Press information issued on behalf of:
Customer Consulting Ltd
500 Avebury Boulevard
CENTRAL MILTON KEYNES
Bucks
MK9 2BE
Web:
www.customerconsulting.com
13th
August 2009
Customer Consulting combats contact centres' failure demand
Customer and change management company Customer Consulting Ltd (CCL)
estimates that some 40 per cent of all calls to contact centres,
especially those in the financial services sector, are the result of
failure demand. CCL's managing director, Simon Rustom, believes that,
"Failure demand results in more costs for the business because of the
time and resources spent in responding to additional customer enquiries
and complaints as a result of processes that do not work."
"Not only are these costs hidden within the operating costs of the
contact centre but they mask the real problems that the organisation is
facing in not meeting customers' wants and needs first time," he said.
"Organisations find it hard getting to grips with this area of wastage.
In fact, the only way is to carry out a 'root cause analysis', which
discovers facts about the real causes of unnecessary contact and the
resulting costs of failure demand."
Failure demand occurs where an organisation fails to deliver clear and
timely information - be it about a product or a service - to a
customer. That failure generates a demand for customer service. Often
that demand is registered via the organisation's customer contact
centre.
Ever responding to new requirements, contact centres tend to evolve.
Consequently, their staff tend to undertake complex tasks and operate
non-standard processes using multiple technology platforms.
All of this can prevent contact centres integrating smoothly with the
rest of their organisation's business.
For example, a product doesn't get to a customer on time, or the
customer's bill is incorrect - and so the customer telephones the
supplier to query what has happened. Or, maybe, a 'standard' letter
sent to a customer does not reflect the content of an earlier telephone
conversation - so, again, the customer telephones the supplier.
Some customer contacts occur because of the need to comply with
industry regulations and staff's reluctance to act purely on telephone
discussions. Nonetheless, this process can be time consuming, thus
irritating customers and creating extra work for company staff.
"In my experience, an average of 40 per cent of all calls to a contact
centre could be prevented." believes Brian Jopling, CCL associate
director. "Saving 40 per cent of the costs of a contact centre and, as
a consequence, producing more satisfied customers is a key goal for any
company with a contact centre - especially for companies which employ
several thousand people.
"These savings could be achieved if companies took a strategic
approach, got back to basics and rethought how they do things," he
said.
"In practice, the way we reduce failure demand is to identify the root
causes and eliminate them. This often affects other departments outside
the contact centre and so requires a strategic approach - enlisting
Board level backing - to achieve success."
"Contact centres are always under pressure to reduce costs, especially
in today's economic climate - and, as in any recession, there is
currently a tendency to meet challenges with 'knee jerk reactions'," he
continued. "Yet - despite any short term indications to the contrary -
the level of phone-based customer contact activity is likely to grow
during the next period."
"So, the challenge for any organisation with a contact centre is how to
grow those contact centres to respond to this trend when, currently, 40
per cent of the activity shouldn't be happening."
"If nothing is done about this, in a few years' time, contact centre
staff numbers will have doubled - and so will the inefficiencies, along
with tangible and intangible costs!"
In Jopling's view, not only does this state of affairs have adverse
effects on customers, it also produces adverse effects among contact
centre staff. He explained, "Knowing that 40 per cent of what you do is
unnecessary, it wears you down, staff morale and engagement levels fall
- causing rising human resources-related costs."
End
About Customer Consulting Limited
Customer Consulting Ltd (CCL) is a specialist customer and change
management company. It helps organisations to optimise their return on
investment in customer management - especially contact centres and
customer-orientated information and technology.
Its vision is to demonstrate that a best practice approach to customer
management delivers sustainable business growth. CCL aims to deliver a
combination of insight, intellect, wisdom and pragmatism - combined
with a real understanding of people - to achieve commercial results
that are beyond the norm. Using a joint project team approach, CCL
offers advice and support to help companies develop and implement
customer strategies that produce results.
With its 100 consultants averaging 20 years experience, CCL helps
business leaders and their teams - including those at Norwich Union,
BUPA, South West Trains and National Express Group - to activate their
internal resources and ensure measurable success.
Further information from:
Kathy Duxbury, Customer Consulting, 00 44 (0) 1908 441012/ 00 44 (0)
7976 405779;
kathy.duxbury@customerconsulting.com
Bob Little, Bob Little Press & PR, 00 44 (0)1727 860405;
bob.little@boblittlepr.com