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Business owners and customer service strategists often fall back on classification systems to better understand consumer behavior. It makes sense to try to find some commonality within a given market segment, but customers interact with each other so differently these days that the old rules of engagement simply don’t apply.

Altimeter Group’s Brian Solis says characteristics we’ve typically used to define generations X, Y, and Z are too narrow to be applied to today’s customers. Instead, he heads back to the beginning of the alphabet to designate the current flock of consumers “Generation C” — as in “connected.”

“To Gen C, experience is everything. What they feel about your products and services now and over time is shared through these connected networks. They know that other Gen C’ers rely on their shared experiences to find resolution. If you’re not proactively designing the experience they have or defining the journey that they will embark on, you cannot influence the experience that’s shared about your brand.”

Solis suggests you find out how users connect and communicate with each other, then be prepared to meet them everywhere they are. That means stepping out from behind the relative safety of your website and joining conversations on social media, forums, etc.

The goal isn’t to outshout competitors or stick your sales message in the face of every potential customer on the planet. The real purpose is actually twofold:

1. To remind users that you’re an authoritative voice in your industry. When you’re quick to respond to user questions or concerns across multiple channels, you’ll gain a reputation as company that gets involved and stays close it its customers. It’s a great way to build rapport and gain trust, especially if you’re in a very crowded industry.

2. To make sure information shared about your product is correct. The last thing you want is for customers to perceive your product as unreliable or difficult to troubleshoot. Unfortunately, it’s all to easy for well-meaning users to share misinformation while trying to help each other noodle around a problem. Get out there and make sure users are giving each other the right answers and don’t hesitate to gently redirect when they’re not.

“We’re living at a time when attention is the new currency. Those who insert themselves into as many channels as possible look set to capture the most value,” says Mashable’s Pete Cashmore. The expectations of Generation C really up the ante when it comes to delighting users with exceptional customer service. But be glad user are hyper-connected with each other these days. It makes conversations easier to find and a great customer experience easier to provide.

Image: Eugen Anghel

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According to a recent study conducted by Dimensional Research and sponsored by Zendesk, customers value a quick response to an issue even if it’s not the answer they’re hoping to get. In fact, the actual outcome of a resolution scores pretty far down on the list of customer satisfaction concerns while things like having to explain a problem to multiple people irk customers like crazy.

“Survey participants who had indicated they had a good customer service experience were asked what specifically made that experience good. The most important factor cited by participants was a quick resolution of the problem (69%) followed by being helped by a pleasant person (65%). Interestingly, the actual outcome of the problem was least important with less than half (47%) indicating that their customer service interaction was good because of the outcome.”

survey_results

The survey results don’t detail what channels respondents used to access support (phone, email, online documentation, etc).  It’s clear, however, that providing users with multiple access points vastly increases the chances you’ll give them a great customer service experience.

Ideally, you’ll have a robust knowledge base filled with the most current product documentation so customers can serve — and help — themselves. On top of that, of course, you need a grab bag of other access points: a toll-free number, online chat, a dedicated support email address, and so on.  Oh, and you’ll need people to staff and manage all these various channels.

Clearly, the most cost-effective customer support methods take advantage of stuff you’re already doing elsewhere around the company. Your tech writers are assembling documentation and manuals, sales and marketing are showing customers around your product, and community managers are helping users find their way around best practices. Harness all that smart content and put it on your website!

Dimension Research’s survey tells us that a rapid response is a primary (if not predictable) desire of customers who reach out for support. You already have the answers your users need so make sure they, and you, can find it all quickly.

Read more about the survey’s results and findings on Zendesk’s website.

ThelmaAndLouise

There is plenty of intrinsic uncertainty in business, and with an intractably grid locked Congress driving the nation towards a “fiscal cliff”, and Europe unsteadily struggling with massive economic reforms and austerity measures, the business climate faces the potential for massive volatility in the near future. However, according to  Jim Rohrer, President of Customer Care Partners:

“When the economy slows down, your business doesn’t have to. Businesses can still succeed and grow even now, in one of the most challenging economies we’ve had since the 1970’s. The secret involves improving client loyalty, the only element proven to cause growth.”

