November/December 2004

Balancing Customer Service Support Options

By James A. Larson
Intel Corporation

Customers often ask questions about products, services, delivery dates and account information, as well as, offer suggestions and complaints.  If customers do not receive satisfactory answers to their questions, they become disillusioned with the company and take their business elsewhere.  In short, good customer service support is the key to repeat business. 

Customer service support delivery options

Customer support service delivery options form a hierarchy (See Figure 1), with the most expensive option (service center) at the top and the least expensive option (paper) at the bottom.  Eager to keep current customers happy, many companies use several options to deliver customer support, including:


Figure 1: Typical Help Delivery Strategy

Customer service support delivery option criteria

Management evaluates the effectiveness of customer support delivery options using a variety of criteria, including:

As you can see, Table 1 summarizes each customer support delivery option with respect to the above criteria.  The article by Todd Strubbe (West) on page 24 describes the criteria for implementing applications in speech or using customer service centers.  For information about a new conference in this area, Service Automation Expo (SAXPO), see pages 1819.


Table 1: Comparison of Criteria for Alternative Support Delivery Options

Two competing goals

Many customers prefer the higher options in the customer service support hierarchy.  Companies find it less expensive to provide the customer support delivery options lower in the hierarchy.

In general, companies attempt to balance two competing goals:

  1. Budget criteria — Companies maintain the overall expense below budget by encouraging customers to use the lower-cost customer service support delivery strategies.  Because delivery options lower in the table are less expensive than the higher options, the same amount of money allocated to a lower delivery option will serve a larger number of customers. 
  2. Customer satisfaction criteria — Companies maintain customer satisfaction above a specified threshold by enabling customers to elevate their service support requests to a higher-cost customer service support delivery option when the lower-cost option is not satisfactory. 

Many companies choose to provide customer support with multiple customer support delivery options.  A company’s customer support delivery strategy determines the relative amount of funding for each customer support delivery option.  Please refer to Figure 1, which illustrates a typical customer support delivery strategy that enables customers to select from among several support delivery options.  The size of the rectangle associated with each option indicates its share of the customer support budget.  

Meeting both the budget and customer satisfaction criteria

Companies can satisfy the budget constraints by allocating large amounts of the budget to the lower-cost option, as illustrated in Figure 1.  However, this strategy may result in excessive customer complaints because of lack of customer access to the higher-level, more expensive delivery options. Customer satisfaction can be improved by shifting some of the budget to more expensive options.

Techniques for managing customer use of the various delivery options include the following:

  1. Improve the performance of your individual customer service support delivery options.  Refer to Table 2 for suggested actions to minimize expenses of each customer service support delivery option 
  2. Ensure that all of your delivery techniques enable customers to obtain accurate and up-to-date information.  Customer satisfaction can be raised for lower-cost options if they provide the same up-to-date information as higher-cost options.  Figure 2 illustrates an integrated customer support system in which each delivery method obtains data from the same database.  (See “Technology Trends:  Developing Verbal, Visual, and Multimodel User Interfaces for the Same Application” in the November/December 2002 issue of Speech Technology Magazine.)  All customers need current information, so the database must be kept up-to-date.  Also, all systems access the same database; therefore, data delivered by each customer service support delivery option is consistent with data delivered by other delivery options. 
  3. Control your customers’ abilities to switch among delivery options.  Companies balance budget and customer satisfaction goals by controlling the availability of each customer service support delivery option and encouraging customers to upgrade or downgrade their customer support delivery choice.  Table 3 summarizes the techniques for encouraging customers to switch among help delivery options.
  4. Upgrade to a newer technology.  The sidebars summarize reasons for switching from touchtone (DTMF) to speech applications and for adopting natural language technology into your call center.


