Help Your Workforce Become Ambassadors for Your Brand

Episode 89

As you likely know by now, I’ve been focusing on customer service for the past several weeks and interviewing my fellow Smart Customer Service conference speakers. Today, I would like to give you my personal takes on customer service. In this episode, I briefly discuss three of the most important aspects to keep in mind while building a customer support team and then I go in depth about the main component that often gets overlooked when working on these three things.

Mentioned in this episode:

Play here (the red triangle below), on iTunes, Stitcher or TuneIn Radio (Amazon Alexa) or wherever you listen to podcasts.

Voice of Influence Podcast Andrea Joy Wenburg

Transcript

Hey, hey!  It’s Andrea, and welcome to the Voice of Influence podcast!  So over the last couple of months, we have been really focusing in on customer service here at the Voice of Influence podcast.  And the reason why we’ve been doing that is that I’m going to be speaking at Smart Customer Service, which is a national conference for customer service in Washington, DC on April 29th through May 1st. So, I’ve taken this opportunity to connect with other speakers at this event and invite them to participate in interviews for the Voice of Influence podcast for a couple of different reasons.  First of all, to share customer service insights from some of the nation’s leading experts then also to be able to connect with them personally.  I wanted to kind of get to know some of the people that I’d be speaking with and then also to promote the conference.

Well, today, I want to share with you a little bit more about what my take is on customer service.  So, I think that we all know that service isn’t all about the other person.  It’s about connecting with them, helping them solving their problems, making sure that they’re having a good experience with your brand, with your company or with your organization.  You’re wanting to be there for the people that you’re here to serve.  That’s what customer service is really all about. But there are a number of things that can get in the way of really doing it well.  And some of those things have been already talked about in the last couple of months. 

One of those things is branding and brand voice and making sure that customer service agents really know what to say, how to say it, and how to really communicate in a way that is in line with the company or the brand.  So that the person who is calling or the person who is interacting with that customer service agent that they would always have a similar experience and that they would feel like they are really connecting with the brand when they’re connecting with that person.  That’s one really important thing.

Another thing would be the idea of essential skills or the ability to communicate well, the ability to empathize, and the ability to write well utilizing those centralized documents or branding elements and bringing that into how they communicate.  So communication is really another big piece of it. 

And there’s always the issue of “Well, how do you keep people?  How do you keep customer service agents?  It’s a kinda hard job.” If you think about it, there are people who are listening to complaints almost all day long.  Now, there are some benefits, I mean, one of the things that you do all day long is solve problems for people, and so in that sense, there is something that can really be satisfying about customer service. But in general, it can be a really kind of a difficult job.  You’re always putting yourself out there to help out, but you might not always be able to be the one to make the difference.  You might not always be able to solve the problem, and you might not always know what the next thing to do or where to send people.  Or you might be dealing with somebody who’s really upset and they’re not necessarily mad at you, but you’re the one that sort of taking on the brands of all of the anger and frustrations of the person you might be speaking with. So, customer service agents also have to deal with that. 

It’s a rough job; I mean it’s not easy to really do and to do it well.  And so it’s difficult to keep people in those positions.  So companies are always looking for ways to encourage people and to keep them.  And one of those ways can be rewards and recognition, giving a raise, or keeping track of how well they’re doing on things.  So, these are all really, really important aspects of doing customer service and having a customer service team and training them well to be able to handle all these situations and all these needs, and to know how to handle all of the technical things as well. But I fear that we can miss out on something if we just do those things.  If we are giving them everything that they need but they’re not still staying, you know.  Maybe they’re still leaving.  They’re still not sticking around.  The numbers aren’t as high as you want them to be or your customers are still coming back with a lot of complaints.  Customer satisfaction still isn’t where you want it to be. Maybe you’re hitting the status quo and it’s working out okay for you, but you know that there’s another level.  Like you know you could take it to the next level, but you’re not just sure how to do it because you’ve been working on all these different things like centralization of information and rewarding your people and doing all these things that you can to give them the skills that they need to be able to do what they need to do their jobs.

But I tell you, there’s something that is missing and that’s something gets down to the core of a person.  And it hits on a human need that is so, so vital for us to connect with and that is helping your people to truly connect and genuinely connect with your company’s purpose and your customer’s need. So, when I think of customer service and all of the issues that are surrounding it, the struggles, the solutions, the main thing that I keep saying not being present, at least not to the degree that I think it could be is helping the workforce to truly connect with the company’s purpose, with the company’s values, their mission, or their vision to feel like they’re really a part of it.  So that when they come to work every day, they feel like they have meaning, that their work has meaning and purpose.  So they’re not just going to work but they’re going to meet a challenge, to bring the best of who they are to the challenges in front of them.

And my guess is that it if you’re listening to this episode, this podcast; you are probably the kind of person who really does want to see that happen for your people.  You want them to feel purpose-driven.  You want them to have a sense of passion inside of them and care about what their job is.  You want them to have meaning and to feel like that their work matters in the world.

So on the podcast, I frequently ask guests “Why did you start getting interested in your specific area of expertise?”  “Why do you do what you do?” 

Well, let me answer that question for you.  So, Voice of Influence is born out of my background in actually singing.  When I was young, as a child, my family would sing together.  We would go around to different churches in our small community and put on these little programs and I would sing solos and my sister and I would sing duets, and our family would sing all together.  And we had this just little thing going on where we would sing a lot and I sang a lot growing up, and that was kind of what I wanted to do when I grew up.

When I was in high school, I ended up choosing a college that was a big music school, and I was really excited to be able to use my voice.  And the reason why I was excited to use my voice is that I knew that when I got up in front of an audience that they would be moved by what I would sing, and I knew it because I’ve done it over and over again.  I just knew how to connect to the meaning of the song and then invite other people into that experience so that they could connect to the meaning of the song as well.  So that they would feel moved.

Well, one of my college professors, she taught me something about my voice.  You see, voice is something that is really kind of personal.  It’s different than playing the piano or playing a different instrument, because a different instrument, it could go out of tune on its own.  You know a key could break or something could need oiled and that’s something that’s apart from the person who is performing. But a voice, on the other hand, this comes from your own body.  It’s something that arises out of you.  There is a certain natural ability that people have with their voice.  They are able to sing high or low.  They are able to have a certain kind of tone or hear the pitch so that they can make sure that they’re on key.  All of these things are very, very personal because they come out of the person themselves.

And so when I was in college, I had a voice teacher who was sort of different than the ones I’d had before.  Instead of just welcoming me into her room and starting our scales and then working on our technical details that came up within songs that I was practicing, she would start off by asking me how I was doing. 

Now, why would she waste time at the beginning of every lesson to say, “How are you doing?” I asked her this one time and her response was something to the effect that “If people come into my office and they’re all worried about something else that’s going on, they’re not going to be able to use their voice freely.”  And I thought that was so profound. 

I see that and I see how people use their figurative voice, their voice of influence, the one that comes out of themselves in order to be able to have an impact on others. And this voice that wants to make a difference, this voice that wants to help, that wants to serve well, this voice is just as personal as the one that I was using to sing.  It’s personal.  There’s a vulnerability to using it and to practicing it.  It can make a huge difference in somebody’s confidence level and their ability to really use it well.

So at Voice of Influence, we believe that everyone has the ability to have a voice of influence, that every voice is unique.  That we’re born with the ability to do certain things and we’re born with the passion to do certain things but then we can also gain skills.  We can get better in other areas as well. 

We believe that every voice matters on a human level that every voice in your company matters and every voice that calls into your call center or works with your customer service team, that every one of those voices matters. But at the same time, we can do things to make them matter more.  We can grow.  We can become more of a voice of influence, not by forcing technique, not by saying, “We have to push it out.”  “We’re trying to get people to do things.”  “We’re trying to force our customer service team to say it this certain way or to drop people in and not to be forceful but to be influential, because it’s not only our voice that matter, it’s also the voice of the customer that matters as well.”

So if you’re wanting your customer service team to be an influence, to build their influence with your customers, then they need to know what it means to have a voice of influence.  They need to be able to have a sense of their own personal identity and connect to the purpose of your company and really know what it means to be a voice of influence.

Do they need that knowledge?  Do they need to be able to know what it is that your company does and how to help your customers and what their job is?  Of course, they need that. 

Do they need skills to learn how to communicate and to be able to handle the processes and the people well?  Of course they do, but they also need to be able to connect to the purpose of your company. 

They need to be able to awaken their passion and feel like they can be a genuine ambassador of sorts for your company.  You don’t want your people to pretend that they care.  You want them to actually care and that’s what your customers want as well. And if your people, if your workforce actually cares and they really do feel connected to the company, then they are going to be able to connect more naturally, more freely with your customers.  And then soon your brand promise and your scripts, your centralized documents; those are going to become part of your customer service agents.  Instead of having them be an external tool that they use, that they’re trying to put on for your customers, they’re going to become those things so that they truly embody the brand promise.  The things that you really care about as a company, they’ll embody that and be able to be a true ambassador for your customers.

Now, one of the questions that always comes up is, well, if we know that this is what we need to do, if we know that it’s important to build culture, to do a good job of communicating our purpose and our values to our workforce, then why aren’t we doing it?  Or why aren’t we studying the companies that do it really well that they’ve had success? 

