When Serena asked its customers “how can we improve the support experience?”, what they discovered was somewhat surprising. Instead of focusing on call hold times or support rep performance, customers expressed the need for a better online experience - one where searching for information was easy and the information received was accurate, up-to-date and consistent with what they would receive from a support rep.
In this customer testimonial, Peter Sianchuk, VP of Worldwide Customer Service at Serena, discusses how InQuira’s solutions have allowed Serena to deflect 18% of support calls and improve call resolution speed by 35% - by simply improving the way support reps and customers access the right information at the right time.
Collaboration initiatives offer real promise of furthering the evolution of customer service. Today, leading companies are leveraging collaboration to transform their service desks into knowledge hubs, central points in which knowledge is gathered, shared, and made actionable—so users and agents can solve issues and proactively keep problems from arising at all.
Based on our experience, here are some words of guidance as organizations consider harnessing collaboration to bring this reality to fruition:
Embrace. Let go of your misgivings: an open discussion can help you create a learning infrastructure. Spot issues early and minimize their impact. Empower your users and make them feel included, which in turn makes them more loyal.
Launch. As you deploy a new application or technology, consider deploying a dedicated discussion forum. Seed it with questions, have experts answer them and build up momentum.
Participate. To keep up with change, encourage your staff to join external online communities dedicated to associated technologies, applications, and industries. Get feeds from these communities using RSS and notifications and feed these into your knowledge portal. You can benefit from others’ knowledge and they in turn can benefit from your experiences.
Incent. Put incentives in place to encourage usage by users and your staff. Build a network of experts with a reputation model based on the usefulness and frequency of knowledge contributed.
Harvest. Don’t let the knowledge being generated disappear into the ether. Put a capture process in place to mine the most useful posts, and structure them into solution briefs, FAQs, tips, and the like. Route these to the experts to review and approve them where needed. Secure them, give them context, and then deliver them back to the user community, via your knowledge portal.
Learn. Continually measure and improve the entire process. Assess how knowledge is being captured and routed. Track the overall usefulness and timeliness of knowledge.
If you were one of the thousands who descended on San Francisco for Oracle Open World, you probably heard that Oracle has selected InQuira to integrate its knowledge management capabilities with Oracle’s eSupport applications. The addition of the InQuira solution has a profound impact on key strategic areas such as “Customer Experience” and “Web 2.0 Social Collaboration”.
How is InQuira working with Oracle?
For end users, InQuira provides “answers”. Unlike a Google-approach to self-service, InQuira truly understands customer intent with online search accuracy often exceeding 65%. Additional benefits include reducing online escalations by 40%, improving shopping cart conversions by 20%, and having a dramatic increase in overall customer satisfaction.
For customer service agents, InQuira provides knowledge. Integrated into the Siebel desktop, InQuira’s intent-driven resolution approach guides agents to best possible answers in the shortest amount of time. By improving Oracle’s knowledge delivery on the agent desktop, organizations can expect to increase agent proficiency, reduce call research time by as much at 44%, and provide a collaborative knowledge network to exchange valuable service information.
For service executives, InQuira provides operational insight. Most organizations do not have the analytical intelligence to really know how to optimize the online customer experience. InQuira couples deep analytic understanding with an agile knowledge platform to intentionally optimize every customer experience. Knowing what customers want is half the battle. Intentionally acting on this is a unique experience the InQuira & Oracle partnership provides.
To keep up with the latest trends in customer service, collaboration and search tools, I am always scouring the Web to soak up as much information as I can. In no particular order, here are just some of the blogs that I read on a regular basis – the list is a combination of knowledge management, customer service, collaboration, search, and CRM sites, because the nature of our business means we need to stay on top all these issues. This is only some of the great information that is available from some of the smartest people who are working in the trenches every day. Let me know what sites you read to stay informed and I will add it to my growing list!
1. KM Edge: The American Productivity & Quality Center’s (APQC) Knowledge Management blog- Carla O’Dell and Lauren Trees and some insightful commentary to news and trends.
2. John Ragsdale’s Eye on Service: VP of of Technology Research at Service and Support Professionals Assocation (SSPA), the Association for Services Management International (AFSMI), and the Technical Professional Services Association (TPSA), shares information, news and analysis on the latest technologies intended to improve customer service.
3. Content Management Connection:George Dearing’s blog combines insight from content management experts with an emphasis on collaboration tools. The blog touches on content management through various aspects including customer service, Wikis, social networks, search engines, and Web services.
4. Bill Ives’ Blog: Bill Ives’ blog discussing practical applications of portals, blogs, and knowledge management.
5. Enterprise Search Practice Blog: This blog hosted by The Gilbane Group offers analysis and the latest news on enterprise search technologies and implementations
I’ll admit it, as a customer I can be pretty darn demanding. Whether it’s a personal or professional purchase, I know what I want when it comes to a product, service or support experience - and I fully expect to get it from the companies I work with.
On the flip side, I also understand how difficult it can be for an organization to keep up with all the demands customers have - there is no way to please everyone all of the time. But there is a way to turn them around and get them on your side so when you can’t give them exactly what they want, they will be understanding, work with you - not against you - and remain loyal.
In this short video, Tom Floodeen, VP of Worldwide Support at Mentor Graphics, discusses how InQuira has helped turn Mentor’s annual user conferences into customer service “love fests” where users share ideas, insights and work with Mentor to become even better.