"Your call is important to our bank; we’ll be with you as soon as possible....in the meantime here is some mind numbing music"
Ten years ago or so banks like many other major businesses recognised the opportunity to cut costs by directing more customers away from higher cost, face-to-face channels to call centres. They wanted to maximise the use of centralised customer contact centres to deliver a more efficient, consistent and auditable service. However, in the pursuit of cost reduction these organisations lost sight of the most important factor: the customer experience.
No business can afford to provide excellent customer service at any cost. But equally, no business can afford to ignore the importance of customer satisfaction.
Call centre cost reduction strategies like off-shoring or technology outsourcing have failed because they focus almost exclusively on improving the bottom line. They have not properly considered the implications for enterprise processes and management approaches and, more importantly, have not focused on the customer. So, anticipated financial and operational benefits have not been fully realised and customers remain largely dissatisfied i.e. a vicious circle.
Customer dissatisfaction has led to many institutions reversing their earlier decisions to offshore call centre operations. In their adverts many banks now make a point of having UK based call centres.
But cost savings and service improvements do not have to be mutually exclusive. If the customer experience is placed at the heart of a business transformation programme, opportunities can arise to improve both customer service levels and cut waste.
The Art of Possible:
There are three layers of corporate process that fundamentally drive performance excellence in a contact centre. They are contact centre strategy, operational planning and tactical execution. The strategic thinking, business analysis, detailed planning and communication that occur at each of these layers must be highly integrated from both the bottom up and the top down.
Only then will banks be able to determine where they are going – and have confidence in the belief that they are really going to be able to get there.
Saving costs and improving customer experience need not be mutually exclusive.
At Charteris we have customer centric contact centre expertise with experience gained in some of the country’s largest and most successful contact centres.
hoss.atri@charteris.com
Thursday, October 30, 2008
----------------------------------------
Related Posts
%28Author%29 - Hoss Atri
Financial Services
Customer Centricity
- Multi Channel Retailing - Putting the Customer First - Part 7 - Creating Agility......The end goal
- Mobile Banking and Payments Innovations
- Multi Channel Retailing - Putting the Customer First - Part 6 - The Customer Centric Approach
- Can banks cut more costs without risking customer service ?
- Multi Channel Retailing - Putting the Customer First - Part 5 - Business Architecture.....The afterthought
- Multi Channel Retailing - Putting the Customer First - Part 4 - I thought SOA was just an IT thing!
- Multi Channel Retailing - Putting the Customer First - Part 3 - Surely, IT has all the answers!
- 8 Steps To Customer Centricity
- Changing To A Customer-Centric Culture
- Why Organisations Become Less Customer Centric Over Time
- The Practicalities of Multichannel Retailing -Part 5 - Delivery and Payment
- Multi Channel Retailing - Putting the Customer First - Part 2 - The single view of the customer
- Customer Centricity vs. CRM
- The Secret Of Creating A Successful Business
- The Practicalities of Multi-Channel Retail - Part 1 - A few fundamentals
- Multi Channel Retailing - Putting the Customer First - Part 1 - Why it matters
- Leveraging existing multi channel assets
- Charteris' ARC Conference Presentation on Leveraging multi-channel Assets
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)