Have You Listened to Your Company’s Voice Lately?
February 2, 2011Call centers spend significant amounts of time and money training associates on delivering a friendly and empathetic approach. The Wall Street Journal reports that some companies now go one step further and reevaluate the voicethat initially greets customers. These companies believe that with a friendlier, more inviting voice, they increase the chance that customers will stay within the automated system rather than trying to reach a live operator, which saves companies money. Alflac, for example, recently brought on a new voice with a calm, hometown feel for its initial greeting. The company reports a 7% increase in customer satisfaction with the automated system since implementing the new voice.
Dress Codes and the UBS Debacle
February 2, 2011Restaurants, grocery stores and banks all have something in common – an employee dress code. Some companies, such as UBS in Sweden, have traditionally taken dress codes to higher levels. A 44-page guide for employees contains specific directives about employee nail care, glasses and even underwear. Recently, though, UBS announced that it will change its strict policies to more practical dress guidelines. While most companies don’t manage company appearance down to such small details, many have some type of code in place, whether it includes wearing name tags or collared shirts, or directing employees not to wear jeans, nose rings or multiple earrings.
The Remains of the Previous Customer Were on the Table, and Other Mystery Shopper Comments
February 2, 2011Back in the 1980’s, one of our early mystery shopping clients was a McDonald’s franchisee. When our CEO, Elaine Buxton, met with him to discuss our quality review process, she explained that all reports would reflect the utmost professional language. She gave the example stating the review team would change a phrase like “She took her sweet time” to something more professional sounding, such as “She was slow in approaching the drive up window.” That wise client taught us an early and valuable lesson: don’t change the tone of what the shopper communicates in verbatim comments. As he so aptly put it, “I can picture exactly what happened when I read “she took her sweet time”, so keep those types of comments in, please. We learned a lot from that client, including how to guide a quality review team to strike a balance between flavor and tone, content and quality.
Confero, Inc. Named Finalist In 2011 Stevie Awards For Sales & Customer Service
January 18, 2011Customer Experience Measurement Firm Recognized In Two Categories
Prepared Employees: Ready to Explain Bank Fees
January 13, 2011Banks are thinking about imposing annual fees of $25 or $30 on debit cards, according to people familiar with bank strategies. Other banks will increase fees on checking accounts. For example, during 2011, Bank of America will offer four basic checking accounts in some states, instead of three. Three of the four will offer ways for customers to avoid fees, while the fourth, the Essentials account, has an unavoidable monthly fee between $6 and $9. Chase Bank will charge a $6 monthly fee on one of their checking accounts, however, customers can avoid the fee with a $500 or more monthly deposit to the account, or when they use their debit cards five times during the month.