Customer Relationship Management: Concepts and Technologies
Customer Relationship Management: Concepts and Technologies
Chapter 10
Service automation
About customer service 1
1. Technical
2. Functional
3. Reputational
SERVQUAL model of service quality
1. Reliability
2. Assurance
3. Tangibles
4. Empathy
5. Responsiveness
Customer Insight
The Culture of the Organisation
Information and Access
Delivery
Timeliness and Quality of Service
TISSE model of service excellence
Figure 10.1
Service automation definition
Contact centres
are configured to communicate with customers across multiple
channels including voice telephony, web, mail, email, SMS,
multimedia messaging, instant messaging, web chat, social media
and fax. call-centres
As contact centres spend more time interacting with customers in
social media, some firms re-imagine their contact centres as
customer engagement centres.
Call centres
are generally dedicated to voice telephony communications, whether
through a public switched telephone network, cell-phone network, or
VoIP.
Where is service automation deployed 2?
Help-desks
● are usually associated with IT environments where assistance is
offered to IT users. SA applications such as case management, job
management and service level management are used in this setting.
Field service
● is widespread in both B2C and B2B environments. Service
automation applied to field service operations involves technologies
such as job management, scheduling, mapping and spare parts
management.
Key technological elements of SA 1
Infrastructure
● When service is delivered through a central call-centre or contact-centre, in
a multi-channel environment, there needs to be tight integration between
various communication systems, including telephony, email, and web.
Data
● Access to the right customer-related data, to enable the service agent to
identify and fix the issue promptly is critical to the delivery of responsive
customer service.
Key technological elements of SA 2
Devices
● Where service is delivered by a distributed work-force, smaller, lighter,
devices such as laptops, Windows-enabled hand-held devices, and smart
phones or cell phones such as Blackberries, tend to be employed; these
are typically not found in call- and contact-centres. Synchronisation is also
an issue for a distributed service team. Periodic synchronisation with the
central CRM database enables service engineers and others to ensure
that they are fully apprised of their daily scheduled appointments.
Software.
Benefits from service automation
Figure 10.2
Functionality offered by SA software
Table 10.1
Activity management
Volumes received
Average queuing time
Average handle time (AHT)
Abandon rate
Average speed of answer
Response time
First call (or contact) resolution (FCR)
Self-service issue resolution
Case assignment
Figure 10.4
Contract management
Figure 10.3
Customer self-service
Web self-service
Interactive voice response (IVR)
Kiosks
Self-checkout
Apps
Email response management systems
Figure 10.6
Knowledge-base self service
Figure 10.5
Service analytics
Figure 10.7
Service level management
Figure 10.8
Workflow development