Answer the call of service

LEGOStarWarsLast weekend, my 7 year-old was the ring bearer in a family wedding. It was a formal outdoor wedding that required Cooper to wear a tuxedo. (Insight: Most 7 year-old boys resist wearing collared or button-up shirts let alone a full-on tuxedo for 3 hours of picture taking and ceremony.)

For being a great sport, I told him that I’d buy him a toy he’s wanted (LEGO Star Wars Republic Attack Shuttle) when we returned to Denver following the wedding.

The first full day we were home, I spent 50 minutes on the phone calling area Target and Wal-Mart stores looking for this particular model. It was painful.

Every call was answered by an automated-attendant. No surprise here. The easiest way to get rid of customers so that you can focus on important work like scheduling, counting banks, stocking shelves, managing inventory, etc., is to send them into an abyss of options hoping that one of these options will appease them or at least prevent them from speaking to an actual person—which is expensive and time-consuming.

The option to speak with a representative was always the last option made available to me. And sometimes there is an audible delay before the automated-attendant finally releases the coveted option. It’s as if the last thing these companies want the customer to do is to actually speak with a company representative who can answer their questions or otherwise address their needs.

Unless the people answering your phones are ill-equipped to do so due to an inadequate selection process, insufficient training, non-existent or unenforced standards, inattentive supervision, and other factors, why wouldn’t you want them speaking to customers? It’s the perfect opportunity to sway comparison shoppers and attract first-time buyers. (Here’s why: Most employees are ill-equipped to answer the phone for the reasons mentioned.)

After navigating the automated-attendant and eventually reaching an employee, most were indifferent towards me over the phone. Indifference is communicated in many different ways. The most obvious way is speaking without any energy or enthusiasm in your voice. It sounds flat and uninterested. Have you ever reached an employee over the phone who matched this description, recognized it, ended the call, and then called back—hoping to get a different employee on the line?  If so, then you know what I’m talking about.

Employees were inattentive when placing calls on-hold. Hold times exceeded two minutes on average before employees rejoined the call with a status update. In two cases, I simply hung up after being ignored for more than three minutes while on-hold. Customer calls should never be placed on-hold for more than 30 seconds without the consent of the caller. A caller’s expectations should be managed. For instance, if you know that it’s going to take 2 minutes or more to find the information the caller needs, let him know that up front. Give him the option to hold or request a number to call with the information as soon as it’s located.

Employees were careless when transferring calls. Two calls were dropped entirely, requiring me to call back and navigate the automated-attendant labyrinth all over again. On one occasion, I was transferred to “Boys” instead of “Toys.” On another, I was transferred to “Fitting rooms.” When I again asked to be transferred to “Toys,” the “Fitting Rooms” employee said, “I can but it usually doesn’t work.” This type of response doesn’t inspire confidence or sales.

Finally, after calling about a dozen stores, I located an engaged Wal-Mart employee who was genuinely interested in helping me. She conveyed this interest through the authentic enthusiasm in her voice and, after personally locating the last LEGO Star Wars Republic Attack Shuttle on the shelf, by offering to then deliver the toy to the Customer Service desk at the front of the store to simplify my buying experience when I arrived.

This Wal-Mart employee also illustrates the truth that, regardless of a company’s customer service culture, a customer’s satisfaction is heavily influenced by his one-on-one interactions with frontline service providers.

If your business has a phone, it has a phone bill. Never forget who pays that bill. It’s the people who are calling your business for everything from directions and store hours to product availability and host of other questions that cannot be answered by an automated-attendant.

Recognize this and treat your company’s telephone interactions accordingly. Ensure that standards are in place governing the attributes and selection of employees who will be answering telephones. Communicate guidelines for effective greetings, placing calls on-hold, and transferring calls. And support these guidelines through consistent employee observation and feedback.

Your company has spent a lot of money to try and get noticed in a crowded marketplace. If a customer takes the time to look up your number and initiate a call, don’t take the caller (along with her personal spending, referrals, and loyalty) for granted.

Appreciate each and every caller and seize the opportunity to answer the call of service!

Questions? Comments? Leave them here or call me: 303.325.1375

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  • http://RestaurantWorx.com Jeffrey Summers

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    If you’d like to speak to someone who cares, please hang up and call another business.

    I’m hoping the “New Age of Social” puts us on a path to rid ourselves of these auto attendants. But I don’t see it happening anytime soon.

    Great post as usual!

  • http://www.stevecurtin.com Steve

    Jeffrey, I agree that as long as a company is in a single-minded quest for profitability, it will continue to subordinate effectiveness (product/service quality) to efficiency (doing more things faster at a reduced cost) in order to appease its shareholders. You would think that business leaders would get the elementary message in the Aesop’s fable, The Goose That Laid the Golden Eggs. But, alas, most don’t.

  • http://RestaurantWorx.com Jeffrey Summers

    Southwest is a great example of people who do it right. If you call and they are busy, they tell you how long it will be in their que, then give you the option of leaving your number so THEY can call YOU back in that same time frame – AND THEY ALWAYS HAVE! Amazing what you can do when you put your mind and heart to it.

  • http://www.afinetoothcomb.com Julie – A Fine Tooth Comb

    You’re right on with the point about indifference. I have noticed this terrible habit more and more lately. Indifference on the phone, indifference in person, indifference everywhere! I’m sick of it!

    Company employees who speak with customers via phone must remember that customers can’t see their facial expressions and/or body language. Voice inflection (and willingness to go the second mile, like the Wal-Mart employee) really is the only thing customers will remember about the call.

    Keep up the great work here, Steve. I enjoy every post!

  • http://www.stevecurtin.com Steve

    Julie, thank you for your feedback! I came across a statistic that supports your point re: the importance of one’s vocal tone over the phone. According to a UCLA study, in face-to-face conversation, vocal tone accounts for 38 percent of a message’s quality. The same study found that, in the absence of body language (such as over the phone), vocal tone accounts for as much as 84 percent of the message’s quality. Most people have the capacity to sound enthusiastic and engaged over the phone, as when they’re making weekend plans. It’s really an awareness issue. Unfortunately, few managers are having these types of conversations with their frontline employees who answer the phone. At least when I call, most sound bored…

  • http://photokitten.com Melissa

    Great post Steve.I agree that as a customer, going through these phone tree hells is nothing but frustrating. It’s helpful that many of the big boxes have inventory accessible online, but that’s no excuse to make it so difficult to reach an actual person. But then, too many companies want to spend as little as possible on customer service/support and employee training so that’s often one of the first cuts they make… and then wonder why it is sales keep dropping….

  • http://www.hospitalityredefined.blogspot.com/ Hospitality Re-Defined

    Isn’t it amazing how many businesses do not understand the value of person to person communications? I, for one, cringe as soon as the automated attendant starts, because I am assuming I will never be able to speak to an actual human being, and it instantly causes me to form an opinion about the business, and it usually isn’t a positive one. On the other hand, when a real person answers the phone, MY mood instantly improves, in the hope that I will have my needs met.