High Availability Helps the Contact Center Meet Consumer Expectations

by Chris O'Brien on February 22nd, 2012

Chris O'BrienThere’s an old saying (or curse), “May you live in interesting times.” This is particularly apt for the world of customer experience. The pace of change virtually guarantees that things will be interesting for the foreseeable future.

 Consumers are embracing new technologies and new ways to communicate, and the impact is far-reaching: with the world of information available to them, consumers have become much more proactive in finding answers for themselves—and much less patient when companies can’t resolve their issues.

As reaching out to the contact center becomes a last resort for customers, the stakes grow higher. Consider recent research by Datamonitor/Ovum, which surveyed 5,000 consumers across 16 countries on their attitudes and expectations for customer service. From the study:

“In virtually every country, customers ended at least one relationship per year due to poor service. Across all countries surveyed, about 7 in 10 consumers have ended a relationship.”

Clearly, it’s not hyperbole to regard every interaction with your customers as make or break. Without the right tools and functionality, the contact center is at a distinct disadvantage in addressing customer issues. Business continuity also takes on added importance: if the contact center platform isn’t robust enough to be dependable in all settings, the company is at risk of alienating customers at critical times.

In a given year, businesses may be susceptible to the impact of natural disasters or other events that threaten their operations. The tornado that hit Joplin, Missouri, in May 2011, reinforced the need for thorough disaster planning and recovery, and contact center operations are a critical function in such situations.

Against this backdrop, companies should ensure that their systems deliver dependability and availability in line with industry standards. What may have been an acceptable level of service even a few years ago might now be lagging behind the competition and consumer expectations. The failure of Amazon’s EC2 cloud offering in April of last year, which continued over a full business day, and the reaction by its customers and media demonstrated how dramatically expectations had changed.Miercom Performance Verified high availabiity architecture

Aspect has long understood the importance of business continuity to contact center operations, and our commitment to providing dependable solutions informs every phase of our development process. Recently, Aspect asked Miercom to conduct a full evaluation of its next-generation solution Aspect® Unified IP 7® to verify that it delivers the mission-critical high availability demanded for today’s customer contact environment. View the complete summary of Miercom’s test report to see how Unified IP 7 earned Miercom Performance Verified certification.

Find out more about how your business can enhance its contact center capabilities without disrupting existing operations, register for the March 27 webinar: High Availability for the Contact Center: Ensuring Customer Service Continuity. Experts from Miercom and Aspect will share their insights on meeting evolving customer expectations, with advice to help you limit or eliminate the experience of downtime for customers interacting with your contact center.

HarborOne Earns Award for Comprehensive Customer Service Strategy

by Chris O'Brien on February 21st, 2012

Chris O'BrienIn the drive to deliver excellent customer experience, companies face two competing timelines. On one hand, emerging technologies and communications channels are raising customer expectations, requiring more coordinated, nimble efforts in the short term. On the other, companies need to lay a solid foundation that will also allow for flexibility as needs evolve in the coming years.

When companies are able to balance both priorities, the results can be truly impressive. Aspect client HarborOne, the largest state-chartered community credit union in New England and one of the top 100 in the country, offers a blueprint for how it can be done. On top of achieving substantial costs savings and improved performance, the company is2011 Leadership Awards gaining recognition for its vision: Ventana Research, a business and IT research and advisory services firm, awarded HarborOne its 2011 Business Collaboration Leadership Award.

The accomplishments are the culmination of efforts that began several years ago. At the time, HarborOne’s executives evaluated their operations and identified the contact center as a priority for strengthening customer relationships and increasing revenues. The team developed a multiyear vision for how it could transform the company to deliver better customer service and support business growth.

As Wayne F. Dunn, senior vice president and chief technology officer of HarborOne, noted, “We knew we needed a future-proof platform that could take us there.” As a foundation, the company selected Microsoft Lync and SharePoint to enable collaboration. HarborOne then added solutions from Aspect to unify elemental contact center functions, give agents greater access to information and experts, and track interactions through enhanced transparency, metrics, and reporting.

HarborOne’s success offers four lessons for other companies seeking to achieve improved contact center performance.