One of the answers that I’ve heard and I’ve heard it a number of times is that the executives feel like that’s beneath them.  It’s beneath them intellectually to go down to that personal level and help their people to really connect with their company. But I don’t think that’s the only thing. 

I think it might be to serve this level thing that you might see in some companies, but I think that more often than not leaders wanted to help their people do this.  They see it.  They see that it’s a good thing.  They can acknowledge that at least in their heads.  But deep down, they really don’t think that they have what it takes to pull it off. 

Leaders struggle to think that they can actually help their people and really turn around the culture this idea of connecting.  It may not be something that they’re good at, but that doesn’t mean that they aren’t willing to go there.  It’s just that it’s so scary because it’s not familiar.

But let me tell you something.  If you have any desire, whatsoever, to really almost empower your workforce, to help them to embody your brand, your brand promise, to help them really become ambassadors for your company; if you long for that, if you want them to feel purpose and meaning in their work, that is all it takes to start the process.  If you start out with that longing then I’m here to tell you that you can do it. 

You do have what it takes. You may also need to develop skills.  You may need to gain a sense of your own personal identity and your own personal sense of purpose.  But if this isn’t purposeful, if it isn’t meaningful to help your people find meaning in their work to connect with your company in a deep meaningful way, then what it is?  It starts with the longing and then if you really don’t feel like you have what it takes, if you’re not sure what next steps to take, then that’s something that we can help you with.

As I mentioned, I will be speaking at the Smart Customer Service Conference here in Washington, DC in about a week.  And in that talk, I’m going to be talking specifically about what your people need in their training in order to be able to truly connect with your company and your company’s purpose.  I’m also going to be talking about how to get buy-in, executive buy-in, as well as buy-in from managers and frontline service agents in order to make this kind of transformation.

If you’re able to be at my session, I would love to have you there.  Please tell me that you listened to this podcast, I’ll have a special gift for you.  If you’re not able to be there, then email me at andrea@voiceofinfluence.net.  That’s andrea@voiceofinfluence.net.  We will find a way to share that information with you because just like the people who work for you, your voice matters, and you can make it matter more.

How Artificial Intelligence Will Impact Customer Relationship Management with Bob Fernekees

Episode 88

Over the past several weeks I’ve been speaking with other presenters who’ll be joining me at the Smart Customer Service conference in Washington D.C. starting on April 29th. Well, today I have a very special treat for you because I was fortunate enough to speak with the leader of the conference, Bob Fernekees. Bob is also the Publisher of CRM Magazine. In this episode, Bob discusses what led him to the customer service industry and why it means so much to him, the work he does at CRM Magazine, how the Smart Customer Service brand came to be, the changes and trends he’s noticing in the customer service field, his thoughts on A.I. and how it will impact the landscape of customer service and brand management, the details of his upcoming Smart Customer Service conference, and more!

Mentioned in this episode:

Play here (the red triangle below), on iTunes, Stitcher or TuneIn Radio (Amazon Alexa) or wherever you listen to podcasts.

Transcript

Hey, hey!  It’s Andrea and welcome to the Voice of Influence podcast.  Alright folks, so you know that the last couple of months we have been focusing in on customer service, in particular, in leading up to the Smart Customer Service Conference in Washington, DC, April 29th through May 1st.  And today I have with me Bob Fernekees who is the publisher of CRM Magazine and is in charge of this conference.

 

Andrea:  So Bob, we’re honored to have you with us today.

Bob Fernekees:  Great!  I’d love being here, Andrea.  I love it!

Andrea:  Alright, so Bob, can you tell us, first of all, tell us a little bit about CRM Magazine and what you do there?

Bob Fernekees:  OK.  Well, I’m the publisher of the magazine and I understand that a lot of people may not know where the magazine is these days.  But it was the chief form of communication, especially in B2B 20 years ago.  We launched the magazine in 1998 actually as sales and field force automation.  Around 2000, we saw that things were changing and we changed the name of the magazine to CRM Magazine.

Sales and field force automation is still a thing, believe me, but CRM has grown well beyond the scope of just sales and marketing customer service.  But I’d say in the last 20 years, the big change has been that the customer service piece has really become huge.  And that’s reflected in the pages of the magazine or website Destination CRM.

And we actually started a second website, Smart Customer Service to support not only the conference, but really to give customer service people a dedicated place where they could get information.  Not much marketing automation or sales type of information, it’s 100 percent customer service focused.  So, we’re still going strong 21 years later, so it’s been an exciting ride and things have changed so much but I’m sure you know that as well, Andrea.  Things have changed, you know, unbelievably in the last 20 years in technology.

Andrea:  Oh, certainly.  So what are some of the biggest changes that you’re seeing now?  

Bob Fernekees:  Well, you know, it’s funny because every single year, there’s almost a theme of new technologies that are sort of bursting on the scene and really become just all over the place in terms of media coverage and messaging from vendors and things that people are concerned about.  This year, definitely I would have to say artificial intelligence and machine learning is sort of the big buzz.

As with most technologies that especially really large, you know, large life-changing technologies, it will take many years for these technologies sort of work themselves through the system.  And probably in 20 years from now, they’ll kind of dropout of sight almost like when, the turn of the 2000’s cloud computing was a huge change in technology.

It couldn’t even be thought of before that because, you know, in the 1990s, late 1990s, most people were still using dial up.  You just didn’t have the bandwidth or the infrastructure to support real cloud computing.  But now it would be really odd if you heard, end users or vendors touting their ability to kept cloud computing.  It just becomes everywhere and that’s probably what’s going to happen to a large degree with the artificial intelligence and machine learning, you know, in a decade or two. 

Andrea:  So it’ll be so normal that we won’t even talk about it anymore.

Bob Fernekees:  Absolutely.  I guarantee that that will happen.

Andrea:  Sure.

Bob Fernekees:  And there are many, many different cases of that, but you know, just think cell phones, just think anything. And yeah that’s the way it’ll go but it’ll take a while.  

Andrea:  So do you think that AI will replace customer service to a certain degree or completely?  Or do you think that there’s always going to be a role for human to human connection in customer service?

Bob Fernekees:  Well that’s a really good question and we’ve done lots of webcasts and lots of content around this.  And I could tell you for the foreseeable future, AI, machine learning, you know, all the technology portions of it will do pretty much more of the same which is what the technology does great.  It takes low value interactions and automates them.  So that nobody really wants to talk to a human being, especially if they want to do something that’s fairly simple.

And that will just become, you know, web self-service on steroids where the AI or the machine learning portion of it will just make that so much easier, so much faster, so much more efficient voice, which was a big thing 20 years ago is coming back around with all the conversational technologies and natural language, you know, conversion.  So that people will be interacting instead of using a keyboard, especially since everybody is on their cell phones right now, a voice will become huge.

And so all of that self-service that can be conducted through AI or machine learning will be done, but there will always be humans on the other side, especially for high value or really complex or just the out-of-the-ordinary types of questions and issues.  Now, from what I understand is that, that will really make the life of your typical contact center agent a lot more interesting just because they won’t constantly be asking, “How do I reset my password?”  “How do I do this?”  “How do I do that?”  They’ll just be dealing more or less on more interesting, less repetitive types of service issues.

Andrea:   High value, as you said.  Interesting.  I just had a question in my mind, just a second.  So how do you see AI helping being almost like a brand asset more than even just as a quick answer to solve a problem?  Is there a way the AI is or can be even encouraging the brand connection with the customer or is it mostly going to be just “This is the way we do it.  We get it done fast and that’s what we’re offering you here in this moment.”  Is there any kind of way to connect with the brand anymore with AI?

Bob Fernekees:  You know what, I think that really forward-looking business leaders right now are looking at that piece of it, AI and brand, really hard because you know as the old song goes, it’s really, you know, a lot more…well, put it this way, selling on price the old way doesn’t really create value for a brand because everybody can sell at a lower rate up to a given point.

Andrea:  Uh-hmm.

Bob Fernekees  But when you’re using AI, and that’s the other great thing about the industry and the technology piece that we’re in right now, Andrea, is that it’s not customer service and marketing have blended together, customer service and sales have blended together.  So in many ways, there won’t really be those kinds of delineations.  Yeah, there’ll be outreach demand generation and those types of things but building a brand that will be done through sort of a mixing or melding of all three.  So when you’ve got AI into the mix and, you know, machine learning, you’ll really have brand managers trying to capture the essence of what their brand is to a prospect or a customer.

Now, it’s really hard to see when we’re talking about consumer product goods.  I don’t know enough about consumer product goods, I’ll say it right now, but to build a brand around, you know let’s say laundry detergent is really hard for me personally to conceptualize.  To build a brand around mountain climbing equipment, that seems a lot easier because, you know, immediately you can say that, you know, “Hey, delivering high quality content, or somebody climbing El Capitan is something that could really enhance your brand.”  I’m sure you can do that on a laundry detergent side too, but it’s just a lot easier when you think of a brand that’s much more extreme.

So yeah, I think, you know, AI will definitely allow all those things and it’ll be able to do trillions of computations to say that Andrea Wenburg would really enjoy receiving this communication from us and here’s what we think will be her next action and, you know, all those things that you can’t really do right now.  And it’s probably very hard for a lot of people to conceptualize these things right now just because no one else has.  But we’re headed into that territory where there will be lots and lots of clever users that no one has thought of before.  I mean, just think of Facebook.