The more your company engages and partners with your customers the more loyal they will be to you. The more you can help them achieve their goals, the more essential you become to their success and they would never think of choosing another vendor (partner).

Surprisingly, even in this economy, many companies remain exclusively sales driven to achieve growth and have given very little attention to introducing innovation into their customer care modalities. The result for many of these companies has been a hapless struggle against accelerating churn rates by doubling down on marketing and sales investments.

In companies failing to focus on their existing customers, churn is frequently treated like the common cold: management presumes the root causes of the problem can’t be cured and think that the very best that can hoped for is to alleviate the symptoms. But bear in mind, in much the same way that pharmaceutical advancements make it possible for healthcare professionals to attack viral strains directly, enterprises are able to diagnose and cure the underlying causes of customer departures and disenchantment. Simply put, churn is curable.

The outcome of investing in customer experience tools almost never has a negative impact on revenue and it’s easy to understand how any churn prevention initiative is likely have a positive effect on other parts of the company because the most-effective churn reduction methods are bolstered by unambiguous and legitimate assemblies of information and data from all channels in the company. A look below at the most common drivers of churn, identified by the Institute for Customer Service, illustrates this:

  • Unethical practices and overstated capabilities at the point of sale.
  • Sign-up, activation, and new user challenges.
  • Fulfillment glitches.
  • Service, support and documentation inadequacies.
  • Unpredictable billing practices and poor payment capacities.
  • Misaligned and/or inconsistently applied policies.
  • Difficulty with product and/or package features—or the lack thereof.

Note that 4 of these 7 are closely linked to your product and support channels. This means improvement of the customer experience in these areas is an essential keystone in your over-arching customer loyalty strategy.

Before the Going Gets Tough, Make Customer Experience and Loyalty a Priority

MindTouch has learned through its long history in providing product help solutions that about 50% of business leaders pinpoint customer churn as the topmost threat to their company. Given that customer retention will be crucial to your business’ capacity to thrive; you simply must focus on it as a central business goal. Position your people, operations and strategy towards creating a fantastic customer experience and make absolutely certain it will be embedded in all parts of the company.

When the Going Gets Tough, the Tough Get Softer

Cost cutting on customer care and technical support is generally a false economy. Rather, carefully consider both the ‘soft’ – intangible or emotional – as well as monetary returns of customer relationships and invest in strengthening the stickiness of your product or service by using essential tools to make your product easier to use and easier to understand through engaging and socially enabled product help.

When the Going Gets Tough, Don’t Swing the Axe at Customer Care

Nearly one third (31%) of business leaders point out their quality of service has been weakened due largely to a short-term focus on cost-cutting and profits. Fair price combined with a valuable product are the foundations of an exceptional customer experience. Start building on this with real value-added, customer focused and publically facing customer care and support investments.

When the Going Gets Tough, the Customer Will Always Be Right

Acquiring and holding onto loyal customers will undoubtedly be crucial as, according to Consumer Studies Research out of Rutgers University, almost fifty percent (47%) of consumers  and B2B buyers describe themselves in this economic climate as more prone to switch companies or vendors in the foreseeable future as their budgets tighten. To counteract this, carefully consider ways in which your business strategy, as well as operating approach, reflects what today’s customer and buyer truly expects from your product and your company.

When the Going Gets Tough, Your Customer Care Team Will Save the Day

Customer care is a legitimate and essential profession that has all too often been outsourced into the hands of persons without a stake in the outcomes of their performance and function with very loose accountability. Therefore, strive to equip and coach your own staff to offer the very best customer care and technical support possible and most importantly invest in a proven technology, like that offered by MindTouch to effectively promote self-service support. Furthermore, empower, stimulate and cultivate customer care skill sets in all your employees – clients will certainly benefit and so will your staff.