Develop a long-term vision. Technological advances will only accelerate going forward, so companies must ensure that their investments in the contact center support flexibility and customization. Considering how the iPad has transformed the business environment in just two years, being able to adapt to changing conditions is imperative.

Take advantage of existing IT investments. Providing the contact center doesn’t have to mean starting from scratch. In addition, companies that have already implemented in Microsoft unified communications solutions are already well positioned to tap products that can integrate seamlessly with their existing platforms.

Understand what customers expect. HarborOne recognized that its consumers were looking for a higher level of engagement across a number of channels, such as IM, social, and potentially video. Across industries, companies are recognizing that customer service can be not only a competitive advantage but also a revenue generator.

Empower management to optimize the workforce. Contact center managers and supervisors need the information and ability to respond to spikes in volume and emerging issues in real time. Enhanced metrics and reporting deliver the latest information, while the best solutions enable quick and easy alterations to business rules.

Most companies can achieve improvements by adding the right functionality to their contact center operations. But as HarborOne demonstrates, the benefits of a comprehensive strategy for customer service are substantial.

FIRST: A “Fair, Innovative, Respectful, Sincere and Trustworthy” Solution

by Chris O'Brien on February 17th, 2012

Chris O'BrienSo rarely in business are we given the opportunity to build anything from scratch. In fact, the luxury of a blank slate is almost nonexistent in the IT world, where legacy systems are regularly retrofitted, adapted, and coaxed into to accepting new technologies. The far more likely scenario – you can call it a challenge, or an opportunity, depending on your outlook – is to be given a new strategy or business direction that must be met using existing systems and materials, with minimal additional outlay.

Leaders with the right creativity and vision will immediately seize upon the inspiration that no matter what systems exist within an organization, the opportunity is always there to restart and rebuild as long as there is a better, more effective way to approach it.

 This was the climate of innovation we encountered when we beganNewport City Homes consulting with Newport City Homes in 2009.

 Now recognized as the UK’s leading not-for-profit Registered Social Landlord, Newport City Homes approached Aspect as a newly established government agency that was facing the difficult task of migrating existing systems and developing an entirely new technology infrastructure. Its Board, executives and staff were determined to introduce a culture of excellent resident services and to develop a solution that would conform to its organization’s FIRST values: “Fair, Innovative, Respectful, Sincere and Trustworthy.”

 Microsoft® Infrastructure

At a network level, Newport City Homes adopted a 100MB meshed network to link its three main sites, with broadband serving smaller offices and other sites; while in the front and back office, it invested in a range of Microsoft solutions including Microsoft Office®, Service Manager, Microsoft SharePoint® 2010 and Windows 7 on the desktop. In order to improve the quality of customer interactions, it also developed a sophisticated Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system based on the Microsoft Dynamics® 4.0 platform. Microsoft OCS (Office Communication System) system, now known as Microsoft® Lync™, provided its high-quality VOIP telephony solution.

By December of 2010, with its contact center handling an increasing volume of customer calls, Newport City Homes began seeking a specialized contact center solution that could integrate with and complement its Lync and Microsoft Dynamics platforms. According to Nigel Ward, Newport City Homes’ Information Services Developer, Aspect Unified IP was the right choice:

“We looked at many different solutions, but Aspect was the only one that gave us confidence to integrate with our existing Microsoft infrastructure and enable us to fully execute our unified communications strategy. We anticipate the platform will play an important role in improving our contact center efficiency and effectiveness.”

Awards and Recognition

Without a doubt, the Newport City Homes implementation team had a clear vision for exceptional customer experience that helped Aspect develop and build their successful, next-generation solution.

Newport City Homes has since been recognized for its success in creating a world-class computing and communications infrastructure. At the 2010 UK IT Industry Awards, it was named “Small IT Department of the Year.” It also won the “Delivering Customer Driven Services” and “People’s Choice” awards at the 2010 Welsh Housing Awards.

Read the full case study.

Are there opportunities for rebuilding within your organization? What stands in your way? Were you successful in integrating new technology with legacy systems, applications or processes? We’d love to hear your story.

