CRM - November 2007 - (Page S5) Sponsored Content November 2007 5 Knowledge Management for “Stand Out” Customer Service 6 Best Practices from the Global 2000 Customer service has emerged as one of the few remaining differentiators that businesses can sustain over time. Companies that are winning in this environment provide “stand-out” customer service by using knowledge to empower contact center agents and drive self-service interactions. In delivering KM solutions to world-class contact centers and self-service operations for over 15 years, we have compiled hundreds of best practices that improve the odds of success in KM implementations, while maximizing ROI. Listed below are some of the popular ones. 1. QUANTIFY VALUE typically include: • LEAD EXPERT: INDIVIDUAL WHO DECIDES HOW THE KB WILL BE ORGANIZED, WHICH TOPICS WILL BE COVERED, WHAT THE ROLES OF VARIOUS PEOPLE IN THE TEAM ARE, AND PLANS FOR MAINTENANCE AND USE • USERS: HIGH-PERFORMANCE CONTACT CENTER AGENTS WHO PROVIDE SUGGESTIONS to the level of ordinary customers who may not know technical terms such as whether their mutual fund is “no load,” “frontloaded,” or “back-loaded.” Using jargon in questions posed by agents or self-service systems is a guaranteed way to increase escalations and customer defections. Best Practice: Find KB contributors that are both technically competent and not too far removed from customer contact. Successful customer service depends as much on the questions posed to customers as the answers. 6. PROVIDE FLEXIBLE CONTENT ACCESS • KNOWLEDGE AUTHORS: INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE TRAINED TO USE AUTHORING TOOLS • PROJECT MANAGER: INDIVIDUAL WHO KEEPS THE PROJECT ON TRACK 3. AVOID THE “SWISS CHEESE” SYNDROME Ambitious deployments almost always result in a KB that is solid in places, but full of holes, like a slice of Swiss cheese. This is a recipe for failure, because if users can’t find the answers, or get inadequate or wrong answers, they will quickly stop using the system. Best Practice: Focus on depth and quality rather than breadth. For instance, if an enterprise sells printers, scanners, and copiers, the best approach would be to cover one product line thoroughly first. 4. MAINTAIN VELOCITY Assessing expected and realized ROI before and after the deployment helps you justify the initial investment as well as ongoing maintenance of the knowledge base (KB), while elevating your visibility as a value creator for your business. Best Practice: Make sure the metrics you use are aligned with business objectives. For instance, if your main business goal is to increase upsell and cross-sell through knowledge-enabled contextual offers, reduction in call handle times will be a conflicting metric. As you assess ROI, keep in mind that KM delivers positive ROI in areas such as: • INCREASE IN FIRST-TIME FIXES AND REVENUE THROUGH UPSELL AND CROSS-SELL People have different ways of finding information, or the same person may use different methods to suit the situation. A flexible approach to information access dramatically improves user adoption and ROI. For instance, novice agents, whether they are in-house or outsourced, may find it difficult to wade through hundreds of search hits to find the right answer, but may fare better if they are guided through a dialog, powered by an inference engine. On the other hand, experienced agents may prefer to quickly process search hits. Best Practice: Provide users multiple ways to access information—FAQ, browse, search, and guided help. The key here is to make sure that the KB remains the same and there are no content silos. eGain has helped world-class companies achieve and sustain customer service excellence for more than a decade. eGain Service™, the company’s top-rated customer service and knowledge management software suite, enables organizations to build customer interaction hubs to provide best-in-class customer service and experience, and reduce service costs. Available for on-premise or ondemand deployment, eGain Service™ includes integrated applications for multi-modal web self-service with flexible information access methods and adaptive content management, email/fax/letter management, chat, live web collaboration, case management and knowledge management, built on a common customer interaction hub platform. A classic mistake in KM implementations is not making midcourse adjustments to keep the project on track. Best Practice: If the deployment appears to be falling behind schedule, narrow the scope of the KB and finish on schedule. In fact, it is better to widen the scope later to expand the benefits of the deployment. As a rough guide, a typical enterprise deployment should not take more than three months after the initial planning, with three or four full-time people engaged. Deployment includes software installation, knowledge gathering, and testing both the quality of the KB and system performance. 