comes down to leveraging a three-pronged approach of innovative CX analytics, QA data, and individualized agent coaching.

1. Move beyond one-dimensional customer service metrics and embrace in-depth CX analytics

show empathy

When it comes to ensuring great customer experiences at scale, tracking the right data is critical.

Most CX teams rely on a combination of standard productivity (AHT and FCR) and satisfaction (CSAT and NPS) metrics to measure agent performance and inform CX strategies. Unfortunately, these metrics give incomplete, and often unreliable, information that doesn’t take you any closer to your goal of providing better customer experiences en masse. They fail to provide any actionable items that allow you to iterate on or improve CX because they don’t help identify and address the root causes of friction in your customer experience.

“CSAT can tell you how a customer feels in a particular moment, but that feeling could be the result of anything relating to your business.” Vasu Prathipati, CEO and co-founder of MaestroQA

If an agent handled a situation perfectly but the customer was upset with your billing policy, they might give a low score. Not only does the low score reflect poorly on the agent—even though the billing policy is out of their control—but the CSAT score itself doesn’t provide any direction on how to improve your support operations or the quality of the interaction. So, companies are left with a massive blind spot between what traditional metrics tell CX leadership and what customers are actually experiencing.

The solution? If companies want to ensure they’re providing a superior customer experience across the board, they need to move beyond these one-dimensional metrics and start focusing on more in-depth conversation analytics that provide a clear root cause analysis. Only then can you start to understand the true impact of your agents’ performance and your company’s processes and policies on the customer experience.

2. Unlock data-driven QA insights

show empathy

You probably use quality assurance (QA) to evaluate the performance of your customer service teams. You listen in on recorded calls to learn if the protocol was followed and to find out if customers were satisfied with your services. And depending on what you find, you may need to coach an agent after a call or take disciplinary action.

The process is mostly about fixing mistakes—which is an inherent part of assuring quality for your customers—and providing individual-based feedback. There is generally little to no reporting or analysis from this process to point to when discussing trends or action items with your wider CX team. This is fine in terms of helping guide managers on utilizing QA to coach, but as your team grows and you look to scale, trying to provide best-in-class support in this reactive and strictly individualized manner quickly becomes ineffective and unsustainable.

The good news? If you already use a QA solution, you’re sitting on a goldmine of data that can be used to learn about your agent experiences, create a continuous feedback loop and identify opportunities for team growth so you can nip potential issues in the bud. Digging into this data and maintaining a structured QA grading process allows you to benchmark good support practices—the ideal tone agents should adopt, the fastest resolution times they can achieve without sacrificing quality, and the tools they should use to be more productive—so you can achieve consistency in service, no matter how large your support team grows.

3. Implement a customer service coaching program

show empathy

In efforts to scale, companies frequently turn to templated training and plug-and-play coaching modules to ramp up new agents or introduce new products and services. However, these methods generally fall short when it comes to helping agents solve unique customer issues because they don’t (and can’t) account for the complexity of agents’ interactions and nuances of real-world human interactions.

Every agent excels and struggles in different aspects of their work. Accordingly, extracting tangible insights based on their individual performance data lets you know what to focus on during coaching sessions. Applying this individualized data to customer service coaching closes communication gaps between CX managers and agents, enabling more efficient learning.

But how can you do this at scale? A data-driven customer service coaching program that looks something like this:

  • Collect QA data to find opportunities for improvement

    You can’t improve what you don’t measure. Accordingly, CX managers need to know exactly what agents need help with to maximize the effectiveness of coaching meetings. The most effective (and efficient) way to do this is by collecting quality data from customer-agent interactions.

  • Establish a coaching cadence to ensure timely feedback

    Coaching needs to be conducted systematically to hold agents and coaches accountable. There isn’t a set-in-stone rule for how often agents need coaching—it can range from once a week to once a year—but every agent can benefit from it. Routine coaching sessions can refine skills and refresh motivation, while also serving as a touchpoint to discuss any work-related issues the agent might be facing.

  • Set up a system to track agent progress over time

    CX managers should always have a pulse on the progress agents make to know whether coaching sessions drive results (or need reevaluation). Tracking progress over time also lets CX teams celebrate key milestones that agents reach. You can even set up incentives—bonuses, prizes—to reach KPIs by a certain date.

MaestroQA’s unique relationship as a Zendesk partner can help CX leaders do all this, and more. By pulling in your Zendesk ticket and customer data directly into our platform, CX managers have access to pull together their complete CX analytics into flexible dashboards. You can also layer in your QA data to identify the root cause of customer issues, as well as enable a data-driven and personalized approach to customer service coaching.

For more insights and tips on creating legendary customer experiences, download our ebook, 10 Customer Service Coaching Tips to Boost Agent Performance.

Ähnliche Beiträge

Article
3 min read

Revenue churn: What it is + how to calculate it

Understanding your revenue churn is a crucial first step in improving your operations and fostering long-term loyalty. Learn about this important concept below.

Article

EU-US Data Privacy Framework and Adequacy Decision

Zendesk has long been committed to delivering trustworthy products to our customers and their users. We believe that trust is at the core of all our interactions with our customers.

Article
14 min read

Customer analytics 101: What it is and how it works for growth

Customer analytics helps businesses deeply understand their audience to make smarter business decisions and improve CX.

Article
6 min read

35 customer experience statistics to know for 2024

Over 50 percent of customers will switch to a competitor after a single unsatisfactory customer experience. Here's a list of 35 more customer experience statistics to share with your team.