Table 2: Efficiency Techniques for Customer Service Support Delivery Options

 


Figure 2 Integrated Customer Service Support Delivery System

 

 

Current Delivery Option
Target Delivery Option
Service Center Kiosk Call Center Speech Application Touchtone (DTMF) Application World Wide Web Paper
Service Center
x Advertise location and availability of kiosks Advertise the call center number
Refer to a self-service telephone number

Refer to a self-service telephone number

Advertise the URL
E-mail, faxback, or mail paper information
Kiosk
  x Provide call center number Refer to a self-service telephone number Refer to a self-service telephone number Advertise the URL E-mail, faxback, or mail paper information
Call Center
Provide the address of the nearest service center
Provide the address of the nearest kiosk x Switch to a speech application while waiting for a service representative Switch to a DTMF application while waiting for a service representative Provide the URL to customers waiting for the service representative Offer to e-mail, fax, or surface mail the information
Speech Application
Provide the address of the nearest service center
Provide the address of the nearest kiosk Switch to a live agent
x Switch to a DTMF application, especially if the user is having trouble with speech Provide the URL to customers
Offer to e-mail, fax, or surface mail the information

Touchtone (DTMF) Application

Provide the address of the nearest service center Provide the address of the nearest kiosk Switch to a live agent
Switch to a speech application
x Provide the URL to customers
Offer to e-mail fax, or surface mail the information
World Wide Web
Provide the address of the nearest service center
Provide the address of the nearest kiosk

Provide the phone number for the call center

Provide the phone number for the speech application.
Provide the phone number for the speech application
x Offer to e-mail, fax, or surface mail the information
Paper
Provide the address of the nearest service center Provide the address of the nearest kiosk

Provide the phone number for the call center

Provide the phone number for the speech application.
Provide the phone number for the speech application
Provide the Web address
x

Table 3: Techniques Encouraging Customers to Switch Among Customer Support Delivery Options

 

Establishing a customer service support strategy

How do you establish and implement a customer service support strategy?  The basic planning steps are:

  1. Determine your company’s overall budget for delivering customer service support.  This will establish a starting point for allocating funds to each of the customer service support delivery options.
  2. Allocate part of the budget to each customer service support delivery option, so all anticipated requests for customer service support are covered.  Recall that resources allocated to the low-cost customer service support options satisfy more requests than the higher cost customer service support options.
  3. Determine if this allocation of funds among the various customer service support options satisfies your company’s goals for customer satisfaction.  It may be necessary for you to allocate resources to higher-level customer service support delivery options to achieve maximum customer satisfaction levels.
  4. Decrease your expenses by optimizing the performance for each customer service support delivery option.  Consider integrating the back-end process for each customer service support delivery option to increase consistency and deliver up-to-date customer service support information, as well as decrease overall customer service support delivery expenses.
  5. Maintain a resource reserve to handle emergency customer service support delivery options, which may occur if one of your products is recalled, world events result in increased calls for customer service support, or (preferable) your sales increase resulting in additional calls for customer service support.

Conclusion

A company balances the two competing goals of delivering support service via the most effective means while maintaining the overall budget.  Options for delivering support services to customers include the use of service centers, call centers, speech applications, touchtone (DTMF) applications, Web applications, and paper.  Criteria for evaluating the effectiveness of these options include customer access, customer service support availability, type of interaction, potential problems, user time to access, cost for the provider, and scalability.  By minimizing the costs associated with each service support option and by encouraging users to upgrade or downgrade the service they use, companies control the overall budget allocated for support services. 


Upgrading from touchtone (DTMF) to speech applications

Touchtone (DTMF) applications are the first technology to enable customers to interact directly with a computer via telephone.  These applications enable self-service, so customers can help themselves without the assistance of customer support specialists. However, the improved price-performance of computer hardware, improvements to speech recognition algorithms, and improvements in the design and implementation of customer-computer speech dialogs have made speech applications a serious competitor to touchtone applications.

Companies may encourage customers to upgrade from touchtone to speech applications when callers become frustrated with the touchtone application and either

  1. Zero out — Callers press the zero on their telephone keypads to switch to call center agents.
  2. Abandon the call — Callers hang up before getting the assistance they need.
    Speech applications are more expensive than touchtone applications because additional processing is needed for speech recognition and speech synthesis.  In addition, licensing agreements for speech recognition, speech synthesis, speaker verification, and natural language processing may be expensive.

As a rough rule of thumb, speech costs two to three times more than touchtone applications.  This suggests that to justify speech applications, a two- to three-fold improvement of return on investment is necessary.   A careful analysis of the following potential benefits is needed to justify the additional expense of speech applications:

The column by Ed Margulies on pages 14–15 provides additional insight on migrating from DTMF to speech.