Statistics consistently reinforce that the biggest challenge in today’s
contact center environment is agent training. Turnover continues to be
high; new hire costs are on the rise—I’ve seen anywhere from $6500 to
$10,000 quoted per agent! At the same time, losing customers because of
bad call experiences negatively impacts your bottom line. What can you
do? How do you justify the training expenditure?
Research has been making a case for how spending in human performance
areas such as training, translates into bottom line growth. Accenture's
study on the impact of training on ROI has some interesting results.
(Smith, David. Y. and Waddington, Ted. Running Training Like a
Business: Determining the Return on Investment of Your Learning
Programs, Outlook Point of View, March 2003.)
First, in the area of recruitment, training opportunities were among
the top three criteria people considered when deciding where they want
to work (the others are the opportunity for advancement and a good
benefits package).
In the area of productivity, as a result of training, employees were:
17% more productive
20% higher performance levels relative to their peer group
Stayed with the company 14% longer
In the area of retention, employees who had access to the training were:
More than 2 times more likely to expect to be with the company in 2 years
More than 6 times more likely to think the company is a 'great place to work'
More likely to think they are fairly compensated
Dollar figures associated with their statistics for a fiscal year
report the annual per person net benefit or $25,324. They multiplied
this number by their 50,000 employees yielding a companywide benefit of
training of $1.26 million. By dividing the benefit by the cost of one
year of training ($358 million), researchers concluded that the ROI (at
Accenture) is 353%.
Negative Customer Service Experiences?
How many of you know (and track) what percentage of your calls are bad
experiences? Hopefully, you do know the number, and they’re in the low
single digits.
In a recent study, in answer to (1) did the agent satisfy your needs in
the call, and (2) based on any negative experience, would you stop
using this company and go to the competition? the results were:
Ages Would Stop Using the Company in the Future
18 - 25 100%
26 - 35 97
36 - 45 53
46-55 50
56-65 33
Over 65 63
Source: 2003 Purdue University/BenchmarkPortal.com
As you can see, there is a strong correlation between participant's age
and his/her tendency to stop using the company after a bad experience.
Notice that younger participants were less tolerant, more likely to go
to the competition, and those over 65 are more demanding that those in
middle age.
Therefore, it's very important to take great care of your younger
callers so as to maintain their loyalty. Callers above 36 have more of
an 'emotional bank account' with the company they're dealing
with-probably had some good experiences and are more willing to
'forgive' a bad one.
If you know your percentage of bad experiences, put a dollar amount on
that call and then total it out for the year. I think you'll be very
surprised at the amount of lost revenue. Now if you have a 1%
improvement, as a result of a training initiative for example, the
amount of recovered revenue (and customers) is very encouraging.
This is just another means to tie soft skills to ROI, and to include
your front lines as part and parcel of the revenue-producing operation
of your companies.
Customer Satisfaction Driver #1
We all know first call resolution (one and done) is the #1 driver for
customer satisfaction with best practices reported at 86%. However, if
your center is at 86%, this means that 14% of your customers are
contacting you more than once to resolve their issues! This not only
frustrates your CSRs and yourselves, but your customers as well. Repeat
calls are costly not only to operations and the bottom line, but they
negatively impact customer satisfaction, and ultimately, customer
loyalty.
How do you define first call resolution? And how do you—if you
do—calculate it? Research shows that there is no common measuring
method. However, what gets measured gets managed, and what gets managed
gets better.
In a recent study (Ascent Group) more than 90% of companies measuring
first call resolution reported improvement in their performance.
Another study (callcentres.com) reported a dramatic fall in call
volume—identifying that a minimum of 20% of all calls were repeat calls
from customers needing an answer or help they didn’t get. Further, that
the absence of first call resolution was found to account for a minimum
of 30% of a call center’s operational costs!
The bottom line: Invest in your people—give them the training, the
tools, and the authority to get their job done right the first time.
After all, CSRs are the interface who handle customer issues. One of
the foremost methods to boost customer satisfaction—and improve first
call resolution—is to consistently and ongoingly train, train, train
your CSRs in world class customer service skills.
ROSANNE D'AUSILIO, Ph.D., an industrial psychologist, and President of
Human Technologies Global, Inc., which specializes in profitable call
center operations in human performance management. Over the last 20
years, she has provided needs analyses, instructional design, and
customized, live customer service skills trainings. Also offered is
agent and facilitator certification through Purdue University’s Center
for Customer Driven Quality.
Known in the industry as 'the practical champion of the human,' she
authors the best selling books, “Wake Up Your Call Center: Humanize
Your Interaction Hub,” 4th edition, Customer Service and the Human
Experience, and her latest Lay Your Cards on the Table: 52 Ways to
Stack Your Personal Deck, all available at www.human-technologies.com.
Also offered is a free ‘tips’ newsletter on How To Kick Your Customer
Service Up A Notch at www.HumanTechTips.com.
Rosanne is also a Certified Call Center Benchmarking Auditor through
Purdue University's Center for Customer Driven Quality. This
certification training focused on the access and use of key performance
data to help better understand benchmarking results so as to advise on
practical solutions for improvement.
She sits on the Advisory Board of Help Desk Professional Association,
is a columnist for TMC.net, and represents the human element on the
Advisory Board for an Italian software company, and is a much sought
after dynamic, vibrant, internationally prominent keynote speaker.