c11-700866-00 Waves of Customer Care WP
c11-700866-00 Waves of Customer Care WP
c11-700866-00 Waves of Customer Care WP
Wave 1: Cost and Efficiency Wave 2: The Customer Relationship Wave 3: The Complete Experience
Each of the waves is described in detail - including associated technologies, metrics, and trends - and recommendations are given for how businesses and organizations can take best advantage of the waves to cost-effectively deliver world-class customer care.
Introduction
The customer service market is in the midst of a major transition as businesses of all sizes strive to provide customer care in the manner in which todays customers wish to be served. This transition to what Cisco first defined as Customer Collaboration combines traditional contact center technology and processes with important innovations in social media, Web 2.0 agent workspaces, and network-based recording and analytics to empower businesses to forge deeper, proactive relationships with their customers. To fully understand the effect of Customer Collaboration, however, it is important to consider it within the context of three waves of innovation and investment in the customer care industry. From a conceptual standpoint, we can refer to them as the waves of cost, relationship, and experience. The cost wave is all about optimizing the cost and processes associated with providing customer service, whereas the relationship wave focuses on adjusting service levels, resources, and channels in response to the customer identity and context. The experience wave seeks to deliver an optimal - and in many cases proactive - customer care interaction using the media and channels preferred by the customer. Businesses and organizations that understand the principles that influence these waves are better able to take advantage of their capabilities to deliver world-class customer care that strengthens customer loyalty and generates additional revenue while lowering costs. Lets now better examine each wave.
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Each of the waves had a clear beginning, but they are ongoing and cumulative in nature (Figure 1).
Figure 1. The Three Waves of Customer Care
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Bringing these new customer touch points into the network of people and systems in businesses is the challenge of wave 3. That is why the contact center is now evolving to an enterprise service (Figure 2) as the processes of customer care literally need to be available to and orchestrated across a variety of people and systems both inside the company and beyond. Customer service representatives and marketing make promises that the entire organization needs to deliver on. Contact centers cannot resolve complex problems by themselves; they rely on resources throughout the organization - and sometimes outside it.
Figure 2. Evolution of the Contact Center
The new metrics include Net Promoter Score, cycle time from the opening to the closing of a customer interaction, and of course first call resolution. Technologies employed to manage these metrics include social mining, enterprise social software, mobility applications, and proactive care technologies such as communication-enabled business transformation (CEBT.) These metrics and technologies link together elements of the value chain such as branch offices, call centers, outsourcers, and retail locations and extend the customer care process into emerging social channels and user devices - helping create a positive, consistent experience that promotes strong, enduring customer loyalty. Wave 3 has some clearly identifiable trends that emerged over the last few years - social media, video, intraenterprise collaboration, and proactive contact being good examples. Wave 3 investments are focused on moving the customer management process into the new channels such as social media, but there is also a tremendous increase in branch office, retail, and contact center integration as agents and supervisors increasingly need to collaborate with distributed locations. Proactive care is also on the rise - not only notification of existing customers but also the integration of the communications network into the workflow of the company. For example, businesses are using social media customer care products such as the Cisco SocialMiner solution to find and respond to positive and negative customer experiences in social forums, and to reach out to consumers in response to critical life events (marriage, moving to a new city, birth of a child, etc). When the contact center was just a place, the emphasis was on appliances that could provide economies of scale. When the contact center became a collection of systems, the emphasis was on integration with IVR and CTI elements. Now that the contact center is becoming an enterprise service, the emphasis is on a platform that can provide economies of scope. Contact center vendors such as Cisco with a network-centric architecture are thriving during this transition, while certain traditional vendors are finding it far more challenging to make the technology leap.
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Conclusion
As we have seen, the contact center has evolved from a place to a system to an enterprise service in response to the goals of lowering costs, improving the customer relationship, and delivering a complete experience. The waves are sometimes seemingly at odds with one another, as business managers are challenged to simultaneously control costs, manage more effective customer transactions, and embrace new channels and media. So what are some keys to successfully managing each new wave, even as the previous waves roll onward? How can businesses and organizations reduce risk and get the most value out of their investments in contact center innovation? One key is for companies and organizations to strike the right balance in support of their specific business goals and brand. There is a return on investment (ROI) associated with each wave, and it is up to each business to seek the ROI that is best for them. Another key is to select a vendor (or vendors) with a proven track record of navigating through multiple market transitions and with an architecture that accommodates previous investments as well as current and future innovations. Strongly consider vendors that do not require a complete system upgrade to attain wave 3. For a closing example, lets return to our opening discussion of Customer Collaboration and ask ourselves within which of the three waves it resides. The answer, as you might now expect, is all of them, for although Customer Collaboration was born in wave 3, it clearly helps to improve the customer relationship even as it enables customer care providers to be more efficient and effective. Customer Collaboration helps companies execute across all three of the customer care waves: cost, relationship, and experience. As discussed previously, however, it is up to each business and organization to decide what balance between the waves is right for them and their own business goals. That is the key to riding the three waves.
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C11-700866-00
02/12
2012 Cisco and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document is Cisco Public Information.
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