5. BALANCE “IVORY TOWER KNOWLEDGE” WITH “STREET SMARTS” • REDUCTION IN ESCALATIONS, TRANSFERS, REPEAT CALLS, CALL HANDLE TIMES, TRAINING TIME, UNWARRANTED PRODUCT RETURNS, FIELD VISITS, AND STAFF WAGE PREMIUMS 2. BUILD THE RIGHT TEAM Successful KM implementations start with the right team for knowledge capture and creation. Best Practice: Build a cross-functional team that can bring a 360-degree approach to knowledge creation. Best-practice teams Enterprises often make the mistake of relying solely on internally focused domain experts who rarely speak to customers. It is sometimes difficult for experts to get down http://www.egain.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of CRM - November 2007 CRM - November 2007 Contents Front Office Reality Check Customer Centricity Have You Caught It? The Mother of Enterprise Information Market Focus: Technology: The Simple Truth about Complex Manufacturing Q&A: Gianforte Talks CRM Required Reading Predicting Profitability Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center Cast a Narrow Net Modern Times, Modern Methods Primos Hunting Calls Snares Efficiency Nailing It Down Moving in on Mortgage Delinquencies RDS Delivery Delivers on Service Secret of My Success Re:Tooling The Tipping Point Pint of View CRM - November 2007 CRM - November 2007 - CRM - November 2007 (Page Cover1) CRM - November 2007 - CRM - November 2007 (Page Cover2) CRM - November 2007 - Contents (Page 3) CRM - November 2007 - Contents (Page 4) CRM - November 2007 - Contents (Page 5) CRM - November 2007 - Front Office (Page 6) CRM - November 2007 - Front Office (Page 7) CRM - November 2007 - Reality Check (Page 8) CRM - November 2007 - Reality Check (Page 9) CRM - November 2007 - Customer Centricity (Page 10) CRM - November 2007 - Customer Centricity (Page 11) CRM - November 2007 - Have You Caught It? (Page 12) CRM - November 2007 - The Mother of Enterprise Information (Page 13) CRM - November 2007 - Market Focus: Technology: The Simple Truth about Complex Manufacturing (Page 14) CRM - November 2007 - Market Focus: Technology: The Simple Truth about Complex Manufacturing (Page 15) CRM - November 2007 - Q&A: Gianforte Talks CRM (Page 16) CRM - November 2007 - Required Reading (Page 17) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page 18) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page 19) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page 20) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page 21) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page 22) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S1) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S2) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S3) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S4) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S5) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S6) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S7) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page S8) CRM - November 2007 - Predicting Profitability (Page 23) CRM - November 2007 - Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center (Page 24) CRM - November 2007 - Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center (Page 25) CRM - November 2007 - Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center (Page 26) CRM - November 2007 - Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center (Page 27) CRM - November 2007 - Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center (Page 28) CRM - November 2007 - Checking the Pulse of the Contact Center (Page 29) CRM - November 2007 - Cast a Narrow Net (Page 30) CRM - November 2007 - Cast a Narrow Net (Page 31) CRM - November 2007 - Cast a Narrow Net (Page 32) CRM - November 2007 - Cast a Narrow Net (Page 33) CRM - November 2007 - Cast a Narrow Net (Page 34) CRM - November 2007 - Cast a Narrow Net (Page 35) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 36) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 37) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 38) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 39) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 40) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 41) CRM - November 2007 - Modern Times, Modern Methods (Page 42) CRM - November 2007 - Nailing It Down (Page 43) CRM - November 2007 - Moving in on Mortgage Delinquencies (Page 44) CRM - November 2007 - RDS Delivery Delivers on Service (Page 45) CRM - November 2007 - Secret of My Success (Page 46) CRM - November 2007 - Re:Tooling (Page 47) CRM - November 2007 - The Tipping Point (Page 48) CRM - November 2007 - The Tipping Point (Page 49) CRM - November 2007 - Pint of View (Page 50) CRM - November 2007 - Pint of View (Page Cover3) CRM - November 2007 - Pint of View (Page Cover4)
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