For the last 30 years, traditional customer service recruiting, training, core skills, and performance management have not changed dramatically. Service professionals and their management teams have been able to hone the delivery of customer needs through various channels. But are the same attributes that make a great traditional customer service representative applicable for Social Customer Service?
Traditional customer channels & attributes:
Channel: In Person
- 1 to 1+, Face to Face
- Visual presentation & interaction
- Immediate responses are critical
- Quality of written responses typically less important
Channel: Phone
- 1 to 1 voice conversation
- Improved with personal connection, tone important
- Near immediate responses improve satisfaction
Channel: Email
- 1 to 1 digital conversation
- Persona driven by written word
- Between 2-24 hrs is expected turn around time
Channel: Live Chat
- 1 to 1 digital conversation
- Typically a casual conversation, short responses, and grammar less critical
- Immediate responses are critical
But are these the same attributes needed for superior social customer service? Let's look at responsibilities and qualifications of a social customer service representative.
Responsibilities:
- Monitor Constant Contact social media outlets/networks (Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, blogs) for customer service related inquiries, complaints, concerns
- Organize customer service inquiries, concerns, and responses for record and reference track the types of questions that appear on social media outlets
- Distribute and/or partner with various internal resources to ensure social media generated issues are resolved and communicated
- Partner with various internal (possibly external) resources to update customers on promotions, technical advancements, general content, issues or changes
- Facilitate the Voice of the Customer (Social Media) to various internal departments and individuals to enhance the customer experience and product strategy
Qualifications:
- Excellent writing and phone skills
- Strong grasp of the structure, purpose, and tone of social networks
- Ability to think quickly, and formulate responses within a short turnaround time
- Ability to communicate on social networks in a professional, yet personable, way
- Flexibility
- Comfortable presenting organization's values, positioning and persona potentially to the entire social universe
- Able to "Exercise Responsible Freedom" (See Chip Bell's Delivering Knock Your Socks Off Service)
And finally, the last channel: social service.
Channel: Social Service
- 1 to many (possibly thousands or millions)
- Persona dependent upon media type
- Response dependent upon media type
- Your response is now your brand
I think we are dealing with a completely different animal. So if we are dealing with something different, what should we consider changing?
- New job titles/roles/descriptions
- Recruiting - should it need to be socially sourced?
- On-board training - inclusion of marketing, product, service, HR
- Core skill development
- Career progression paths
- Performance Management
- Continuous education models
Since this is such a new arena, all comments and thoughts are very much appreciated.
Michael Pace is the Director of Customer Support for Constant Contact's award winning Customer Support Department and on the Board of Directors for the North East Contact Center Forum. You can connect with him via LinkedIn or follow him on Twitter.