Customer Service in the Web 2.0
World
By Chuck Ganapathi
Our world is changing. With over 100,000 new blogs being created
each day, every individual's voice can now be heard. And with more
ways to connect to one another - through the Web, the blogosphere,
social networks, and virtual worlds - more people are starting to
tap into the power of the online community. What does this mean for
customer service organizations?
The rules of customer service are being rewritten. Web 2.0
consumers, who have become accustomed to the instant access and
gratification of the Internet, now expect the same level of speed
and ease in their customer service interactions. They trust their
social networks, and they look to their peers online for information
and advice. Self-service is a way of life for them, not just an
option for service outside business hours. Plus, an unhappy
customer has the power to destroy a company’s brand with a single
click.
Leading companies are using Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) to swiftly
adapt to this new world. SaaS - or on-demand software - brings
together both the technology and interaction models popularized by
Web 2.0 to help customer service organizations turn their customers
into evangelists, transform service agents into brand champions, and
move as quickly as their customers demand.
Turn Customers into Evangelists: Self-service Web sites have
been around for a while, but most are static, difficult to navigate
and use, and limited in the types of services available for the
customer. With on-demand software, companies can quickly deliver a
fully branded, personalized customer portal that redefines the
customer experience. Just as Google and Yahoo! make it easy to find
information on the Web, these portals help customers easily find the
right answer to their questions. The relevance of the answers is
continuously improved through user ratings and feedback, another
attribute of Web 2.0. Customers can log or email trouble tickets
and chat with agents online to resolve service issues and requests.
Beyond issue tracking, companies can enable any number of new
services for customers using mash-ups with Web services for maps,
shipment tracking, ordering, and training.
On-demand customer portals also allow companies to create their own
social networks for their customers using Web 2.0 technologies like
blogs, wikis, forums, and online voting. All of these services are
fully integrated with the internal service application, allowing
customer service managers to have complete visibility into these
interactions. By creating these compelling online experiences and
being part of the conversation with the community, companies can
build greater customer loyalty.
Transform Agents into Brand Champions: With client-server
solutions of the past, customer service organizations had to choose
between speed and ease of use. On-demand applications, which are
built from the ground up on the Internet, provide the best of both
worlds: they are as intuitive as buying a book on Amazon.com while
also providing a highly efficient, desktop-like user experience,
thanks to Web 2.0 technologies like AJAX. These technologies also
allow on-demand applications to seamlessly integrate both
traditional telephony systems and new VoIP services, such as Skype,
right into the browser and combine productivity features like
click-to-dial, screen pops, and call logs. Plus, since on-demand is
built natively as a Web service, companies can create a 360-degree
view of a customer’s history by integrating data from internal and
external systems.
For companies looking to outsource, whether offshore or home-shore,
on-demand is a natural choice. Since it requires no hardware or
software installation on-site, companies can turn any browser
anywhere in the world into their own call center desktop. By giving
every agent the right tools and up-to-date information at their
fingertips, on-demand can empower call center agents to delight
their customers by delivering faster, better service with the fewest
possible clicks.
Move as Fast as Customers Demand: As the front line for the
customer experience, call centers need to constantly innovate their
service to meet callers’ changing expectations. Client-server
solutions of the past have forced customer service organizations to
focus on technology infrastructure rather than on service innovation
because those solutions are hard to implement, challenging to use,
and tough to maintain, customize, or modify. In a recent report,
Gartner said that eight out of every ten dollars that companies
spend on technology is “dead money” because so much effort is spent
just on keeping the infrastructure running. On-demand frees
companies from the hassles of expensive and complex hardware and
software so that they can focus their resources and energy on
delivering a superior customer experience, while the on-demand
vendor takes care of the infrastructure.
On-demand provides the most value to companies when it is built on a
multi-tenant architecture. Multi-tenancy is the core innovation
that allows consumer Web giants like eBay and Amazon, as well as Web
2.0 applications like MySpace and Facebook, to run shared, massively
scalable infrastructures. These giants complete these functions
while allowing each user to keep their information private and fully
customize their experience, or “space.” On-demand platforms that
follow this model are unmatched in their flexibility and speed of
customization, allowing companies to tailor the application to fit
their unique business. As business needs change, companies can
easily and quickly make modifications or develop their own custom
applications with just a few clicks. Multi-tenancy also allows an
ecosystem of vendors to create value-added applications, just as
many developers build services on top of eBay and Amazon or home
page widgets for Yahoo! and Google users. That means customer
service organizations can count on a growing stream of innovations
from both the on-demand vendor, as well as independent software
vendors.
Connecting the Dots: In their recently released 2007 “Magic
Quadrant for Contact Centers,” Gartner predicted that at least 75
percent of customer service centers will use a form of SaaS by the
year 2013. Visionary companies are joining the on-demand revolution
to stay in tune with the Web 2.0 customer. They are replacing
inflexible and complex legacy systems and are able to get up and
running with on-demand in weeks - without being mired in long
implementation cycles or painful upgrades.
Furthermore, The Economist, in its recent survey of 406
senior executives across the world, found that companies expect
their customer service departments to be one of the most significant
users of Web 2.0 technologies. By bringing the best of Web 2.0 to
customer service applications, on-demand is poised to play a
critical role in helping companies build a community of loyal
customers with enduring value.
Chuck
Ganapathi is a VP of Marketing at salesforce.com, a provider of
on-demand CRM, and an evangelist for their Salesforce Service &
Support Application.
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