The Value of Listening to What Your Customers are Telling You

by Chris O'Brien on February 16th, 2012

Chris O'BrienAmong the many classic episodes of Seinfeld, one of my favorites is when Kramer becomes the MoviePhone operator, though without any of the tools he needs to provide good customer service.

Once he exhausts his ability to provide the right answer, his fallback is to ask, “Why don’t you just tell me the name of the movie you want to see?”

Seinfeld customer service experience

Many companies that are struggling with customer service are desperate for someone to just tell them how they can make their interactions with consumers more effective. It’s not hard to understand why. As fast as the customer experience landscape is evolving, it’s difficult for even the best organizations to keep pace. However, the information and answers to enable better customer service are often closer than you think.

At Aspect, we’re big advocates of harnessing the information that customers are already providing to improve their experience. On this blog, we’ve shared a number of approaches for optimizing customer experience.

Data analytics. As we’ve noted previously, companies are sitting on a wealth of insight in the form of data they capture through customer interactions in the contact center. So the key is to implement the capabilities and processes to extract the value from these data

Social media monitoring. As consumers have adopted social media channels to express their feelings about companies and products, business leaders are struggling to understand how to track and address issues from these sources. It’s clear, however, that social media and what it can tell companies are too valuable to ignore.

Expert voices. One of the most difficult challenges with customer experience is to take a step back and understand the larger trends shaping the industry. With the benefit of these perspectives, companies can gain a comprehensive understanding of how to react to rising customer expectations in a strategic and sustainable way.

In an effort to practice what we preach, we’re holding the Aspect Customer Experience (ACE), on June 19-22. Over the past few years, we’ve found that part of what makes this event so valuable—to our executives as well as attendees—is that the agenda is developed in part based on feedback and surveys from our customers. So if you allow me to channel my inner Kramer, why don’t you tell us what you’d like to see?

With this information, we’re looking forward to a stimulating program that directly addresses some of the issues and challenges our customers face in delivering excellent customer service and improving the performance and effectiveness of their contact centers.

I’ll be sure to share the customer insights that emerge from ACE in a future blog.

Measurable Results from a Customer-Centric Strategy

by Chris O'Brien on February 8th, 2012

Chris O'BrienThe decision to refocus or restructure an organization in favor of a more customer-centric model is a bold move, but it’s one that is becoming more common as customers consistently demonstrate how much of the power they now wield in today’s social marketplace.

This was the goal of India’s largest paint company, Asian Paints. With customersAsian Paints, customer-focused strategy in more than 65 countries and a 25,000+ dealer network, most of Asian Paints’ direct interactions took place with its dealers. Therefore, the company not only needed to respond to  evolving consumer demands and expectations for better service, responsiveness, consistency and knowledgeable consultancy, it needed to provide exceptional, convenient phone service to its dealers.

The only way to realistically achieve these goals was to focus on becoming a truly customer-centric organization. To do that, Asian Paints needed a next-generation customer contact platform capable of managing both customer and dealer communications, and optimizing agent productivity and responsiveness.

When selecting a solution provider, Asian Paints did its research. Mr. Deepak Bhosale, Chief Manager, Systems, explained the company’s decision:

While we were researching different vendors and getting references, the best remarks and kudos were given from customers using Aspect to organize its customer interactions. Since we wanted a cost-effective way to have several solutions in our contact center, Aspect was the right choice for us. We needed a little bit of everything, improved quality interactions, dealer interaction and high operational efficiency.

Working with Aspect to implement a next-generation customer response and dealer management system, Asian Paints made it easy and convenient for both dealers and customers to do business with the company – from placing quick and convenient orders, to consulting with an expert on paint color choices.

As a result, Asian Paints achieved measurable successes:

  • 80% increase in dealer satisfaction, as well as improved customer satisfaction
  • 40% drop in average call handle time, due to increased visibility into caller’s information and history
  • Improved contact center agent productivity
  • Reduced wait time resulting from access issues
  • Increased service availability window, leading to an effective 40% reduction in workforce

 By improving customer interactions and organizational productivity, Asian Paints hopes to reinstate customer confidence and build customer loyalty, particularly among customers who had moved to competing brands during periods of poor customer service.

