CRM - August 2008 - (Page 12) CUSTOMER CENTRICITY BY DONNA FLUSS Hold On to Your Customers Why the contact center may be your last line of defense business world is that competitors are always looking to steal your customers, and many customers are on the lookout for a better deal. Annual customer-attrition rates range from 7 percent in some industries with high exit barriers, such as banking and insurance, to nearly 40 percent in the cable/Internet service provider industry. Slowing the customer churn rate by as little as 1 percent can add millions of dollars to any sizable company’s bottom line. As it’s a great deal more expensive to acquire customers than to retain them, an effective customer retention strategy is crucial to success. Customer retention is a primary concern for all companies, whether B2B or B2C. Enterprises have traditionally placed a greater emphasis on customer retention during recessionary times, when new customers are much harder to find. Over the last few years, as companies have begun to accept the painful reality that consumers view most A F U N D A M E N TA L truth in the for building a loyal customer base. The marketing department has to realize that, while it’s responsible for creating loyalty programs, the contact center helps customers understand the initiatives and is often instrumental in the success of the effort. The best way to achieve interdepartmental cooperation between the two is for them to share enterprise and customer retention goals, where the success of one organization is clearly dependent upon the success of the other. EMPOWER AND RECOGNIZE CUSTOMER-RETENTION SPECIALISTS Enterprise management must empower contact center managers to take immediate action to retain an at-risk customer, and not tie their hands with strict limits from compliance and auditing groups, as happens all too often. It’s fine to assign guidelines and budgets for fee reversals, free services, gifts given away, etc.—but customers are not all equal. Some are worth a lot more than others and managers need to be able to handle each one individually. Since agents are the last line of defense against customer churn, they should have the flexibility to do what it takes (within reasonable limits) to retain customers. Contact center agents who retain customers also must be recognized for performing what is unquestionably a difficult-but-crucial task—preventing frustrated and often angry customers from deserting the company. Successful retention agents must be consistently empowered, supported, and recognized. The best ones are highly motivated by the intrinsic challenge of the job and thrive on their success—but even if they don’t perform solely for the recognition, formal rewards and incentives will help attract the best talent for this high-stress function. Customer retention is an enterprise goal and contact center personnel are well positioned to contribute to the success of this objective, but only if they are invited to the decision-making table. Asking contact center managers to retain customers is a good start, but they can contribute more substantially if they participate in developing the strategy for customer retention and loyalty programs, as they know firsthand what customers want and why they defect. Donna Fluss is founder and president of DMG Consulting LLC, a leading provider of contact center and analytics research, market analysis, and consulting. Contact her at donna.fluss@dmgconsult.com. EMPOWER CONTACT CENTER MANAGERS TO TAKE IMMEDIATE ACTION TO RETAIN AT-RISK CUSTOMERS. products and services as commodities, senior management has also begun to appreciate the crucial role played by contact center personnel in retaining customers when marketing and loyalty programs fail to achieve their goals. MARKETING AND SERVICE NEED TO WORK COOPERATIVELY Contact center staff can provide the necessary insights for proactive customer retention, if marketing and senior management invite them to the table. Contact center managers should participate in strategy sessions to build customer-retention marketing programs, as they know firsthand why customers are closing their accounts—and they may have good ideas about the best ways to retain them. In many cases, customer dissatisfaction is driven by an operational problem, back-office issue, process failure, or lack of a critical product feature. Contact centers can also be effective in the last-ditch effort to save disgruntled customers, but the ideal situation is to avoid reaching this point at all. It’s time for contact centers and marketing organizations to work cooperatively to achieve enterprise goals 12 CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT | AUGUST 2008 www.destinationCRM.com http://www.destinationCRM.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of CRM - August 2008 CRM - August 2008 Contents Front Office Feedback Reality Check Customer Centricity The Tipping Point Maximum Security A Code Win Doesn’t Blow Forming the Platform CRM on Twitter CRM Class Is in Session Making CRM Mandatory for University Administration Required Reading Cover Story: Calling it Quits Wouldja Look at That? 8 Enterprise Strategies That Stick CRM Searches for Search All Lines Are Not Busy UC: As Easy as A-B-C Even Contact Centers Have Room for Improvement Money Lying Around? Secret of My Success Re:Tooling Scouting Report Pint of View CRM - August 2008 CRM - August 2008 - CRM - August 2008 (Page Cover1) CRM - August 2008 - CRM - August 2008 (Page Cover2) CRM - August 2008 - Contents (Page 3) CRM - August 2008 - Contents (Page 4) CRM - August 2008 - Contents (Page 5) CRM - August 2008 - Front Office (Page 6) CRM - August 2008 - Front Office (Page 7) CRM - August 2008 - Feedback (Page 8) CRM - August 2008 - Feedback (Page 9) CRM - August 2008 - Reality Check (Page 10) CRM - August 2008 - Reality Check (Page 11) CRM - August 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 12) CRM - August 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 13) CRM - August 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 14) CRM - August 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 15) CRM - August 2008 - Maximum Security (Page 16) CRM - August 2008 - A Code Win Doesn’t Blow (Page 17) CRM - August 2008 - CRM on Twitter (Page 18) CRM - August 2008 - CRM Class Is in Session (Page 19) CRM - August 2008 - Making CRM Mandatory for University Administration (Page 20) CRM - August 2008 - Required Reading (Page 21) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page 22) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page 23) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page 24) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page 25) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page 26) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page BP1) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page BP2) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page BP3) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page BP4) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page BP5) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page BP6) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page BP7) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page BP8) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page BP9) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page BP10) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page BP11) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page BP12) CRM - August 2008 - Cover Story: Calling it Quits (Page 27) CRM - August 2008 - Wouldja Look at That? (Page 28) CRM - August 2008 - Wouldja Look at That? (Page 29) CRM - August 2008 - Wouldja Look at That? (Page 30) CRM - August 2008 - Wouldja Look at That? (Page 31) CRM - August 2008 - Wouldja Look at That? (Page 32) CRM - August 2008 - Wouldja Look at That? (Page 33) CRM - August 2008 - 8 Enterprise Strategies That Stick (Page 34) CRM - August 2008 - 8 Enterprise Strategies That Stick (Page 35) CRM - August 2008 - 8 Enterprise Strategies That Stick (Page 36) CRM - August 2008 - 8 Enterprise Strategies That Stick (Page 37) CRM - August 2008 - 8 Enterprise Strategies That Stick (Page 38) CRM - August 2008 - CRM Searches for Search (Page 39) CRM - August 2008 - CRM Searches for Search (Page 40) CRM - August 2008 - CRM Searches for Search (Page 41) CRM - August 2008 - CRM Searches for Search (Page 42) CRM - August 2008 - UC: As Easy as A-B-C (Page 43) CRM - August 2008 - Even Contact Centers Have Room for Improvement (Page 44) CRM - August 2008 - Money Lying Around? (Page 45) CRM - August 2008 - Secret of My Success (Page 46) CRM - August 2008 - Re:Tooling (Page 47) CRM - August 2008 - Scouting Report (Page 48) CRM - August 2008 - Scouting Report (Page 49) CRM - August 2008 - Pint of View (Page 50) CRM - August 2008 - Pint of View (Page Cover3) CRM - August 2008 - Pint of View (Page Cover4)
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