Andrea:  Yeah, that’s exactly what I was thinking.

Bob Fernekees:  I mean, you know, everybody knew it’s a great idea just because there was social media before that, but to this extent, probably not literally changing democracy.

Andrea:  Oh yeah.  Well, and I was even thinking about Facebook algorithms and how the other day I purchased a Growth Mindset workbook for my kids, OK.  And then the next day on both Instagram and Facebook, I’m seeing ads about another workbook by that same company that’s on resilience now.

Bob Fernekees: Right.

Andrea:  It’s a lot like what you’re talking about in terms of being able to predict what the next step would be for the customer.

Bob Fernekees:  Absolutely, absolutely. Now, I think the way that most companies, and believe me it’s getting way, way, way more complex, especially up to maybe two years ago, I think most companies did that type of ad serving, you know, in a very heavy-handed flatfooted type of way.  So that if you bought a Ford car and signed the deal last month for the next six months, you’d be seeing ads for Ford cars and it’s like “Ohh, I already bought one and I don’t know why I kept seeing this now.”

Now, you know, that’s just a technology in its infancy.  But, you know, now whether or not they predicted the needs of your children to get these workbooks, probably not, but they definitely predicted your likelihood of buying another workbook on a similar but different topic in serving you that ad.  And that’ll just get way more, way more creepy.

Andrea:  You know that’s an interesting way to put it, because I do think that people feel a little like creeped out by things like that.

Bob Fernekees:  Sure.

Andrea:  Yeah, they probably should.  But at the same time, it sounds like we’re going to be not creeped out by that in 20 years is what you’re saying.

Bob Fernekees:  Well, yeah.  Like I said, I mean, you know, there’s an episode of The Office where Dwight is trying to sell his car to Andy and he keeps saying, “Buy this car, buy this car, buy this car.”  And that’s kind of what we’re getting right now in terms of the immaturity of technology right now.  So, yes, it does sound, you know, it is heavy-handed and not real subtle.  But, you know, possibly in the future there will be targeted offers for things that you really need, didn’t know about but could really use that ad value to your life other than just buying the exact same workbook with a slightly different content.

Andrea:  Sure.

Bob Fernekees:  And, you know, in all the ramifications like how I could figure out how old these kids are and what they’re doing, you know, going along through every grade that they go into from now until they get out of school.

Andrea:  Sure.  Yeah, that’s interesting.  I’m trying to think of what the subtle way of doing that would be, but it would be something less obvious is what you’re saying.

Bob Fernekees:  Something less obvious but also could be completely, you know, obvious or it could be something like “Hey, you know, you bought a car and that one component of it, you know, that 100900 was bad and it could fail.” Well, you know, that’s just a recall issue but you kind of get what I’m trying to say that there could be some things that are like a lot more helpful to you and of value to you.

Andrea:  You were talking about forward-thinking companies and it sounds like they really do have to be forward thinking.  They really do have to be able to map out the customer experience and journey and what could possibly happen and all those sorts of things, so lots of innovation and forward thinking, like you’re talking about.

Bob Fernekees:  Yeah, absolutely.  I mean, I think one of the things that probably astounds people that aren’t, you know, sort of sitting in our seats where we get to see lots of different vendors and lots of different applications and end users.  So you’ve got a really broad view of things.  That’s an inch deep, but you do have a broad view of the customer service market.

And one of the things that really surprises me all the time is how much real thought, real effort, and real research goes into customer journey mapping and all of the different sort of strategic people process type, definitely the technology too.  But, you know, just sort of encapsulating the whole thing, obviously, you can’t just plunk technology and you really need a strong idea of how you want your customer to progress and all of those other things that go along with great technology, but it’s amazing to me.  And I’ve met such intelligent people that have really devoted a lot of serious research and I’m sure you have as well. That’s the part that is really encouraging to me.

And the other thing, having done this for quite a while and just seeing things progress, is how far people’s expectations have come.  I mean, it’s hard to believe that we used to do things the way we used to do.  It was the best you could do at the time.  But I think 10 years from now, we’ll be looking back on 2019 as a stone age, as how did we ever deal with having to dial a phone or, you know, just the simple things.  So it’s really encouraging and there are a lot of really smart people that have put a lot of time and effort into figuring that out.

Andrea:  So Bob, what drives you in this industry?  Like why did you get involved in the first place and what kind of, I don’t know kind of excites you about it or feels like it’s a purposeful for you?

Bob Fernekees:  Well, OK that’s a fair question.  Basically, I was involved in the professional broadcast video film industry on the publishing side.  I worked for CBS, but I also worked for magazines, you know, magazines that dealt with professional B2B broadcast video and film production.  So, you know, I kind of did that.  Me and another salesman actually split the cost of some sales force automation software.  I got really interested in at that point.

And around 1998, I guess it was, I heard of a magazine that was starting up.  I really liked the idea of it because that just, for whatever reason that’s what I did.  I felt like it was going to be a really interesting area to go into.  Like I said, the sales automation part of it really was eclipsed very quickly by much larger customer service aspects.

Marketing automation, people don’t really probably remember this, but really marketing automation, didn’t really start to take off until after 2010 in my opinion or maybe even a little bit earlier than that.  But you know, it’s relatively new, which is a really exciting piece of it as well but, it’s relatively new.  But that’s kind of how I got interested in CRM.  It was through Sales Force Automation which was the first iteration.

And when we launched the magazine, it did extremely well.  We changed the magazine to a name CRM Magazine.  At that point in time, I think there was only one analyst that was using “customer relationship management” as an acronym, so we kind of see where things are going. And for the last 20 years or so, it’s just been really exciting because there’s different  that kind of die out and the river changes course, and it’s just really an interesting way to just watch for patterns and see what’s coming up.

You know, we’ve jumped into technologies or different facets which haven’t exactly panned out.  Mostly things don’t pan out and then they come back in five years or so when there were more possible to do.  Like I said, when I started off cloud computing, I mean, there were people trying to do cloud computing in the late ‘90s and it was virtually impossible because they still tried it.  People still bought solutions, but trying to do cloud computing on dial up connections was, you know, hard.

Andrea:  Yes.  I’ve heard that sometimes it’s better to be the second one on the scene after the first person is kind of, yeah, yeah.  OK, so let’s talk a little bit more about the conference.  So what are the different aspects of the conference or the tracks and tell us a little bit more about it.

Bob Fernekees: Sure.  OK, so first of all, we’ve got the conference coming up April 28th through May 1st, Washington, DC.  It’s actually work distinct conferences co-located together.  So it’s a total of about eight tracks.  Now, you know, if you had a Venn diagram sort of the piece in the middle would be customer experience.  We’ve got speech tech.  Speech technologies are used in all sorts of things, conversational interfaces for one. We’ve got some great keynote speakers, which we’ll talk more about that.

But speech tech, huge with contact center, huge in many other different ways.  We’ve got CRM Evolution.  Brent Leary is the chair.  That’s three tracks.  We’ll be covering the breadth of CRM technologies and people and processes as well.  Geoff Ables is doing smart customer service.  Actually, it’s the first year that Brent is doing CRM alone, and Geoff will be doing smart customer service.  That looks like it’s going to be really exciting, super successful, and it’s a great place if you want to come and meet people.

As I was mentioning to you before, we’ve also got a digital experience as well, which is a newcomer.  That’s the fourth conference as well.  But just, you know, to stick with the customer service portion of it, the thing that we’ve done differently with, especially CRM Evolution Smart Customer Service, is that although we have speakers that are aspirational CMO’s of very large companies. We also got people that you actually read on our websites and in our magazine.

So lots of analysts, lots of well-known authors, industry gurus, thought leaders, and you know, you can put a name to the face.  It’s a conference where it’s very easy to talk to these people.  It’s not a large conference where, you know, the session ends and you can’t get near the speaker.  So if it’s a really good place to get out, meet people, and especially meet some of your peers and do some networking on the peer side as well.

Andrea:  Great!  OK, so who would you say it’s for just any company that’s dealing with these particular issues, or is there any more of specificity to the target audience?

Bob Fernekees:  Well, you know, that’s a great question.  We do everything in a broad way.  So we’re like horizontal.  It doesn’t really matter to us if somebody is in financial services versus government applications.  For us, especially for Smart Customer Service, 90 percent of the people that go to the conference are involved in customer service probably at the manager or the director level, really depends on the size of the company.  If we had a VP from Zappos, they’d probably be speaking not in the audience but there could be a VP from a smaller company and that’s kind of how those things go.

But, you know, it’s great for all sorts of call center or customer service or people that are dealing with customer experience.  And like I said, there’s so much research and information out there to go to the conference and to be able to ask the speaker, “Hey, you know, I’m seeing some conflicting information,” or “Here’s my company, here’s our situation.”  And to get some positive feedback with an expert because a lot of the speakers are consultants, analysts, people that seen a wide variety of different types of end users and also have an in depth knowledge of a wide variety of industry solutions and technologies.

