Posts Tagged: ‘Customer Experience’

[EN] Why Digital Customer Service is now a Strategic Imperative | McKinsey & Company

23. August 2014 Posted by Stefan Pfeiffer

 

The problem is that companies from customer-facing industries that deploy multiple customer service channels too often assess the effectiveness of e-care by measuring individual channels, when customers today often move from one channel to another as they try to resolve service issues. They may start looking for an answer on the company’s website before switching to its mobile app, posting a comment or question via social media, and then finally turning to the call center if they have been unable to find an answer elsewhere. That’s why it’s critical to measure the multichannel effectiveness of e-care—something many companies still are not capable of doing.

via Why companies should care about e-care | McKinsey & Company.

True. Digital Channels play a more and more important role in Customer Service. But the whole and real story is: Digital Channels play a more and more dominant role from the Pre-Sales/Information Phase to Sales to Service and Support and Customer Loyalty. The whole cycle is meanwhile strongly influenced by digital and we struggle on each and every intersection point to measure it properly. What is the real influence and ROI of Social Media? Which role do digital channels play for the buying decision? How do the sellers need to act in the age of the well and pre-informed customer? And here: Which role are digital channels playing for e-care? I used to call it the Social Age. Perhaps it is better called the age of Digital Transformation everywhere (where social plays an extremely important role in the emancipation of the customers – in B2C and B2B).

Digital everywhere:

 


Filed under: English Tagged: Customer Experience, Digital Experience

[EN] Boundary Workers: Sitting Right at the Boundary of Knowledge Workers and Service Personnel [Infographic]

26. Februar 2014 Posted by StefanP.

A very interesting infographic on the new ‘boundary workers’. Wyatt Urmey describes them as follows:

There is a major shift in customer service underway and it heralds a new type of worker –the “boundary worker.” Boundary workers sit right at the boundary of knowledge workers and service personnel – they are not quite knowledge workers, but they are an order of magnitude above today’s service people. …

Social, mobile and cloud technology enable them to harness the expertise of the company on a mobile device right in front of the customer, where it matters. …

The implications for customer service are wide, stretching across traditional and digital operations in many industries, from banks to movie theaters to airports. …

So all hail the rise of the boundary worker. They will make our experience as customers the best we’ve seen in history, enabled as they are by technology and hired because they care.

via All Hail the Rise of the Boundary Worker – Social Business Insights Blog.


Filed under: English Tagged: Customer Experience, SocBiz

[EN] Boundary Workers: Sitting Right at the Boundary of Knowledge Workers and Service Personnel [Infographic]

26. Februar 2014 Posted by StefanP.

A very interesting infographic on the new ‘boundary workers’. Wyatt Urmey describes them as follows:

There is a major shift in customer service underway and it heralds a new type of worker –the “boundary worker.” Boundary workers sit right at the boundary of knowledge workers and service personnel – they are not quite knowledge workers, but they are an order of magnitude above today’s service people. …

Social, mobile and cloud technology enable them to harness the expertise of the company on a mobile device right in front of the customer, where it matters. …

The implications for customer service are wide, stretching across traditional and digital operations in many industries, from banks to movie theaters to airports. …

So all hail the rise of the boundary worker. They will make our experience as customers the best we’ve seen in history, enabled as they are by technology and hired because they care.

via All Hail the Rise of the Boundary Worker – Social Business Insights Blog.


Filed under: English Tagged: Customer Experience, SocBiz

[EN] Boundary Workers: Sitting Right at the Boundary of Knowledge Workers and Service Personnel [Infographic]

26. Februar 2014 Posted by StefanP.

A very interesting infographic on the new ‘boundary workers’. Wyatt Urmey describes them as follows:

There is a major shift in customer service underway and it heralds a new type of worker –the “boundary worker.” Boundary workers sit right at the boundary of knowledge workers and service personnel – they are not quite knowledge workers, but they are an order of magnitude above today’s service people. …

Social, mobile and cloud technology enable them to harness the expertise of the company on a mobile device right in front of the customer, where it matters. …

The implications for customer service are wide, stretching across traditional and digital operations in many industries, from banks to movie theaters to airports. …

So all hail the rise of the boundary worker. They will make our experience as customers the best we’ve seen in history, enabled as they are by technology and hired because they care.

via All Hail the Rise of the Boundary Worker – Social Business Insights Blog.


Filed under: English Tagged: Customer Experience, SocBiz

[EN] Could your company’s non-marketing departments be negatively impacting your marketing efforts? – Forbes

22. Januar 2014 Posted by StefanP.

Could your company’s non-marketing departments be negatively impacting your marketing efforts?

The answer is yes.

Most employees perform tasks that, on their face, don’t relate to marketing, but still impact marketing efforts. From the chief executive to the minimum-wage shipping assistant, every staff member has the power to affect your brand — the brand so carefully developed and promoted by your marketing department.

There are plenty of other marketing mistakes that non-marketing departments make, so if you want to make the most of your marketing efforts, be sure to look at marketing as a cross-departmental strategy. Nothing can give your business a better image quite like the staff members who run it.

via Are Your Non-Marketing Departments Making These Common Marketing Mistakes? – Forbes.

Marketers: Don’t call it Marketing. Call it Social Business. And Social Business is everybody and everywhere in the company.


Filed under: English Tagged: Customer Experience, Marketing, SocBiz