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Home => Research The Dual Roles of Service Recovery & Customer FeedbackCustomer Service is under resourced and under valuedMost organisations (both commercial and not-for-profit) of any size have a designated Customer Service department. It may be called something else (such as complaints, customer service, help-desk or consumer affairs) but its purpose is to deal with customers who have questions about or problems with their organization's products or services.Unfortunately Customer Service departments are often under resourced and under valued in the corporate hierarchy. They are perceived as a necessary evil of modern commercial life rather than an opportunity to get closer to customers; an unwelcome cost centre to be contained rather than adding value to corporate performance. In particular, the joint values of customer feedback and service recovery are rarely appreciated and understood. Customer Service remains a reactive department keeping problems out of the way of senior management but rarely contributing positively to organizational performance. This is quite strange, particularly at a time when the focus of many organisations is on Customer Relationship Management. CRM rarely addresses existing customers' needsCRM is about getting closer to customers in order to understand and meet their needs more effectively. Unfortunately in many cases an admirable business strategy has ended up an ineffective software solution. Typically CRM applications assist the sales process or contribute to marketing data rather than address existing customers' needs.Finding out about what matters to existing customers is often left to the Market Research department. Such research, probably valuable in terms of understanding future product requirements and profiling potential customers, is not necessarily geared to understand the issues influencing and the current needs of existing customers. It is also not uncommon for a positive spin to be put on such research in terms of customer satisfaction rather than identifying problems. Customer Service adds significant value representing the Voice of the CustomerThis is where the Customer Service department can add significant value. Listening to customers who have experienced problems - and are committed enough to contact the organization - provides the concentrated feedback that traditional market research cannot reach. It alone has regular contact with customers who have experienced problems or have issues to raise. It knows the issues causing most concern and is best placed to represent the Voice of the Customer in future business decisions.But unfortunately this voice is rarely heard. There can be a number of reasons for this:
The following eight guidelines provide a framework for raising the profile of Customer Service and promoting the value of its dual objectives of service recovery and customer feedback: Position Customer Service as a profit centreFirstly, before even considering the pay back from Customer Service there is a requirement to have accurate financial data in the first place. This may demand considerably more attention to financial information than previously. Although cost centres often have limited budgets they also do not experience the same financial planning and reporting requirements of larger departments.Therefore the first condition for being treated as a profit centre is to act like one and take ownership and control of departmental finances. It is obviously important to maximize performance in terms of productivity and to justify a return on investment. Proving a positive ROI may not be as easy as it is for other departments (sales for example can compare costs with the value of new business). To identify the ROI of service recovery and customer feedback the calculation will have to include information such as the value of potential customers at risk retained, the impact of both negative and positive word-of-mouth and the financial return from product and process improvements attributable to customer feedback. The following benefits can be achieved from effective Customer Service:
Top Management must be committedUnless Customer Service has the support of top management it is hardly likely to obtain the buy-in from other departments. It is therefore vital to convince the CEO of the value Customer Service brings to the business and then to blatantly use that support to build internal commitment.Top management are always happier with numbers than with ideology. Take time to document a business case that justifies the investment in Customer Service resources in terms of future retention and loyalty and organizational improvement. Keep the CEO fully briefed with topical, concise and actionable Voice of the Customer feedback that provides an insight into customer perceptions and their impact on future business performance.
It starts at the front-lineA centralized Customer Service department is no replacement for front line service recovery. Indeed it is often only the very determined customers who find their way there anyway. Resolving issues at the first point of contact will achieve higher levels of satisfaction and future loyalty.But the Customer Service department still has an important role in achieving this. It must provide the professional support to make this happen. Firstly it needs to ensure that all front-line staff have the basic customer contact handling skills needed, that they are empowered to resolve most common issues and know the responses to common situations. They also need to have access to Customer Service for advice and guidance on specific issues and, ultimately, as an escalation route. The Customer Service team therefore provides support to the front-line and act as experts when needed. Make it easy and pleasant for customers to contactThe objective is to ensure that as many customers as possible who have an issue contact the organization about it rather than take their business elsewhere and tell others about their negative experiences. And when they do contact the experience must be a pleasant one. The following guidelines provide a framework for a customer contact charter that encourages such contacts:
There must be effective resolution processAny investment in Customer Service will be wasted unless both Customer Service department and the front-line achieve high levels of contact satisfaction. Sadly numerous research studies over recent years have reported that satisfaction levels with service recovery remains disappointingly low.Contacts need to be monitored and performance evaluated to ensure that the majority of customers feel that their issue has been satisfactorily resolved. If this has not been possible they should, at least, be satisfied with the way the contact was handled. The achievement of this objective requires the provision of an effective contact management process. Although beyond the scope of this paper this would include sufficient trained and experienced staff backed up by effective business processes, technology and information systems. Contacts need to be adequately recorded and reportedVoice of the Customer feedback relies on an effective process for logging, analyzing and reporting on customers' contacts. This must include the cost effective capture of front-line contacts.Although there are a number of very effective proprietary solutions many organisations still lack the capability to effectively log, analyse and report on their contacts. Data must then be analyzed and reported to the rest of the organisation. Consider the following recommendations for effective Voice of the Customer reporting:
Develop a relationship and communication channel with internal clients for Voice of the Customer feedbackCustomer feedback should be understood and respected throughout the organisation. The views of customers and the issues undermining their satisfaction and loyalty have impact on most departments including marketing, sales, product development, quality, operations, finance and production.The role of Customer Service and the benefits it contributes to organizational performance should be understood and valued. It is therefore critical that other departments within the business are fully aware of and appreciate the value of Voice of the Customer feedback. This can be achieved by:
Use the Customer Service channel for soliciting proactive feedbackIn addition to reporting reactive feedback from customers who contact, an additional opportunity is available to utilize such contacts for soliciting proactive feedback. When the reason for the customer's initial contact has been resolved he/she can be asked for their comments on any particular issue of concern to the organisation.Using basic on-line research tools, up-to-the-minute data on customers' views, perceptions and suggestions can be recorded and reported almost immediately. This provides significant added value to the organisation at virtually no cost - only a slight extension to contact time
Amit Nayak March 2004 |
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