So, it’s a great place to come and ask those types of questions.  In today’s day and age, you know, a lot of people don’t like to pick up the phone.  But I still think that, you know, getting face to face and making connections with people is just a great way to go beyond, you know, remove the digital wall and make a human connection and there’s so many different ways things can go from there.

Andrea:  I can definitely attest to the personability or the way that the speakers are ready to connect and help out.  Because having interviewed more than a handful of them, I know that they all really care and they’re sincere and they are smart.  And I just really enjoyed connecting with them personally and so I know that your attendees are going to really appreciate being able to connect with the speakers as well.

Bob Fernekees:  Yeah.  You know, as we were talking before, you know, one of the things that I really liked about this industry is the type of people and professionals that, you know, have made this career.  I definitely like working with people like this and just having them enhanced my life and definitely enhanced my professional life as well.

Andrea:  OK, Bob, so anybody that’s listening, if you’re on the fence, it’s time to sign up because it’s right around the corner here now.  And, Bob, if they can’t make it or even if they do make it, what kind of offerings does CRM have?  Do you have a magazine?  Tell us a little bit more about how they can connect with CRM Magazine and your other offerings.

Bob Fernekees:  OK, so, just right off the bat because I may not have mentioned this is that if you googled CRM magazine, you’d find our site.  Our site is actually called destinationCRM.  So you can go there, you can sign up for the magazine.  It’s free to anybody that’s qualified.  If you’re listening to this podcast, I’m sure you must be qualified unless you have a strange taste in podcast.  So just go there, sign up for the magazine, either site destinationCRM or smartcustomerservice.

You can sign up for any of our newsletters, any of our webcast.  By the way, we do webcasts once a week on different topics.  You’ll be notified if you sign up for one of our newsletters or promotions of what we’ve got coming up.  People really love those. We’ve been doing them for 20 years back in 1998 when there was no broadband and we were trying to do them live from a TV station through camera shoot when there was no broadband.  So that was an interesting thing.

So yeah, we’ve had some troubles with getting a little bit ahead of the technology.  But, you know, we’ve got that.  We got tons of white papers and we will have a bunch of the content on video that you can watch after the conference is over.  Most of it will be edited down.  So you’re getting more of a flavor or maybe some of the major bullet points, but I think we will have some long format video as well.  So there’ll be those opportunities, but there’s nothing like sitting in the audience of, you know, I’m thoroughly convinced.

Andrea:  Yes, I agree.  And you know what, if you happen to be there on April 30th, I’ll be speaking at 1:45 about transforming your call center from a customer service model into a customer’s ascension model for profit and purpose.  So I would love to see you there too.

So, Bob, thank you so much for being here with us on the Voice of Influence podcast and for providing this fantastic conference and connecting people to all these really important solutions around customer relationship management.  And we’ll be sure to link everything that you talked about in the show notes on our website.

Bob Fernekees:  Great!  Thanks so much, Andrea.  It was fun being here and I just think you’re doing a great job.  It’s pleasure meeting you.  I can’t wait to meet you at the conference in person.

Andrea:  Great! See you then.

 

Are Your Analytics Helpful or Are They Noise? with Robert Lamb

Episode 87

Robert Lamb is a customer interaction expert with thirty years of experience. He specializes in transformational strategies for virtualized omnichannel customer contact. He has multiple technical certifications for designing, implementing, integrating, and developing applications for various technologies. Robert has consulted for over 400 customers and designed architectures implemented for over 150 clients. He’s also a published author, an in-demand speaker, and a frequent blogger on customer contact. In this episode, Robert explains how he got involved with this field, what he means when he says he “makes the complex simple” and helps businesses do the best for them and their customers, how his work specifically applies to call centers, the other contact options a company can utilize besides a typical call center, the things a business needs to consider when evaluating feedback and analytics for their customer interactions, his tips for businesses that are looking to have their customer service representatives be their ear to the ground when it comes to customer feedback, and more!Mentioned in this episode:

Play here (the red triangle below), on iTunes, Stitcher or TuneIn Radio (Amazon Alexa) or wherever you listen to podcasts.

Robert Lamb Voice of Influence Podcast Andrea Joy Wenburg

Counterintuitive Ways to Overcome Service Obstacles with Jeff Toister

Episode 86

Jeff Toister has written three customer service books; including his new book, Getting Service Right: Overcoming the Hidden Obstacles to Outstanding Customer Service. Jeff has been recognized as a top customer service thought-leader by Global Gurus, ICMI, and COM100. More than 140,000 people on six continents have taken his video-based training courses on LinkedIn Learning (a.k.a. Lynda.com). His training videos include Customer Service Foundations and Leading a Customer-Centric Culture. In this episode, Jeff discusses his new book, how he got into the customer service field, why he firmly believes providing great customer service isn’t just a matter of using common sense, why customer service leaders shouldn’t be dismissive of angry customers, how customers sabotage the service they receive, a breakdown of the “Zone of Hospitality,” and more!

Mentioned in this episode:

Play here (the red triangle below), on iTunes, Stitcher or TuneIn Radio (Amazon Alexa) or wherever you listen to podcasts.

86 Jeff Toister Voice of Influence Podcast Andrea Joy Wenburg

Transcript

Hey, hey!  It’s Andrea, and welcome to the Voice of Influence podcast! 

So, if you’ve been listening to episodes in the last few weeks, you know that we are talking to experts in the area of customer service, in particular, because I’ll be speaking at Smart Customer Service Conference in Washington, DC, April 29th through May 1st.  And we’re speaking with some of those other presenters for the conference and today is definitely going to be a treat.  If you want to know more about the Smart Customer Service Conference, you can go to voiceofinfluence.net where we will have links to that conference there.

Today, I have with me Jeff Toister.  Jeff Toister has written three customer service books, including his book, Getting Service Right: Overcoming the Hidden Obstacles to Outstanding Customer Service that just came out a week ago from this airing of this podcast.  He has been recognized as a top customer service thought leader by Global Gurus, ICMI, and Comm100.  More than 140,000 people on six continents have taken his video-based training courses on LinkedIn Learning Lynda.com and Jeff’s training videos include Customer Service Foundations and Leading a Customer-Centric Culture.

Andrea:  Jeff, it’s great to have you with us on the Voice of Influence podcast!

Jeff Toister:  Oh, Andrea, thank you so much for having me and I have to commend you, it’s fantastic that you’re doing these podcast sessions in the lead up to the Smart Customer Service Conference.  So I’m really looking forward to see you in person at the conference but, of course, I’m looking forward to our conversation today.

Andrea:  Yeah.  This has been really fun.  It’s been fun to connect with people and I think that what’s interesting is that everybody has a little bit different perspective and a little bit different of expertise to bring to the table and that’s always exciting to really hear that.  And I know that you just came out with your book; can you tell us a little bit about your new book?

Jeff Toister:  Sure.  Well, it’s called Getting Service Right as you said, and the promise behind that is just that all of us have experienced poor customer service and if you were customer service leadership, you’ve seen your employees deliver poor service.  And most of the time their reaction is “It’s so obvious what they should have done, I can’t believe they didn’t do it the right way.” And what the book tackles are hidden, counterintuitive, sometimes unusual obstacles that get in the way.  And they’re all based upon real experiences.  I’ve done the research so you don’t have to but then I’ve also found solutions that actually work.  And so it’s kind of a fun look at how hard it really is to serve customers but how we can learn to be much, much better.

Andrea:  What was the kind of the origin story of Jeff Toister?  Were you always interested in customer service?  What got you into this field?

Jeff Toister:  Little did I know that I would start this book or get interested in customer service or training, and really I have a background as a customer service trainer.  The very first customer I’ve ever served, my very first job, it was a service failure and has spurred me forward. 

So what happened was, I was working in a retail store.  I’m in high school, so I’m nervous.  I don’t have a lot of experience and the person who was supposed to be training be gave me about 15 minutes of orientation and said “Well, I’m going on break, here’s the key to the dressing room, good luck!” And I was terrified and so I’m secretly hoping no one comes and talks to me until she comes back from break.  But of course, you know, my worst fear is a customer who approaches me and he was definitely had this kind of tension, like he was looking for something and he needed help.  So he comes right up to me and says “Do you carry Dockers?” 

And I didn’t know and now you know and I know and I’m sure your listeners know, if you don’t know the answers to a question, go ask someone who does. But tell that to a 16-year-old kid who’s nervous and barely knows what he’s doing.  I couldn’t stop my mouth from saying what my brain was thinking, which is I don’t know.  That’s actually a skill to stop your mouth from saying everything what’s going on in your brain.  That’s a skill you learn overtime.  And at 16, I hadn’t learned that yet, so I said very nervously, “I don’t know,” and I didn’t get a second chance.  He got angry “Kids these days,” stormed out of the store. 

I remember feeling in that moment like an idiot.  I knew I said the wrong thing.  It was my inexperienced that didn’t prevent me from doing the right thing. And so I wanted to get better and never feel that way again but I also realized that it was certainly my fault.  I needed to take responsibility.  I was also not set up for success.  The person who should have been training me didn’t put me in a position where I could answer that question with confidence.  So that’s always fascinated me how can we set people up for success, and in particular, in the customer service world.