Read the full Asian Paints case study.

Companies can no longer afford to think customer service doesn’t matter. In many markets,  the customer experience is the competitive differentiator.

Have you found this to be the case in your industry? Tell us about it in the comments.

Speech Analytics is Talking; the Industry is Listening

by Tim Dreyer on February 3rd, 2012

In my first post on this topic, I covered at a high level the basics of how speech analytics can bring deeper customer engagement to the contact center. In this follow-up, we’ll look at why the industry is starting to take notice.

A lot of the industry interest in speech analytics is being driven by a heightened focus on the customer experience. In today’s hyper-competitive economy where there the meager opportunity for product differentiation and operational efficiency has been squeezed as much as possible, customer experience, driven by customer service, has emerged as a primary area of differentiation. There is a realization that a lot of learning is needed to before an organization is ready to deliver differentiated customer service. Organizations are looking at their existing data such a recordingSpeech analytics for customer engagement that they already have, to see if they can extrapolate more value out it and turn it into a true enterprise asset.

Customer interactions are becoming increasingly complex. With so many customers seeking self-service routes before they engage with the enterprise, agent-customer phone interactions are more complex than they used to be. Because of this, organizations are trying to figure out if they can better understand those interactions, some of which are using speech analytics to do so.

Customers have changed. They are more connected, they are more informed, and due in part to the increasing use of social media, they have a voice like they never did before. And while the customers have changed, what they want from their service provider has changed as well. Speech analytics can help an organization get a quantified view into those changes.

At the same time, technology has evolved such that the actual recordings are easier and cheaper to capture and store. Unified communication has contributed to that by reducing the reliance on hardware and shifting it to software which, due to falling storage costs, is easier to configure and maintain. And speech analytics options have also increased such as text-to-speech and even phonetic-based approaches. Plus, speech analytics solutions are increasingly more open, enabling data to be extracted and integrated easier than in the past.

In some ways, it’s a perfect conversational storm: the drive for service differentiation, the need to understand the new customer and their new needs, and technology evolution.

Tim

Role Reversal: Microsoft’s Skype Acquisition Will Transform the Contact Center

by Mike Butts on January 25th, 2012

About this time last year, I wrote a blog titled “Will video transform the contact center? Don’t believe the hype.” I was very skeptical that video is everything and stated emphatically that it would not replace voice in the contact center. While video may not replace voice in the contact center, my thoughts were radically changed last May.

Little did I know at the time that Microsoft was in the midst of making an $8.5 billion investment acquisition of Skype. No company makes that kind of an investment unless they are playing to win and win big.Will video play a larger role in the contact center? (Skype’s revenue was only $860 million at the end of 2010.) This acquisition brings Microsoft 700 million consumers that use Skype technology for their voice and video calls. As we know Microsoft has not officially released details on how it plans to integrate Skype into its product stack, but we do know that Skype will play a key role in Microsoft Lync, Office including Outlook, Windows Phone, and Xbox.

Once Microsoft integrates Skype video technology into its product and hardware (phones and Xbox) stack, it will bring consumers even closer to companies. Forward-thinking organizations will have new opportunities to seize customer loyalty and wallet share. In the near future, consumers will use Skype via the Web, Windows Phone, or Xbox to communicate with businesses. As a result, companies that deploy a Microsoft Lync unified communications infrastructure will have the right tools to collaborate with customers across the same Skype video stream.

All B2C companies have a short window of opportunity to prepare their organizations to use video as a service differentiator, productivity booster, and revenue generator. Companies need to act now to gain a leadership position in customer service before their competitors leap onto this emerging communications channel. Doing so will allow your company to take customer service, communication, and collaboration to the next level because people who use Skype (850 million and growing fast) will want to communicate via video.

Microsoft Lync will provide the perfect integrated platform to allow your contact center (and the rest of the enterprise) to collaborate using Skype video and the rest of the UC capabilities such as presence, instant messaging, screen sharing, remote desktop access and more. These 850 million consumers are opening a new frontier for your organization.

