Thomas Rødseth at Intelecom, shares his top tips for making web chat work and what you need to consider before taking the plunge
Web chat certainly has many benefits – it delivers a modern, near real-time response to today’s digital consumer. It is cheaper than a traditional telephone call and has been proven to enhance online shopping experiences and increase customer loyalty. No surprise, therefore, that 16% of UK contact centre managers have web chat as a top 3 investment priority, with 52% of managers actively looking for a web chat solution.
Is it right for you?
But web chat is not for everyone. How can you tell if it is right for you? All contact centre managers should step back and ask themselves the following three questions:
1.Why are customers contacting us? Is it a ‘negative’ contact? For example, a customer reporting a missing delivery or a broken product. Or is it a ‘positive’ contact such as customer calling to upgrade or purchase a complementary product?
2.Is web chat the right tool for our products and services? The aim of good customer engagement is to provide customers with the answers they are looking for as quickly and efficiently as possible – regardless of the channel used. Would adding chat buttons on websites, newsletters or social media be more or less effective than including additional phone numbers or links to further information?
3.Do we have the manpower? Be practical. Do you have enough resources to meet the demand for web chat? Forecast how many agents are required to handle expected future contact volumes at various times. It’s a very similar exercise to scheduling resources for telephone contact but expect a few stark differences. The average handle time for a web chat can be very different from a phone call. Also, while a call handler can only deal with one call at a time, a web chat agent can deal with multiple interactions, anything up to 8 at any given time.
Six Top tips for getting started
Once you’ve decided that web chat is the way to go, it’s time to get organised internally. Here are a few tips to get you started:
•Trial services before go live – test out your chat service and experience how it works, making sure agents truly understand the steps customers must go through to resolve particular queries. Start small. Begin with just a few simple services before bringing on board the more sophisticated ones to boost both agent and customer confidence
•Select web chat agents carefully – don’t assume your best telephone agents will make good web chat agents. Excellent writing skills and an ability to communicate clearly and concisely are essential requirements for a web chat agent. Consider hiring people with sales experience if web chat is intended to help with checkout conversion. Technical role? Check out their ability to grasp technical information quickly. A multi-lingual contact centre? Check out written language skills
•Up-skill appropriately – once you’ve chosen the raw talent, train staff properly. In addition to the usual product knowledge and general customer service skills, make sure agents have the ability to put themselves in the customer’s shoes during a web chat, identify what a successful customer outcome may look like, avoid jargon and communicate the corporate brand
•Consider security – wherever possible, keep sensitive customer data out of web chats. Keep agents up-to-date about network security, how passwords should be used and how private details should be stored
•Measure success from different angles – track your progress and measure your success including joint reporting comparing chat and other channels such as voice. Use a comprehensive range of key performance indicators (KPIs) – from wait time, to quality scoring, customer satisfaction scores, conversion rates, first contact resolutions, customer effort or ‘Voice of the Customer’ scores. View web chat results in conjunction with results from web analytics to evaluate how effective the medium is in improving the performance of e-commerce and other websites
•Use the right technology – the latest cloud contact centre solutions deliver all the usual benefits of a cloud-based system with the added bonus of structured Chat messages and WebRTC softphone capabilities to improve real-time interactions in the contact centre. Why not consider introducing a truly blended multi-channel environment whereby web chat facilities are only available to customers during peak periods to balance overall workload? Using ‘dynamic availability’ techniques, managers can move live agents between calls, chats and emails to save time and deliver consistent service levels.
Applying a logical, systematic approach is essential to establishing the true need and practicalities of introducing web chat into your organisation. Follow these six simple steps and you will be rewarded with a more efficient and effective contact centre full of highly productive staff and your business will thank you for increased sales and loyal customers.
Thomas Rødseth is VP of Product and Marketing at Intelecom
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About Intelecom
Intelecom is a leading provider of cloud-based contact centre solutions. With approaching two decades of experience, Intelecom was one of the first to develop a cloud-based contact centre. Highly flexible and scalable, Intelecom can be adapted to accommodate one to several thousand concurrent agents using any device, in any location and integrates with multiple applications seamlessly.
Intelecom is one of the few contact centre solutions that is completely multi-channel. Intelecom agents can respond to Phone, Email, Chat, Social Media and SMS enquiries all within the one application.
For more information please visit www.intele.com
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