Andrea:  It makes a difference for the company but it makes a difference for that person too.  I’m sure that as a 16 year old, you were feeling like, who am I, what am I doing and that sort of thing when it came to that difficult conversation that ended up happening.

Jeff Toister:  Well, of course, and you know, most of us, I’m sure you had that new job feeling.  I think we’ve all had that feeling at once whether it goes well or it doesn’t go well.  You have a certain level of nervousness and then to have a failure almost immediately on top of that.  You know, failure can be a powerful learning experience but it can also be a signal to a lot of us that “I made a bad decision.  I don’t even know why I’m working here.”  And often that happens to employees.  They have such a horrible first experience at first introduction that you lose their commitment almost instantly when they start a job.

Andrea:  Absolutely.  Yeah and then it has ripple effects for sure.  So I’m curious why did you end up writing this particular book?  I know that you’ve written a couple of other ones as well.  What led you to this one in particular?

Jeff Toister:  I think it’s the notion that customer service is easy.  I’ve heard so many people, even leaders talk about it in terms of common sense.  I wanted to debunk that.  I’m very curious about kind of the why behind how people operate.  So I would see somebody, you know, do something and I’d wonder why they did it, you know, whether it was good or bad performance. 

And I started kind of digging into research and the more I dug, the more I found. So as an example, one thing that’s always frustrated me as a customer service trainer is how dismissive many leaders are about angry customers.  And they’ll tell an employee, “Just don’t take it personally.”  I never like that.  I didn’t think that was very helpful advice.  So the more I looked into it, the more I realized, you know, we all have this instinct called the fight or flight instinct where when we’re confronted with an angry person, our instinct is either to fight them, you know hopefully not physically, but we argue with them perhaps or flee.  And that’s the flight part, in other words, to get away.  Yet, in customer service, we’re saying, you can’t argue with them and you also can’t run away, you have to smile and take it.

So our instinct as a human being goes against the very fabric of what you’re supposed to do in customer service.  And when I realized that I said “That’s something, right?  We need to help employees deal with this.”  And then if you look at the leaders, I discovered really fascinating study that it’s easier for our customer service leader to delegate something unpleasant to an employee than it is for them to do it themselves.

In other words, that customer service leader who is dismissive and says, don’t take it personally, they’re probably insulating themselves from those same angry customers.  So it’s easy for them to give that flippant advice because they don’t have to worry about taking it personally.  And those types of things over and over I kept finding that there are ways around these repeated service failures, we just need to find them.  And ultimately, that all the research became a book.

Andrea:  So is there some sort of purpose then that’s driving you to solve these problems, to dig into these questions and these things that you’re saying?  Why do you care?  Why did you go into this?

Jeff Toister:  Well, I think at a basic level.  I don’t want anybody to feel like I felt when I was that 16 year old.  But what I’m fascinated by is really helping people and teams unlock their hidden potential.  And this is very similar, I think, to what you do.  So I would call myself a customer service trainer, it was really what I started doing.  But there’s so much more than formal training.  There’s often different obstacles that are in the way that have nothing to do with training.  And to me, it’s both fascinating to figure out what the obstacles are but then immensely rewarding to help an individual or to help a team figure out a way to overcome the obstacle.

And sometimes it’s surprising.  And an example, a small company years ago hired me to do customer service training because the CEO felt that employees were being rude.  So the natural solution they jumped to is, let’s do a class to teach to teach people to not be rude.  It turns out most of us know how to be polite.  It’s situational, so what’s causing the rudeness.  And I spent 15 minutes with the team and it’s not that I’m some sort of wizard, it’s just I asked questions where the leaders in that organization did not. And what I learned was that, at certain times of day, certain days of the week, they were under staffed and they would have people waiting on the phone for 30 minutes.  Well, that creates this kind of tension, right?  “I’m nervous about how many people are on hold so I naturally get abrupt with the person I’m talking to because I’m trying to get them off the phone.  I’m anticipating the next person is going to be angry at me for keeping them waiting.”  And so that was really the root cause.

And for this company, fortunately, the solution was pretty easy.  They just needed to change their schedule to better match demand.  Sometimes they had too few people, but other times they had too many people.  And so without adding staff, they just needed to redistribute their staff throughout their week to better match when those people were actually going to be calling.  And that small adjustment was enough to dramatically change the perception of rudeness with no training required.  And so to me that is so much fun, but the reward is this great performance where before those employees were pretty frustrated with their jobs.

Andrea:  Hmm, I love that because I’ve noticed that with individuals, with teams that sometimes you think that something is an internal problem like I have a problem, there’s something that I’m doing wrong.  There’s something that I don’t know psychologically that’s wrong or whatever.  But when it turns out, it’s a piece of overwhelm or stress that could so easily be taken care of with a slight tweak like you’re talking about.  That’s fantastic!

Jeff Toister:  I guess the only problem is I end up talking myself out of doing the training class, but that’s OK.  I’ve learned to accept that.  I’d rather have my client be successful than to sell them to the cookie-cutter solution.

Andrea:  Right.  I’m sure that the training would still be beneficial though.  You seem to be really connected to why things matter and motives and things like that.  Have you found that values play a pretty important role when making customer related business decisions?

Jeff Toister:  Values are tricky and I’ll tell you why.  You know, almost every company has set of values.  The most common value, there was a study, and I apologized because it’s at the top of my head and I can’t remember who did the study.  It’s a few years old, but they looked at the most common corporate values, and the number one value was integrity.  And what’s interesting about that is Enron listed integrity as one of its core values. 

And you may know the story and your listeners may know the story, it’s one of the hugest scandals involving fraud in the history of US. So there’s a huge disconnect between stated values in what we say are our corporate values and what are values actually are. 

Values are actually are agreed upon norms that influence your behavior and thinking and it’s great if they’re explicitly defined.  But what really tell us what the true values are are the behaviors and how people act, how people communicate, and how people treat each other. And so in a lot of our organizations, I mean every organization, has values.  The question is whether or not their actual values match what the value statements are on the company website.  And I’ll give you an example from my own client work. 

A mid-sized credit union hired me to work with them to understand how well their values that they communicated to the entire organization and how well people are living them. And it was a fascinating project because almost everybody in the organization could recite.  There were five core values.  They could all recite them.  So they’ve done a fantastic job of that.  Where they struggled was there was universal disagreement as to what behaviors constituted a values match.  And even on the executive team, they could not agree as to what living the values actually looked like and not to coincidentally one of their values was integrity.

Andrea:  Sorry, it took me just a second understanding what you meant by that.  That was pretty good.

Jeff Toister:  It’s alright.  It was an Enron call back, right?

Andrea:  Yes.

Jeff Toister:  Everybody’s got integrity as a value.  It doesn’t mean that your…

Andrea:  Right.  That was good.  Yeah, I think that there can be such a huge disconnect but when those things are connected, it does seem to make a difference.

Jeff Toister:  It’s huge because then you can explicitly say, this is how we operate and you can share that with your employees and then they’ll know exactly what behaviors are appropriate and rewarded and what behaviors are frowned upon.

Andrea:  So I’d like to get into your book a little bit if you don’t mind.  There are few different things that came up for me that I’d like to ask you about and one of those really stood out to me.  You say that customers can sabotage the service that they receive, what does that mean?

Jeff Toister:  I’ll start with the research.  I always like to start with the research.

Andrea:  Great!

Jeff Toister:  Two things; one is customer service expert named John Goodman who has done a lot of research on customer service data and the sources of service failure.  In his research uncovered that about 20 percent of service failures are caused by the employees, about 60 percent, this is a rough-cut, are caused by poor product service or processes, so out of the employees’ hands, and about 20 percent caused by customer errors. 

And some of those errors are accidental “I’m confused by the instructions.”  “I don’t know how to operate this product,” and some are delivered. There’s this air of certainty that customer sometimes possessed that they’re doing it right even when they’re doing it wrong, which leads to something else that’s fascinated me on this notion that we have that the customer is always right.  And I think a lot of people believe that. 

And I in fact, I want to do a research, who first said this?  Like I was kind of angry, I wanted to track them down and maybe send them like a box of glitters or something.  I’m just not happy with this person and come to find out no one first said it.  What has happened is over the years, we’ve taken quotes and there are several potential candidates for the origin, but we’ve taken quotes and twisted them to mean something different. An example, one possible origin is Cesar Ritz, you know, the Ritz Carlton Hotels.  He allegedly said, from the research I found, he said “The customer is never wrong.”  And the context of that is not that customers don’t make mistakes, they do.  It’s just that we don’t argue with customers.  We try to help them be right. 

You can imagine if we’re both on the same side that can work beautifully.  But if there’s an insistence on the customer point of view that “No matter what I’ve done, I’m right and you have to figure out how to fix it,” that’s doesn’t lead itself naturally to great service outcomes. And unfortunately a lot of customers have that attitude and that leads them to, you know, withhold key information or dig their heels in and refuse to follow a sensible solution, you know, get unreasonably angry. 

There’s even something I lovingly call “the rule of three,” which is customer psychologically will exaggerate how bad things are sometimes by a factor of three just to make it feel like it’s actually bad.  You know, if I waited five minutes, I’m not going to get any of my friends to cry with me about that.  But if I say, I waited 15 minutes, maybe.  Or you know if the person was stern with me that won’t engender sympathy, but if they cussed me out, uh, well that was terrible.  So customer will often exaggerate about how bad things are as well.

