Best Practices

Why Traditional Customer Service Models Just Don’t Cut It – Part 1

By Incognito on June, 23 2015

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The answer lies in subscriber self-service.

Research from the Customer Contact Council has found that customer loyalty has more to do with delivering basic promises than dazzling service. Furthermore, many people actually expect to have the option of self-service when seeking help for a problem. Up to 70 percent of customers expect a self-service option for handling commercial questions and complaints. However, there is a caveat — if self-service falls short, personal contact as a safety net is an absolute necessity. The message is clear: reduce the work that customers have to do to solve a problem to encourage loyalty and lower churn.

Subscriber self-service has the added benefit of reducing costs. According to the most recent TSIA Support Services benchmark data, incidents resolved via phone average $510, while email incidents average nearly $700. Chat interactions average a much lower $150 per interaction, but still dwarf the cost of web self-service incidents, which average only $4. See the table below for more detail.

The need for subscriber self-service is clear, but what challenges stand in the way of implementing a valuable self-service portal? And how can you solve them? Find out next week in part two.

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