Here are a few thoughts for how video can be used in the contact center:

Create a personal relationship with your agents and company. I don’t know about you, but I always feel like my challenges are going to be resolved faster if I can see and make a personal connection with someone who is taking my order or assisting me in some other way. Video allows this to happen without traveling from location to location.

Increase collections. I wonder how much collections would increase if you can look a debtor in the eye when he makes a payment promise? I have to think that collections would increase significantly because of this direct, more personal interaction. This goes back to creating a more intimate relationship.

Enable opportunities to up-sell. Have a new product or campaign? Use an on-hold video to inform customers about additional products and services. Get really creative by pushing a relevant video based on a caller’s purchase history. The potential here to drive revenue is unlimited. Your marketing department is going to love this.

Facilitate troubleshooting. Push a video to a caller that instructs them how solve their current challenge. Video can also help reduce call volume by allowing your contact center to push visual installation or assembly instructions to callers.

Support learning and agent development. Record and capture videos in your contact center to educate current and new agents on best practices and supervisor to agent training.

So how do companies prepare? At a recent conference, Microsoft proclaimed that “60 percent of enterprises are going to make a unified communications decision in 2012.” I encourage all CIOs and customer experience decision makers to investigate and deploy the Microsoft Lync platform now. Get your contact center and enterprise personnel comfortable using the vast array of unified communications capabilities now so video becomes a natural extension once Skype is incorporated. Implementing Lync in your organization is not that difficult, and in many cases you can recover your investment within six months. And last but not least, your employees will absolutely love the new capabilities.

Till next time.

Mike

“Inbound, Outbound, Successbound”

by Chris O'Brien on January 23rd, 2012

In a tug of war between resources and customer service, nobody wins. Organizations experiencing this uneasy push-pull may be struggling through periods of rapid growth, budget constraints, rapid turnover, or a change in roles brought on by a new strategic direction. Whatever your challenges, today’s consumers are unrelenting in their expectations of a consistently superior customer experience.

Businesses that continually put the customer first are those that manage to successfullyThe tug-of-war between customer service and resources command consumer attention in the crowded marketplace, and are rewarded with long-term customer loyalty.

One such organization is Germany-based contact center outsourcer, 020-EPOS. Urged by its high-profile clients to proactively engage with customers in a more targeted and personalized manner, 020-EPOS needed a solution that would help it maximize outbound and lifecycle management strategies, while taking advantage of optimal choice and flexibility.

020-EPOS conducted an exhaustive review of all potential solution providers before selecting Aspect to develop its integrated call center solution.

One of 020-EPOS’ key requirements was the ability to reliably support, integrate and route multichannel contacts. At the same time, the solution needed to offer comprehensive, state-of-the-art dialing, callback and call blending capabilities, in order to ensure a smooth transition between inbound and outbound operations.

Another key consideration was 020-EPOS’ desire to route callbacks and returned emails to the same account teams that had initiated those contacts. As Georg Jansen, Managing Director at 020-EPOS explained:

“Outbound campaigns generate inbound contacts and inbound calls gather information for outbound. In order to be successful, both have to be managed professionally, that is why we act upon the maxim Inbound, Outbound, Successbound.”

020-EPOS was able to articulate its forward-thinking vision for customer experience through Aspect’s next-generation customer contact solution. This led to achievement of a number of specific benefits:

  • Improved agent utilization due to soft blending capabilities and Workforce Optimization, which enables managers to adjust outbound/proactive activities when inbound call volume is high.
  • Higher closing rates, resulting from inbound calls being routed back to the same teams that initiated the contact.
  • Higher productivity through the use of skill-based teams rather than channel teams.
  • Comprehensive, measurable quality assurance by applying defined quality criteria to all sequences of the customer dialogue.

 Read the full 020-EPOS case study.

Aspect helps great organizations do what they do well, even better. What are the obstacles to your achievements right now? Are you in the middle of a tug of war between resources and customer experience? Tell us about it in the comments below.

The Right Tools for Next-Generation Customer Interaction

by Jane Hendricks on January 17th, 2012

Certain jobs require specific tools. For instance, if you see the cable guy coming and he doesn’t have his special bag of wire cutters, cable splitters, and signal testers, you’re probably not going to be watching your stories in HD tonight.