Andrea:  Really, why do you think that they do that?

Jeff Toister:  I think it goes back to the customer is always right.  If you created this construct that I am right, you are wrong, the psychological defenses come up and they start protecting our ego by doubling down on “No, it’s your fault and you have to fix it, I’m the customer.”

Andrea:  You know, that’s interesting and I’m going to take this to an interesting, a different place for just a second.  But I’m a part of an initiative where were working on bringing more positive communication about our community to social media in conversations and things like this.  And one of the things that we’re noticing is that there are a lot of people who do this, who kind of exaggerate in those small groups. 

You know, I’ve got a group around me and maybe I’m getting my hair done and I start talking and I start making a little bit of exaggeration and I start placing the blame on other folks.  It’s almost like customer service.  It’s almost like the people of a community even looking at their town as a company that they’re not being served by but in a sense almost, I’m having an a-ha moment so, you know, forgive me.  But it feels like kind of what you’re saying, does that sound similar to you?

Jeff Toister:  It does, and part of it is I think positive fuels better.  We’re naturally wired to be more heavily influenced by the negative.

Andrea:  Yeah.

Jeff Toister:  So in a service situation, companies often talk about wowing the customer.  What we should really work hard to do is avoid angering the customer which is equally challenging.  But the impact of a wow versus the impact of a service failure, that service failure is far more impactful because negative things stand out more.  That’s why we see more negative new stories. 

That’s why, you know, we hear more people complaining rather than saying, that was really good.  It’s just how we’re wired. And I’ve learned to stop feeling bad about us being human and just try to better understand it, like in a customer service context knowing that people are naturally wired to think about things in more of the negative.  I’ve spend more time there and I think companies spend more time trying to prevent things from failing. 

And the funny thing about that is you can be perceived as brilliant by your customers if you’re just consistently good.  You know, forget the wow stuff.  That’s really tough to do and you don’t get a chance to do it every day.  Just be consistently good, make what people’s lives a little bit easier and somehow that stands out from the crowd.

Andrea:  OK, what is the zone of hospitality?

Jeff Toister:  The zone of hospitality is kind of a mindset thinking that anybody around me and this generally works, I think more so in face-to-face situation, so retail, restaurant, hospital, etc.  Anybody around me, I’m creating a zone of hospitality and I’m going to make them feel welcome and try to help them.  This can be a challenge because of the way people are led, so let’s use a retail example.  In retail, a lot of associates on the retail sales floor have customer service responsibilities but they also have kind of task oriented responsibilities, like rearrange a display or fold all of those jeans.

Well, at the end of the day, it’s easier for the manager to be able tell if the display or the task was completed versus whether or not that employee was servicing customers at a very high level.  So the default usually coming from the leaders is to focus on the task first rather than service first.  And so zone of hospitality is just kind of a mindset that says, I’m going to create a zone of hospitality around me regardless of whether or not this person fits kind of my job or my department. 

I’m going to help them out. I worked with a client that was on a college campus and they had people in a variety of different roles and it just wasn’t their job say to help a student find a classroom.  But the zone of hospitality says, I see someone with that lost look on their face wandering through my area near to me.  As a human, I can tell they have a need and so I’m going to approach them in a friendly manner and offer them assistance.  So that mindset says, despite it not being the task oriented part of my job, I’m still creating this zone to make them feel welcome and find a way to help them.

Andrea:  Yes, zone is so important.  You talked also about viewing our roles from the customer’s perspective and that there’s sometimes a difference or a dissonance between the way that we see or what we see our job to be and what they see our job to be.  Is this similar to what you’re just talking about?  Does that coincide with that?

Jeff Toister:  It does.  I’d say it’s little parallel.  The example there is have you ever had computer problems where you needed to contact support or IT internally?

Andrea:  Of course.

Jeff Toister:  Well all have, right?  So think about it and that could be a perfect example.  When you’re having computer problems, your need is to get back to work, to do whatever it is that you were doing.  It’s very natural for the IT support person to view your need in terms of the language you use.  My computer is not working, so it just naturally, they’ll focus on the task fixing your computer and there becomes a disconnect because you really need to get back to work.  You don’t care how they do that, and they’re looking at the kind of more technical aspect of providing solutions.  But the most technical and easiest solution might not be the best way to get you back to work. And so that requires kind of reframing things from the customer’s point of view saying “Well, how do I get you back to work?” 

An example, I was once hosting a webinar and I needed support about 20 minutes before the webinar started and I kind of panicked and nervous because I have all these people, you know, it’s a client that’s paying me to host this webinar and now things aren’t working.  And I’ll never forget the technical support walked me through the problem, but she was also very sensitive to my anxiety because I explained what was happening.  And she did something I’ll never forget she said, “I’m gonna stay on the line with you until your webinar starts just to make sure everything is working properly.” Now, she was focused on a task. 

She would say, “Hey, it’s working, I’m onto the next thing.”  If her job was evaluated based upon efficiency, that would be exactly the behavior that she should have chosen.  But in that moment, I was lucky enough to have someone who’s realizing that the real need here was to give me some relief that my webinar was going to go off without a hitch.  And by staying with me just a little bit longer, I had so much more confidence and peace of mind.  Then if she had simply fixed the problem, I still would have been really nervous about it.

Andrea:  I love that.  Almost like a safety blanket.

Jeff Toister:  That’s very true.

Andrea:  That’s fantastic!  So do you think that there’s pretty clear line or is it kind of difficult for companies to decide when customer service should be more based on, you know, completing the task and efficiency versus being able to provide that extra level of emotional support as well that that you’re just talking about?

Jeff Toister:  This is where it gets a little counterintuitive for leaders if we look at how things are measured.  We use contact centers an example because there are so many things that are measured.  I know how long an agent spends on a phone call and I know how long they spend on their average call and I know how much that costs me.  That’s very tangible.  So the default, because it’s easy to measure that and I’m trying to be efficient and reduce costs, the default is to measure handle time or how many emails per hour you can respond or how many chats you can handle at one time and clear out in your shift.

The challenge with that, of course, is when you put someone on a clock like that; their natural inclination is to speed through things.  I had one agent say, “You know I get a lot of really angry customers but I only have six minutes to solve their problem.  I don’t have time to make them feel good.  I just have time to tell them what to do.”  It’s counterintuitive but if you were to focus agents on solving the issue completely and fully but efficiently and take the clock away from them so don’t put it in front of them. 

As a leader, may be you still measure but don’t put it in front of the agent. When I talked to companies who have done this, it was really interesting.  What happens is they spend just a little bit more time making sure that the person doesn’t have to call back.  And if you were to measure that when people call back, now that problem becomes a lot more expensive because they had to contact you twice, but that’s just harder to measure. The other thing that’s counterintuitive when you’ve taken the clock away from the agent and say, “Just focus on getting the customer through this as quickly as you can, but in a way that they’re delighted about.” 

The average time it takes to resolve a problem either remains the same or goes down slightly.  And I hope I’m not getting too much in the weeds here but what happens is when agents know that they’re on the clock, they’ll speed things up. But here’s the other thing that I think a lot of leaders don’t realize it’s when agents think that they have extra time, because it was a short problem, it was easier to solve, they slow things down.  So they work, always work towards the standard rather than just getting the customers through as efficiently and fully as they possibly can.

Andrea:  Yeah, it makes a lot of sense.  Jeff, this has been a great, great conversation.  I hate to stop now but we need to because of time.  So can you tell us a little bit about your session?  I know that you’re presenting with someone at Smart Customer Service, can you tell us a little bit about that?

Jeff Toister:   I am so lucky because I am presenting with my good friend but also the, in my opinion, customer service writing guru, Leslie O’Flahaven.  And our session is How to Write Like a Human in the Age of Speed.  So we’re combining our expertise.  I’ll share research I’ve done on people’s expectation for response time, particularly email, and how those expectations influences sometimes to make mistakes.  And Leslie is such a fantastic writing coach.  She is going to send us through some very interactive exercises on how to better understand our customers and write better but also faster.  So it’s going to be a very interactive session and it’s going to be a lot of fun.

Andrea:  That’s great!  And if you the listeners are looking to hear my conversation with Leslie, it’s episode 81, How to Write with the Voice of your Brand.  So I’m glad that I was able to have this conversation with you and Leslie in different times and I look forward to connecting with you in D.C.

Jeff Toister:  It’s going to be a lot of fun and thanks for doing this.  This is such a cool idea.

Andrea:  Alright.

How to Align a National Team with Tisa Sinclair

Episode 85

Tisa Sinclair’s work experience has given her the opportunity to engage in several areas of communications from public relations to social media and digital marketing.  She currently leads a D.C. based team that forges the ongoing social care strategies, processes, and official responses to members and nonmembers as they interact with AARP’s digital content. This program is a key feedback component to the AARP customer experience strategy.

In this episode, Tisa talks about her role at AARP, how having a clear company vision and a centralized communication hub for all branches of the company allows AARP to keep their communication and messaging consistent across the board, how they were able to get their employees and representatives in 53 different states to buy into their communication strategy, how customers usually provide feedback to AARP and what she’s found surprising in all the feedback, how having company values and purposes are valuable to the service teams, what it was like building loyalty and trust with their social media followers and customers, the three Experience Pillars AARP aligns their values and messaging with, and more!