Before the Going Gets Tough, Engage and Empathize

The softer elements of the customer experience and engagement are in many cases neglected. Clients favor being taken care of as people, not account numbers. Engage your client at every opportunity, communicate that you understand, and deliver consistency, trustworthiness, reliability every time. This will help ensure that your clients become your advocates. One of the most neglected customer engagement points is, amazingly, when an where customers look for help with a product. This is perhaps the most critical point to maximize engagement…when the customer (or user) is having a problem and looking for answers on Google or your web site. Its critical to know when when and where your customer is looking for help on-line, and to know whether or not they’re finding the information they need.

Wall Flowers Never Grow-Get Social and Listen

Social media, Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Google+, YouTube, etc.,  gives you and your customers a medium for feedback as well as mutual sharing and engagement. Harness the variety of applications designed to both monitor customer reactions and comments and engage with them to enhance the total product, customer care and product support experience. Companies like HTC, SuccessFactors and SAP have even taken the extra step of integrating their MindTouch powered product help with their CRM and ticketing platforms and social network accounts to provide rapid solutions to customers looking for help across multiple channels.

An Ounce of Prevention is Better than a Pound of Churn

Customer problems and grievances cost time and money but a workable, easy to use and scalable system will allow you too efficiently and cost effectively pinpoint weaknesses. Monitor customer feedback and adopt streamlined engagement and monitoring applications, for instance MindTouch, a socially enabled product help system, enables you to address customer problems with your product and its documentation before they catch fire.

Think Strategically and Gather Intelligence

Customer care and technical support is a significant driver of bottom-line performance and will be the decisive battlefield in the blistering struggle through economic downturns for new buyers. Keep coming back customer care strategy routinely, evaluating the ways in which your clients as well as  your staff  regard it, not to mention the ways in which it stacks up to competitors’ approaches.

Drive Customer and Buyer Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt Off the Cliff Instead

83% of executives, interviewed by a Rutgers University research team, specified that the caliber of customer care and product support is a greater determining factor as weighted against price in determining their ongoing loyalty as a client. So, lastly, differentiate, as well as market yourself on the excellence of your customer and technical support as well as your product, ensuring that clients continue to keep coming back and to lend stability against fear, uncertainty and doubt in the minds of potential buyers.

Customer Support

The Number One Goal for Most Support Departments: Decrease the Overhead for Customer/User Support.

Companies face a large overhead tied to the amount of agents needed to field inbound requests- whether it be by email, phone or chat. Depending on the medium the customer uses to interact with the agent, the cost to the company can increase or decrease. Example: a phone call will usually cost more than an email exchange because it is easier to multi-task with email and you can pull from scripted responses.

The first step companies take to decrease their overhead is to cut the number of support agents. This typically results in poor customer satisfaction because there rarely are enough agents left to handle the volume of tickets.

Before Cutting Agents, First Understand the Lifecycle of a Customer “Issue”

A better way to approach this is to understand the customer issue lifecycle:

Looking at the Customer Issue Lifecycle above, “Self-Troubleshoot” is the number one step any customer takes when they have a question. When self-troubleshooting doesn’t work they continue on through the cycle until eventually the company’s support team gets involved.

Read more…

Most well run companies steer by defining and tracking key performance indicators (KPI) that gauge success at a departmental and company level.  You can always find examples of this in customer service teams. Ticket backlog,  inbound tickets, length of calls and mean time to resolution are all useful gauges to track.  However, how do you know your KPIs matter? Are you a slave to your gauges? Are you serving the machine or are you serving your customers?

I’ve personally witnessed data overload wherein departments become so fixated on measuring and tracking KPIs they lose sight of what actually matters: serving their customers. An old colleague of mine shared a sophomoric example of this in a recent Beavis and Butt-Head episode. Yes, MTV has brought Beavis and Butt-head back and I am happy, don’t judge me. Obviously Beavis and Butt-head aren’t exactly a beacon of best practices, but this episode made me think of previous experiences I’ve had (with other companies) while managing customer support teams. In the episode (Season 9 Episode 2 around 12:40 find it at MTV.com), Beavis and Butt-Head inadvertently wander into a customer support call center and find themselves working customer support calls.  Beavis and Butt-Head’s frequent hang ups and inappropriate responses  to “set it on fire”, etc does wonders to drop the average call times and lower support costs. Soon the entire call center is instructed to take their lead.