In the business world those tools are changing all the time. As new tools enter the consumer domain―for example, mobile devices and social media―the tools used by the business follow suit. This consumerization of IT is seen in the rapid adoption of the mobile devices, web-based communities, and even instant messaging within the walls of the enterprise.

The force that drives consumer adoption of new technology is a thirst for instant, real-time information and engagement. This anytime, anywhere access to information and people defines Consumer 2.0. As the tools that we use to connect to one another get smarter, our tolerance for slow, ineffective customer service, while already low, drops even further. As a consumer, I expect that if I am able to access competitive pricing and relevant suggestions for complimentary products while standing in line at a store, I will receive the same level of sophistication and intelligence when I have a question or issue.

The contact center has become the option that consumers tap only after all others have been exhausted—the last best hope for issue resolution. So after an individual has spent time on product pages, consumer forums, and the FAQ page of the company website, she is banking on the contact center to provide her with some information that she didn’t turn up on her exhaustive search and to be cognizant of what she has already reviewed.

This environment raises the bar for service agents and what they need to deliver to keep customers satisfied. That’s why some recent figures caught my eye.

Forrester released research findings on the adoption of customer service technologies in the contact center. According to analyst Kate Leggett:

“Our data shows that 55% of companies surveyed use knowledge management; 35% use real-time decisioning and another 40% are actively considering this technology; and, 34% use unified agent workspaces.”

While these numbers are moving in the right direction, they show that a large number of companies are sending their agents into the customer engagement space without the necessary tools. Some thoughts:

  • Without knowledge management tools, agents don’t have the benefit of information generated by customer engagements. In practice, the result is multiple agents searching for the same answers to recurring questions—or worse, inconsistent answers to recurring questions—not exactly the model of productivity.
  • Nearly two-thirds of companies aren’t using technology to route calls to the best agent based on expertise, performance, and other factors. When agent skills and customer needs are misaligned, you are gambling, and customer experience is the currency. In today’s environment, one negative interaction can irreparably damage the company-customer relationship, so why not lower those odds?
  • Last, the majority of companies don’t give agents the benefit of a unified workspace or access to the same kind of tools they enjoy as consumers. Having to switch between screens, rely on phone calls and notes to pass information within their team, and use clunky interfaces not only increases handle times but severely reduces the likelihood of first-call resolution.

Over the past year, we’ve seen a growing number of companies awaken to the realization that effective customer engagement can deliver long-term benefits—happier consumers who spend more money on products and make recommendations to friends.

While the adoption of necessary functionality is lagging behind consumer expectations, the right technology can transform contact center operations. But there’s no time to waste.

Key 2011 Contact Center Trends—and What They Mean for 2012 and Beyond

by Tim Dreyer on December 29th, 2011

Over the past year, several trends emerged that will shape the customer engagement landscape for the foreseeable future. A number of factors, fueled by technology, have elevated the importance of the contact center, making it the hub of customer engagement efforts. Aspect’s executives and thought leaders weighed in on the new challenges facing companies as well as the steps they should take to position their contact center to serve today’s consumer.

The growing importance of the contact center

As consumer expectations continued to increase, progressive organizations came to the realization that the entire organization needed to be engaged in supporting customer engagement. This is easier said than done, as most companies have organizational structures that support 20th century business operations. Nancy Dobrozdravic weighed in on the strategy, tools, and organizational realignment that must occur to strengthen customer relationships:

Compliance with shifting contact center regulations

Technological advances are presenting new opportunities for contact centers, but existing laws on outbound calling and collections have created ambiguity and potential risk. Mike Sheridan and Lynne Levy shared their insight on how companies could make sense of the current regulatory environment and maintain the flexibility to adapt to changes:

Workforce optimization

Companies looked to the contact center not just to improve customer interactions and experience; they were also interested in achieving greater transparency and accountability to boost efficiency. In a series of posts, Doug Whitaker laid out the tools and functionality contact centers need to get more out of their workforce:

Be sure to check back to this blog throughout the year to get more insight on these and other topics. All the best for 2012.