Mentioned in this episode:

Play here (the red triangle below), on iTunes, Stitcher or TuneIn Radio (Amazon Alexa) or wherever you listen to podcasts.

Tisa Sinclair Voice of Influence Podcast Andrea Joy Wenburg

Transcript

Hey, hey!  It’s Andrea, and welcome to the Voice of Influence podcast! If you’ve listened to the last few episodes here on the podcast, you know that we are interviewing people that are going to be speaking at the Smart Customer Service Conference in Washington, DC, April 29th through May 1st in 2019.   These folks are experts and leaders in the customer service arena and it’s fun to have them here.  It’s fun to learn more about them, to be able to hear a little bit about their personal experience, what motivates them, and their expertise.   So I’ll be a fellow speaker at the conference, so there’s some personal enjoyment for me in just being able to connect with folks ahead of time too.  But I think that what you’ll find is that in this conversation with Tisa, we’re going to really have the opportunity to hear from somebody who’s really in it right now and has had some major success at AARP.  

So, I’m just going to share with you a little bit more about her here in a second.  But if you’re interested in attending the Smart Customer Service Conference then go to the show notes at voiceofinfluene.net and we’ll have links there for you so that you can learn more about it and possibly see us there.  

Tisa Sinclair’s work experience has given her the opportunity to engage in several areas of communications from public relations to social media and digital marketing.  She currently leads a D.C. based team that forges the ongoing social care strategies, processes, and official responses to members and nonmembers as they interact with AARP’s digital content.   This program is a key feedback component to the AARP Customer Experience strategy.  I’m really looking forward to hearing more about this.

Andrea:  So, Tisa, welcome to the Voice of Influence podcast!

Tisa Sinclair:  Hi, thanks for having me.  I’m excited to be here!

Andrea:  So tell us a little bit more about your role at AARP?

Tisa Sinclair: Sure.  I mean, you explain a bit in the intro, but I lead the social response, or more widely known as social care function, here in AARP.  As you know, or for those who don’t know, AARP is one of the nation’s largest nonprofit organizations that’s really dedicated to empowering Americans who are 50 and older, especially when it comes to choosing how they live as they age.   My team oversees everything from response governance to customer analysis.  And like I said, this program is a key feedback to the overall customer experience strategy, especially since that team or that area is responsible for really defining and developing the strategy and tactics that’s necessary to enhance the overall consumer experience.  

So we engage with and assist members in need.  We proactively share resources.  We answer questions and offer guidance.  And we provide that response for home governance, customer experience feedback, brand perception analysis and just act as an overall escalation point for our sensitive issues and topics that’s encountered by our organization.  

Andrea:  You just said something that I don’t even know what you mean, so you said, you provide escalation for sensitive topics that are relevant to people in AARP?

Tisa Sinclair: Yeah.  So the way that the response function operates in AARP is that we have an internal, sort of in-house, escalation team, and then we work with a third party vendor that works with our more transactional sort of items.  So they focus on interaction such as member questions, how to join. Membership items for AARP take up more than half of our volume.  So it’s really important that we have a team that’s dedicated just to that area, and they will then escalate anything more complex or nuanced to the internal social response team.   But all teams that engage with our consumers, they do so we’re aligned with messaging.  We all work under one tool so we can centralize our operations, and this also alleviates us not to have to respond natively and in each channel, so ongoing centralization is really key.  Hopefully that answered your question.

Andrea: Yeah.  So it sounds like AARP has done a lot of work on coming up with what that central ideas, the central principles or messaging, the way that you message things that that is all centralized, then you work from that.  Is that kind of part of what you’re saying then?

Tisa Sinclair:  Yeah, definitely.  So we’re a relatively new team, I would say.  When it comes to centralization and consistency, that was one of the major key initiatives that we wanted to really improve our overall experience.  The addition of our new operation has really kind of widened the interaction channel choice for the 50+ community so we can be there to meet them where they are.  And once we were setup and established, we then focused on a lot of initiatives but the main one was definitely centralization and consistency.   So by kind of funneling all of our social channels into one tool to engage, we were then able to really ensure that all of our answers across properties were consistent and then all of our processes scale. 

In addition to that, we’re pretty unique because in addition to the social response team, my team, we also have 53 state offices who have their own social properties. So it was important that we coordinate with them so then they can properly be equipped, and we can all be aligned with responses.  And that includes building out like an internal communications hub to create that further drive, that consistency of centralization to help drive those state contacts and information that will align with our guidelines.

Andrea: Sure.  So it sounds like you have done an incredible amount of work, number one, to just identify what needs to be in that tool, what needs to be in the communications hub, but then also to be able to communicate it to everybody that’s all that up there in the frontlines.  Do you mind sharing with us a few of the things that are in the communications hub, in the centralized documents, or the things that are key components that you’re trying to make sure stay centralized and consistent?

Tisa Sinclair:  Oh sure.  We have sort of like a master document or guideline so the states can kind of make sure they have that resource there, just in case they want to kind of grab under various topics, under various issue areas.  It’s really important that we’re aligned on how we do certain things.  So you know, the how-to’s, what to hide, what to block, how to respond to certain messages regarding membership, how do we respond to trolls, or how do we respond to partisan comments.  We get those pretty often as well.  

We also wanted to make sure that we provide a quick access to certain tools that we use because some of their tools are different, which is fine.  But the whole point is to make sure that we’re centralized in the resources that we have and the messaging and the talking points because it’s really important that we’re aligned across the board.

Andrea:  Is there anything in particular that you have done that really has helped to make sure that everybody is onboard and everybody is able to understand these guidelines, understand how to use the things that are in your communications hub?

Tisa Sinclair: It was definitely a huge effort to kind of create this centralized space to drive those state contacts.  I first did a discovery phase.  This is where we kind of find out the states challenges so we can better accommodate them and develop just better solutions for consistency across the organization.  

And then the next phase was kind of figuring out how we can alleviate some of those pain-points from a social response perspective to then start building out that page, and it did include focus groups and surveys.  So I work with various team members for each of the states just to kind of figure out their pain-points, figure out what’s working, what’s not working, and then after that just kind of doing my little analysis to figure out how we can better serve them and how they can better, you know, help us as well.

Andrea:  And then was there some sort of training that was involved as well?

Tisa Sinclair:  Well, we haven’t done the training yet.

Andrea: Oh, OK, you still in the middle of it.

Tisa Sinclair: You know, we’re still in the thick of things.  We’re still trying to get that hub, that centralized space up.  But when that does happen, because we work on a separate engagement tool that we will have to roll out a distribution plan to eventually get those states trained on the tool that we use because it would make sense, right?  If we want to be centralized, if we want to aligned, if we want to be consistent, it would make sense to engage under the same umbrella and under the same tool.  So we definitely have plans to roll that plan out soon.

Andrea: That would be really hard.  I’m just in awe and admiring the work that you’re doing, but I’m wondering too how are you able to get buy-in from folks that have to make changes?  Is there anything in particular that’s kind of come up and you’re like “Oh, this is something we’ve had to address to get buy-in.”

Tisa Sinclair:  Yeah and no.  It actually wasn’t hard at all.  I think even just from up top, there was this need to be centralized.  You don’t want to look like an organization that’s saying different things from different areas.  So everyone was really excited where everyone was really onboard.  You know, people are always maybe apprehensive to change but once they realize that we’re moving in the right direction and these changes are only for the better, I think that it was a lot easier to really get that buy-in.  It’s really no easy feat, right?  We’re talking about 53 states, to train, to respond, to answer any questions.  But from what I’ve seen so far in the thick of things and my work, it’s been that with positive response.

Andrea:  That’s awesome!  Is there one thing that you think has made the difference in the success of your customer service team or this whole process in this initiative?

Tisa Sinclair:  I think that goes back to the centralization and consistency.  Like I said, having everything under one roof, being able to scale, because of that we were able to grow our social properties.  And as a result, we had really surprising and engaging conversations which then revealed really new ways to increase member engagement and loyalty, which is key, which is really, really important for our function. 

And as we continue to kind of wire in more of our social properties to even widen the amount of channels that we service, I think right now, we’re at over 25 channels and that includes social media.  We service article questions.  We have a very expansive community forum that’s extremely active and we try to help out there.  We even respond to app reviews.  Because of this, we will be able to see those deeper effects that we haven’t seen before in the space, like MPS and membership renewals and just membership lifetime value for our members.

Andrea: I can imagine that working in customer service to provide excellent service or excellent experience for your members probably comes with its own set of challenges in trying to know exactly what they need for their age group, for their demographic.  Is there anything in particular that you came across that surprised you?

Tisa Sinclair: Honestly, we get a lot of misconceptions about who or what AARP is.  I don’t know, I found that pretty surprising.  I always felt like it was a brand that people kind of automatically equated or related to an organization for the 50 plus community but a lot of people think we’re an insurance company.  They think we’re aligned with certain parties.  So it’s always interesting to hear people give their opinion on the type of organization that we are.  I think that that really surprised me the most.