This isn’t too far from reality. Departments can become slaves to the gauges. To avoid this, reset your thinking every quarter. Look at your key performance indicators and ask yourself: are you’re serving the KPI machine or are you serving your customers?

If you subscribe to the MindTouch newsletter you received this information via email earlier this week. Don’t forget to Fan us on Facebook to get updates on promotions, product releases, announcements and more! Become a Fan Now.

In This Issue

  • Welcome to the MindTouch Customer Family!
  • Recommended Podcast
  • Join the Next Webinar
  • Monthly Survey
  • Letter from the CEO: Your Product Documentation is a Marketing Asset
  • 5 Reasons Why Your UX Strategy is Incomplete
  • We’re Pleased to Announce: The Most Influential in Customer Service
  • Having Conditional Documentation using MindTouch TCS
  • Replay of “Don’t Overlook Governance! The Need For Control In Content Strategy”
  • Infograph of the Month | Top 25 Most Influential in Customer Service

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There are countless customer service and support agents who make our work and personal lives easier. Yet with how busy we are, we often forget to give them the recognition they deserve. That’s why we’re pleased to announce our support for the 2011 Recognition for Excellence in Customer Support and Service (R.E.C.S.S.) awards. This year marks the 3rd annual and MindTouch is happy to participate.

We spend so much time on our product interface, website user experience, A/B testing colors on landing pages, aligning the products guys with the design and usability folks – so it might come as a shock to hear you still aren’t doing enough when it comes to UX. So what else is there? Product manuals.

Think about it, when was the last time you put your product manuals through a usability test? It’s a no-brainer why UX is so important, so why aren’t we giving our product manuals more thought? Just as your website needs love, so do your product manuals. Those little manuals can have a profound effect on your bottom line. Maybe it’s hard to convince your design or product marketing team or maybe you just had no idea how important your product manuals (Aaron Fulkerson talks more about that in Forbes) are to your company’s success. Whatever the reason, it’s time to take your product manuals through a UX overhaul. Still not convinced? Here are 5 reasons why you need to stop everything and launch a UX strategy for your product manuals today.

Read more…

Our latest webinar, “What’s Next? Socially-Enabled User Assistance, Interactive Documentation, and Location-Aware Help” was a discussion by Scott Abel, the Content Wrangler, about how businesses big and small are leveraging the power of the crowd to create exceptional socially-enabled customer assistance experiences, engaging interactive/enhanced digital content, useful mobile device apps, and powerful location-aware help.

The webinar was an action-packed 60 minutes and the recording is available below. In addition to the recording, there were a handful of questions asked by the live audience during the webinar. I enlisted Scott to help answer them. You can find them below. Thank you again to Scott for an insightful webinar.
Read more…

MindTouch TCS comes out with a host of new features on a weekly basis and a lot of times the value of the features aren’t fully covered in the product notes.  I’ll be working on a series of blog posts that will cover some of the new features and why it matters to you.

The feature I’m going to focus on this week is our user feedback feature.  The user feedback feature is exposed in two areas on your mindtouch.us site.  The first location is when you rank an article thumbs down.

This then prompts the user to provide additional feedback as to why the article wasn’t helpful. The user can fill out the information and then click  Send.  In the background this message is by default emailed to the admin of the site, but there is also the ability to configure the email address that the message is sent to.  This means that you can add your support email or an email that points at your task management system, thus making it easier to manage and execute on the user feedback.

The other location where we actively solicit user feedback is in the search results.  If the user doesn’t find what they are looking for they can click the “Tell us how we can improve our search results” and that loads a dialog box where the user can submit their feedback.

The feedback is then either sent to the admin user or a custom email address which is used for the thumbs down feedback.  This is just one of the many features included with MindTouch TCS that make it easier to engage your community with your documentation and to manage their feedback.