contact centre

The cost of customer service failure

Published on: June 29, 2011
Author: Epticablog

Failing to answer customer service queries has an obvious impact on an organisation – customers and prospects get upset and vote with their wallets, leading to a loss of sales and a dent to the brand. Nowadays more and more consumers also broadcast their concerns on social media, generating further impact on company reputation.What is less well-explored is the other consequence of customer s...

The customer service black hole

Published on: June 14, 2011
Author: Epticablog

A large number of UK companies are still failing badly when it comes to online customer service. That’s the headline finding of a major new report – The 2011 Eptica UK Multichannel Customer Service Study, which found a chasm between the best and worst performers in delivering service to consumers.The study surveyed 100 leading UK organisations in multiple sectors, analysing their abili...

Putting the Smart into mobile customer service

Published on: May 31, 2011
Author: Epticablog

While smartphones have been around for several years, their usage is now dramatically increasing, driven by the likes of Apple and Google’s Android operating system. Recent figures from analysts Canalys found that 101 million smartphones were shipped in Q1 2011, up 83% from previous figures.So what does this mean for customer service strategy? With more and more customers using smartphones t...

Why better email management is vital for customer service

Published on: May 26, 2011
Author: Epticablog

 While channels such as social media are rapidly increasing in importance, for the majority of organisations email is still the communication channel of choice for customer service. It has the advantages of being quick for the customer, has an audit trail and is available outside normal office hours.Yet judging by customer complaints and even the views of industry figures many companies still...

Customer service isn’t just the contact centre

Published on: May 10, 2011
Author: Epticablog

The reason that contact centres came into being was to provide a central place for delivering service to customers, initially via telephone and then expanding to include new channels such as email, the web and now social media.However forward looking companies now realise that customer service can’t be just left to a small part of the organisation – the contact centre – no matter...

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