You’ve felt it. That feeling of being absolutely powerless, and completely at the company’s mercy when you decide to call in to settle an issue. By picking up your phone, you are basically relinquishing control, resigning power, and handing over your most precious commodity: time.
From a company’s point of view, it’s important to manage the customer/company interaction like the valuable commodity it is: any time you engage directly in a dialog with a customer, it’s a golden opportunity to reinforce the relationship and ensure that they *stay* a customer. You can address any further questions and meet the customer’s expectations head on – things that a turnkey web ordering portal just can’t do.
So *how can* you make your callers feel like they made the right decision to call in (as opposed to going to the website) and to restore some of that control and power into their hands?
Have the agent – sincerely – thank them for calling in.
If you were to have the live agent – in a genuine way – acknowledge the caller’s initiative in taking the time to call in and assure them that this was a wise decision to do so…..profoundly impactful. (Make sure that if they need to follow a script to do so; they need to memorize it and paraphrase it in normal, conversational speech.)
Demonstrate continuity skills.
When the caller learns that their previous call has been notated, and that even though they have not spoken to this particular agent before, the previous interaction was well documented, they experience the euphoria that comes with knowing that they matter; that they don’t have to go through the whole story again, and that your call center is listening, paying attention, and cares about an on-going relationship.
Offer perks.
I was recently offered a lower price, free shipping, and front-of-line priority when I called a small appliance manufacturer to check where my online order was. The operator said – almost conspiratorially -- “It’s always cheaper when you call in.” Despite the turnkey nature of most of our interactions, that experience changed my perception of phone commerce, and makes me more willing to interact with a human to get a better deal. Discounts for future orders placed over the phone, gold-level priority for future calls – there are many ways to reinforce the relationship and encourage them to call again.
Online service undoubtedly offers fast, easy transactions for “in-and-out” -type interactions; the improvement of the bottom line for companies to not use up human power to serve customers is undeniable. But for those customers with specific, complex issues which requires a bit of finesse, (or for those customers on the verge of jumping ship and going to your competition), them calling in is a chance to fix, bolster, reassure – and to land future business.