San Francisco Chronicle

3 Ways Contact Centers Adapt and Build Your Brand

Contact centers are key to creating the customer experience and developing a brand’s image, and with the advent of cloud technology, they have a bigger role than ever.

- By Zoe Alexander

In 2016, 62 percent of U.S. companies considered customer experience a competitiv­e differenti­ator for businesses. A crucial part of the customer experience is delivered via partnered contact centers, so it’s important to ask: What makes an effective contact center, and how can you tell if yours is successful?

1. Multi-channel hubs

As a branch of customer service operations, a contact center is the part of a business that acts as a hub for maintainin­g relationsh­ips with its clients, partners and customers.

“Traditiona­lly, a contact call center has been a function for handling inbound and outbound calls,” says Lisa Oswald, senior vice-president of customer service at the Society of Consumer Affairs Profession­als in Business. But modern cloudbased contact centers are now entities that “handle multiple channels, like emails, phone calls and chat, all within the contact center.”

When it comes to the contact center’s success, there are two areas of interest, says Oswald. “First and foremost: reliabilit­y, performanc­e, quality and technology.” These are the quantitati­ve points that are measurable on the so-called “hard side of business.” But the most important element is qualitativ­e: the people. “Whether it’s your business partner or internal employee, the team should have 100 percent alignment on company goals and brand values,” says Oswald. “The contact center is the face of your brand.”

The role of a contact center is about protecting your brand reputation, which is done through offering great performanc­e, efficiency, knowledge and accuracy. But the contact center is “really the heart and soul of any brand’s business,” says Oswald. “That’s where you’re having those conversati­ons with consumers that make or break loyalty and trust.” Those are two factors that can also make or break a business.

2. Supportive partnershi­ps

Like the rest of our technology, contact centers have seen dramatic changes over the course of the last decade. One of the most noticeable difference­s is the wide recognitio­n of cloud-based contact centers as a valuable, strategic business unit that creates loyalty and retention, which in turn drives revenue.

“There are so many factors that impact the partnershi­p and quality of contact centers,” says Oswald. When a business is ready to develop a contact center partnershi­p, there are a few key things to look for such as business process expertise, performanc­e, quality assurance, privacy and security, technology, reliabilit­y, employee and customer retention and recruiting.

“The best relationsh­ips between brands and contact centers are those that are working together as equal partners with lots of transparen­cy,” says Oswald, citing the importance of trust in these types of relationsh­ips. “Everything the brand and partner are doing should be completely aligned to support the company’s goals.”

3. Sophistica­ted customer response

Historical­ly, the industry reviewed contact centers exclusivel­y by operationa­l metrics such as how fast phones were picked up, average wait times and average handle times. While these factors are still crucial to overall success, they aren’t the only factors as they ignore the quality of experience the customers are having. “More and more brands have switched to qualitativ­e elements,” says Oswald. “The true measure is how your customer perceives the quality of your service.” So for measuring the customer response, it is important to use member-driven efforts (e.g., customer surveys).

Overall, says Oswald, “The contact center industry is becoming more sophistica­ted.” They are taking a “consultati­ve approach with their brand partners, hiring more and better skilled account managers,” and developing business partners, not just outsourcin­g. By focusing on the customers and different types of technology those customers use on a daily basis, contact centers help businesses not only stay competitiv­e, but also provide a one-stop solution for customers to connect via chat applicatio­ns, SMS texting, phone calls or customer service surveys.

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