Andrea: And when you say they’re giving their opinion, does that mean that comes out in conversations, in social media; where do you see this coming out?

Tisa Sinclair:  Definitely, even under our own media.  We do a certain post about something that we support an initiative or a campaign.  You know, people very freely voice their opinions, as we encourage, you know, we don’t sensor people within reason.  We encourage people to have dialogue among themselves and with us.  And through that dialogue, we’re able to kind of glean sentiment and how people feel not only towards AARP but just toward whatever issue that’s plaguing them at the time.  So it’s really great that we’re able to be there and step in and show our support and share resources, anything that we can to help our members and nonmembers.

Andrea:  I would imagine that that’s really helpful for creating the documents that you need or the talking points that you need to put in your centralized hub.

Tisa Sinclair: Yeah.  It’s really kind of cool to see the work that we do and how it can help shape the conversation and that helps us report on trending topics and adoptions and really encouraging and facilitating those conversations among our members.  It’s a great, great opportunity these comments to identify opportunities to probably convert brand detractors to brand loyalists, to watch for member prospect opportunities, or to reinforce the multidimensional value of AARP.  There are just so many ways that we can tap into our engagement and our comments in the community.

Andrea:  Have you found that values or having a personal purpose are important in the training and empowering of the service team?

Tisa Sinclair: Definitely. 

Andrea: I’d love to hear about it.

Tisa Sinclair: You know, I think that your values, they really help to define your brand.  It’s important that you clearly define your core values and then act in accordance with them.  You want to show that in everything that you do.  You want to celebrate that.  You want to tell employees and customers what they are and you know, we do have our own strategic pillars to help guide our goals and that’s to monitor, to console, and to engage.   We want to act as that real time beacon for AARP outside brand identity and reputation and we do.  We try to deliver our value though our advocacy.  We try to deliver our value through our information and of course we try to deliver that through our service.  So it’s really crucial that we provide things like training that helps kind of reinforce that culture and really help strengthen your workforce commitment to those values.  And you know, hopefully, that will help provide that direction towards your goal.

Andrea:  Sure, and do you personally feel connected to values or feel like you have a purpose in this?  I can imagine that you do.  You sound pretty connected, so I’m wondering what makes this personal for you.  Why do you care besides, you know, it’s your job?

Tisa Sinclair:  No, no.  I care because, well, A: I love what I do.  And you know what they say, people who fully know and understand your organization’s value, they’re more likely to describe themselves as fully engaged with their work compared to people who do not.  I think that shows in the work that I do.  It shows in the work that my team does.  You know, I like to feel like I’m a part of something that’s larger than myself.  And this feeling of commitment and belonging, it really helps bring out the best in myself and in my team and I see that every single day.

Andrea: Do you feel like you have that sense of purpose, that you’re making a difference for the older adults in the country or that sort of thing?  Is there also that kind of lofty kind of purpose that you have too?

Tisa Sinclair: Yeah!  I mean, we do so much.  And it’s really important to me and to my team that we develop and focus on a really intimate, empathetic relationship with our members through these conversations that we have with them day in and day out.  It really helps build trust and positive sentiment because with this demographic, we’re starting to see that growth on social channels.  

There was sort of apprehension at first, but once they start seeing that people were there, in the trenches, answering their questions, servicing them, and meeting them where they are, I mentioned that before, we started to see that trust kind of slowly, kind of like peeling the layers. And because of that, we started to see that engagement grow, which to me is a testament of the work that we do.

Andrea: Do you think that that took a certain amount of time, I mean, how long did it take for the sort of positive sentiment, this trust to kind of start to really grow for AARP?

Tisa Sinclair: Yeah, it didn’t happen overnight, right?  It’s a slow process.  First of all, having that empathetic language is really key to a lot of our conversations, particularly when we converse around those sensitive topics.  So it’s really important that we make sure that we kind of ladder up to our pillars by expressing our values with empathy, honesty, and humanity.  You know, that is how we inspire that trust and it’s not something that happens overnight.   Like I said, we’re very young and scrappy team and we’re less than two years old.  And we’re just now starting to see that change, which is really exciting because we know that it can only grow and scale up from here.  

Andrea: I know that AI is kind of becoming more and more in the conversation about customer service and how we interact with people, are you finding that that is coming up for people in AARP?  Is this going to happen more you utilizing AI more?  What changes do you see coming down the pipe in the next few years?

Tisa Sinclair: I think right now the focus needs to be or is going to be on the importance of customer experience.  You know, I think a lot of companies, from what I’ve seen from the conferences that I’ve attended and just being here in the organization, you know, brands and organizations across the globe are starting to really integrate that CX into a sort of broader range of business operations.   I’ve always said, you know, we all need to create a culture that has costumer focus which means that every decision is made with the customer in mind and everyone in the organization knows or should know, how they impact the overall chain of customer service strategy.  

And I think a part of that is a couple of things, you know, there’s personalization.  We need to create a more personalized, I would say, frictionless experience for our customers because they now expect more and more of brands and us to provide them with experiences that are just more tailored to their individual wants and needs since they do expect brands to be relevant and timely with things like promotions and campaigns and products.  Or just any services that’s based on their own personal data.   I find that more and more consumers are starting to find impersonal experiences really frustrating.  So I think companies really need to get, including ourselves, we really need to get on board with personalization and consumer expectations because it is continuing to shift and we should expect this to be more of the norm.

Andrea:  And I know that it has a lot to do with the people who are actually on the frontlines, the people who are actually having conversations with the customers, with your members.  What makes that person who is on the phone or maybe it’s through an email or whatever it might be, what makes that person a really trusted adviser to the customer while at the same time being a brand ambassador for the company?  Have you found anything in particular that’s helpful for that?  

Tisa Sinclair: You know, and, I feel like I’m repeating this, we always want to be direct, transparent, and human, which is why we make sure that we align ourselves or align our messaging and our voice with our experience pillars, and we have three.  The first is that we want to ensure they’re interacting with us is inspiring.  That can be anything from making your greetings personalized using that empathy and manners. You know, please and thank you go a long way, being authentic and even a little bit of surprise and delight, you know.  If you can or when you can, you want to go above and beyond to really provide members and nonmembers with the peoples’ community with back to back, that personalized service and that solution that they might have never considered.  

You also want to provide that effortless experience and that can be something as simple as making sure you’re meeting the members where they are and responding in the appropriate channel and being really specific with their resources.  You know, giving as many applicable details as possible and really sending those relevant links that leads directly to the actual needed information and resources that they requested.  You don’t want to send anyone down a rabbit hole and make them even more confused and just being concise in providing the right information while not overwhelming them. And then I would say the last pillar is making sure users are compelled to feel that AARP gets them. 

So that can be anything from being casual you know, you want the people who reach out to us they feel like interacting with the real person and not some like automated system.  That means customizing our language to match the tone.  Of course, you know, we have a template language as a guide.  

It’s always important to have that but also adding that customization for each response to kind of match the questions and the tone of the member.  Basically speaking their language, using the same words that they use if you can and I think it really shows that AARP is a trusted source.  And it makes you feel like you can open up and it makes you feel like, “Hey, I can come back to the same source and they would be able to help me in my time of need,” whatever that may be.

Andrea:  So many great things that you’re doing and it’s interesting to hear about this.  I’m sure that you’re going to be digging into this more deeply at the conference.  Can you tell us just a little bit about what your session will be about?

Tisa Sinclair: Sure.  So one of our major goals this year is to focus on thoughtfulness in the language.  To improve the customer service experience, via social and like I’ve said that empathetic language is key through a lot of our conversations, particularly when we converse around sensitive topics, particularly caregiving.  So we knew that a solution to this problem was to kind of enhance our interactions by crafting our responses to be more human and validating in nature, therefore non-template based.  

We want to kind of treating these new interactions at casual conversations among friends.  So members kind of feel reassured if they’re talking to a real human as opposed to a bot.  I’ll definitely dive more into this at the event but you know just showing how our team works really hard to kind of implement this more intimate and personal approach and the route that we took.  The trainings, working extensively within our in-house caregiving team to ensure that our voice and our messaging was aligned.  

I’m going to talk about the topics that we included such as overhauling our knowledge base to help agents find those relevant resources faster inserting that, sort of, appreciative language in our responses.  So this includes starting our messages by just thanking people for being a caregiver.  You know, a lot of caregivers, they don’t feel appreciated so that touch of validation alone can have a huge impact and some of these stories are just heartbreaking.  

So it’s really important that we let them know that before we go into our spiel about resources that we have which is really important, we just want people to know that we’re there.  We’re here and just thank you.  Thank you for just being such an amazing person.  Thank you for doing what you’re doing with your spouse, with your parent, just thank you.  And that little touch right there made all the difference and we started to see a shift in how people reach out to us in our overall engagement and I’m going to dive into how we did just that.

Andrea:  I love it!  I love that idea of validating the person that you’re talking to.  That’s huge.  I love it!

Tisa Sinclair:  Thank you!

Andrea:  Well, thank you for being here with us on the Voice of Influence podcast.  Tisa, I appreciate you sharing your experience and I look forward to seeing you at the conference soon.

Tisa Sinclair:  Same here.  Thank you guys so much for inviting me.   I had a great time.

Andrea:  Awesome!  We’ll see you soon.