Elevating the Customer Experience (CX) is an obsession for the contact center industry, and rightly so. The experiences that customers have with your contact center condition the way they think about you as a supplier of goods and services and as a trusted partner in providing the things that they need and want in their lives. Traditionally, focus has been put on training agents to pro vide friendly, empathetic service, along with training on product and service information. We see these elements as constants across virtually all of our clients and contacts.
What is less consistent is the utilization of advanced technology to provide knowledge to both agents and customers in user-friendly, accurate ways. Simply scanning paper-based manuals into electronic formats, or using legacy knowledge management software does not provide the high-impact, just-in-time information that today’s customers want. Customers are getting more demanding and many managers are looking for ways to break through to higher levels of customer satisfaction.
In this white paper we focus on the information made available to contact center agents. While self service is getting better and better through the use of artificial intelligence (AI) of varying degrees of sophistication, many questions continue to end up with agents, either because the customer couldn’t find the answer through self service, or the customer simply doesn’t like self service options. In these cases, it is the agent who is expected to raise the customer experience to the highest level of excellence possible.
How can this be done? I invite you to read on and to discover the research and expert insights that show how superior knowledge management lifts up Agent Experiences, which, in turn, elevates the Customer Experience.
If all the information that customers needed could be easily accessed by them through automated means, then everyone would be happy. However, we know that many customer needs (and customer types) still require the personal attention of live agents. We also know that customer satisfaction and agent satisfaction show signs of leveling off.
One manager said it feels like efforts at improving these satisfaction metrics have “hit a wall.” As a result, good contact center managers are asking themselves: how do we crack through that wall and increase agent satisfaction going forward? How do we beat the competition by providing improved Customer Experiences for those who inter act with us – especially those who contact us through our live-agent channels? And how do we make the Agent Experience as supportive as possible of this process?
This white paper endeavors to bring together the latest research on customer pain points and agent challenges, as well as the best ways we see these pain points and challenges being successfully over come.
According to survey research of 5,000 customers conducted by Forrester and sponsored by eGain, the pain points for customers include some specific elements that we highlight here:
Biggest Pain Point: 34% of CSRs not knowing the answers to questions asked
Over one-third of respondents said the biggest pain point they have with CSRs is the agent not knowing the answer. This is a major fail-point. The whole reason the customer contacts the company is to have answers, and finding out that the source they are contacting cannot provide them with a proper answer undermines confidence not only in the agent but also in the agent’s employer – your company.
The responses were also divided by industry and by demographics, and here were some other take-aways that should be of special concern to managers in the following sectors:
This sort of performance failure can lead to customer dissatisfaction, complaints, and defections.
Also of great concern, over four in ten respondents reported their greatest pain points include situations in which different customer service agents give different answers. This lack of consistency in answers provided by CSRs was most pronounced in the following sectors:
We have all had the experience of getting different answers from different agents. Although occasionally this has a happy result (lower price for a product or a quicker appointment date… ) usually this is a source of confusion that creates dissatisfaction. It reflects poorly on the employer and indicates a need to look at in formation sources -both technological and human – that are used by agents.
The demographic data for these two questions are interesting and warrant careful consideration by forward-looking managers. Younger participants in the survey showed more irritation with agents not knowing the answers than older participants.
Certainly, these survey results are a wake-up call for managers. To provide superior customer service and obtain top customer satisfaction scores, you need to have people, processes and technology that can provide consistent, accurate answers to all those who contact your center.
The results shown above, which come from customers, mirror the issues faced by agents and detailed in other research that is focused on contact center agents themselves. In a worldwide survey of contact center agents conducted by eGain, the question asked was “What creates the biggest pain(s) for you in answering questions/resolving problems/executing a customer service process, when you have the customer on the line?”
The second-most cited response by agents, “Answers to questions vary in different systems”, dovetails with the “Different customer service agents give different answers” response from customers cited previously. It helps to explain why different answers may be forthcoming from different agents, and is something managers should seriously investigate. The third-most noted response is “Selecting among multiple apps / windows” supports both of the previous answers, and can help explain the pain caused by them.
Finally, “Keeping up with new or changed information” also fits in with the other responses. The ability to find and communicate the current information needed by the customer is a matter of proper training, knowledge technology and updating of the in formation stored in that technology.
Our latest contact center agent survey, “State of Agent Experience 2022”, sponsored by eGain and conducted in mid-2022, revealed that the agent experience (AX) is going to get even harder. 63% of the 456 respondents said the customer queries are getting more difficult. This is predictable as easier questions continue to get automated across communication channels, whether phone or digital. As the percentage of difficult questions has in creased for front-line agents, human support for them has been reduced. Remote or hybrid work limits or eliminates the “next cube” safety net from in-office colleagues that many agents relied upon to get their answers back before the pandemic. In fact, 76% of respondents in our research said they still work from home, which is surprising given the easing of pandemic restrictions. Nonetheless, this means that Agents are more “on their own” than ever in terms of close-to-hand human support.
