If your customers don’t find what they’re looking for, they’ll go somewhere else.
It’s a truism in any industry, and it’s been a reality since commerce began.
It’s especially true in this pandemic, where many businesses are failing, and the future is uncertain.
Every attempt should be to acknowledge customers (and impart how important their business is to you), every effort should be made to ensure that transacting with your company is as seamless and as intuitive as possible, and your goal – always – should be to set your customers up for success. To keep them coming back. *And* spreading the word that you’re still in business and eager to do business.
I’m astounded – even with the limited amount of “consuming” I do during COVID – how many companies don’t really grasp how precious a customer is. Companies should be doubling their efforts to make commerce easy and make customers feel like they matter. While navigating through an IVR, it’s *especially* important that callers remain on the call and achieve their goal.
If they don’t: it’s just money walking out the door.
Here’s some common ways that telephone-based customer service fails – and why these factors affect your bottom line.
The IVR Confuses
Callers don’t like to feel frustrated or as though the IVR system is “getting the better of them”. There’s a huge feeling of powerlessness when a caller is at the mercy of a selection of options which are nebulous, confusing, or just plain don’t apply to what they’re calling about. Make sure the options on your system are the *leading reasons* why people call in; make sure the options are front-stacked to feature the most emergent/most frequently used choices up front, and ensure that the options are not so similar that the correct choice becomes a dilemma.
The IVR takes Up Too Much Time
People are busy. They don’t have time to waste on a system which doesn’t navigate in an intuitive way. Be sensitive to caller’s time limitations and get them through the menu choices as quickly and as efficiently as possible.
A Solution to The Caller’s Problem is Too Much Work
It’s as though some IVRs are written *deliberately* to be hard work for the caller. It might have actual roots in the company protecting their bottom line by not giving refunds or service to any but the most determined or persistent callers; however, I feel most of the time, it’s just bad IVR design. IVR prompts not written with the customer’s ease in mind; systems not written with an eye to efficiency or an even remotely streamlined flow. We want to keep the customer happy, get them to a solution as fast as possible, and to not make them work to hard to get there.
The success of your company rides on knowing your customer, anticipating their needs, getting them to a solution as quickly as possible, and earning your money by providing the best possible service. Don’t make it hard for customers to give you their money and set your customers up for success with telephone and call center prompts which make the experience a positive one.