One of the other findings of the AX study was the level of stress this provokes in agents, particularly newer agents, who represent an increasing percentage of the workforce in this high-turnover era. These novice agents report stress levels that are 31% higher than the levels for their more tenured peers. This underpins a continuing problem with agents leaving, which is very expensive and disruptive for centers, and is a negative force for both AX and CX.
These crisis indicators point to an increasing need for proper training, complemented by a robust and modern knowledge management system that can fill in the gaps smoothly and quickly for agents searching for answers.
So where are we with knowledge management tools in our industry?
As the previous section noted, the complexity of questions, plus at-home work status, mean that agents are in greater need than ever of contextual and personalized knowledge guidance delivered to them at the point of customer interactions.
Yet, Gartner data, reported by Smart Customer Service in 2018, indicated that “only 16 percent of representatives find that the systems and tools actually help them handle customer issues and even fewer – just 12 percent – say tools simplify their day-to-day work.”
The inverse of these numbers would indicate that 84% of agents do not find their systems and tools, on balance, help them with customer issues, and 88% feel their tools do not simplify their day-to-day work.
Our State of AX research showed an alarming 64% do not have any kind of conversational or process guidance tools to help them navigate a customer conversation effectively, efficiently, consistently, and compliantly. Agents who are unsupported by “the cubicle next door” and by their knowledge systems are clearly going to provide lower-quality and slower service – and will suffer in terms of morale themselves.
What comes out of our research is a picture of a very stressful work experience for agents, involving interactions with multiple software applications and multiple tech support interactions. All of this must be seen in the context of customer interactions that are becoming more complex and more pressured over time.
So the research evidence points toward difficulties for agents in their quest to resolve increasingly complex customer requests on a consistent, accurate and timely basis. Agents become the sandwich meat in the middle of the CX dilemma, with inevitable impacts on AX.
The AX-Knowledge dilemma confronting many contact centers can only be addressed by empowering agents with superior knowledge tools (complemented with appropriate training) that bring structure and certainty to the information access and problem resolution process. Think of carpenters with well-ordered workshops, who know exactly where to find the tools needed to complete their tasks. Compare that mental picture with a vision of poorly ordered workshops, where finding the right tool may take a long period of time and provide a sub-optimal result – because the right tool is hidden under a mess or was never brought into the workshop in the first place.
Or think of your own electronic files (yes, this can be painful, but instructive). Information that has been properly organized and curated will be readily available for quick retrieval, while information that is not curated will cause you delays and frustration.
As a manager, you want to put your front-line agents in a position to do their jobs professionally, accurately and swiftly. Knowledge management technology that is designed for the new age of digital, remote-first (or hybrid) contact centers is a tool that can transform the agent experience and allow agents to elevate the customer experience, all to the advantage of your enterprise. Empowered agents are also satisfied agents you are more likely to retain – avoiding the expense and disruption of high turnover.
Modern knowledge management involves enterprise software (usually cloud-based) which agents access from their desktops. The best knowledge tools load quickly when agents log on and have a user-friendly interface that rivals those of modern consumer apps. Agents can click on informational categories and input search options that will then guide them down to the answer by asking questions that the agent can relay to the caller. The agent then uses the customer’s answers to input responses to the system. The interaction among caller, agent and knowledge system ultimately leads to the correct answer the agent needs or the goal the customer wants to accomplish.
Naturally, the system must be set up and knowledge needs to be created and curated with thought and care by people who are familiar with:
Poor KM can hobble operations and make managers wary of adopting new knowledge systems for fear that they will be entangled in yet another project failure. However, the proper knowledge management technology, implemented with best practices, can bring very high return on investment, boost AX, and improve service quality and compliance.
In addition, some modern systems use artificial intelligence to further enhance knowledge management. For example, some of these tools leverage various aspects of Al to better understand customer intent and provide conversational guidance to agents, learning from prior interactions to help optimize knowledge on an ongoing basis.
The financial math behind this concept can be very compelling. Consider a knowledge management {KM} system that reduces your Average Handle Time metric from 5 minutes to 4.5 minutes. A center with 1,000,000 calls per year could save 10% of time spent on calls. If average cost per call is currently $5.00, then reducing the cost to $4.50 would save $500,000. This type of savings is not unusual with good KM implementations.
It is no surprise that the research evidence and the lived experiences of many contact centers point to the same solution. Customer contact is a company function that brings together the ability to create and manage relationships with the ability to make knowledge readily available to those who will use that knowledge to in crease revenues to the company.
The quest to make information easily available to agents so that they can share that information with customers is the central purpose of knowledge management. Successful knowledge management systems elevate the agent experience and make these employees feel more professional, supported and satisfied. This, in turn, elevates the customer experience and results in higher satisfaction and loyalty.
Download the PDF to also read valuable case studies.