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Great customer service - online or by phone?

Great customer service - online or by phone?

Great customer service - online or by phone?

 

One of the challenges of writing articles for a company blog is to write about the right stuff. It’s easy to write about stuff which really isn’t relevant to our customers. No-one really wants to hear what I think of Batman - The Dark Knight, or what our CEO has for breakfast. But every now and then something interesting comes up in the blogosphere, which we just have to give our opinion on. Rohit Bhargava is a pretty well known marketing blogger and he’s reported on a disagreement of what makes good customer service.

Essentially a company called 37Signals believes that offering email-only support makes for excellent service. Another Web 2.0 company, Freshbooks believes that telephone support is an essential part of excellent customer service.

 

We think we’re something of an authority on customer support delivered online, and have a stack of awards to prove it. So I thought it would be interesting to add to the debate and provide our perspective on what makes for great service. We fundamentally believe excellent support, delivered online is perfectly possible. In our ideal world customers would only ever phone us if their broadband service was totally broken (and hopefully we’d know that before they even phoned us).

We’ve always aimed to deliver as much customer support online as possible, rather than by phone, for several reasons. Customer self-serve and automation is a core principle of our business model. We believe customers want to find their own answer and are perfectly capable to do so if you provide the right tools – why wait in a call queue to tell an agent your new billing details if you can log on the website and update them yourself in half the time?

Around 16,000 contacts per week (customer service enquiries, technical support requests etc) come through our Help Assistant and around 24,000 come into our Customer Support Centre via the phone system. We have two customer support sites - Sheffield, UK and Durban, South Africa. It’s more efficient for us to deal with support requests online rather than by phone, as we don’t have to deal with them in real time. That way we can manage the peaks and troughs of demand better. We provide customer support statistics and an SLA so customers can see how quickly we respond to tickets and when the quietest times to call us are. The benefit of online support is that because of the efficiency we’re able to employ fewer support staff per customer than our competitors. In turn that means we have lower costs and pass these onto our customers in the form of lower prices and more attractive products.

We developed our online support system to replace email support as we believe email isn’t accountable enough. We always want to make sure customers can track their query and if different agents in different teams work on the ticket, our customer can always check on progress. Also absolutely everything that happens to that ticket is recorded so our customers can always see a complete audit trail. We also give updates via email and SMS.

Over the years we’ve tried various different things to promote online support and improve our service. So generally speaking we’re in agreement with 37signals that customer support for web applications and web services should be delivered online. Having said that we know some customers really do want to speak to someone to get an issue resolved. This can be particularly important for business customers and we have a dedicated business support team specifically to meet that need.

We’ve got plans in place to trial customer support via instant messaging and also give our customers the ability to add their own support tips and user guides to our website so that everyone can benefit from the shared knowledge.

What we believe is fundamental however is choice, consistency and quality. If customers want to phone up you should provide the support and it should be just as good as any other channel for support. If customers prefer to use our website for support then that needs to be top notch too. An opportunity for feedback and improvement is a must. So we track feedback on our tickets and run monthly customer service surveys to track call quality.

In the future it seems hard to believe that anyone brought up with laptops, iPods and smart phones will accept having to phone a call centre to get technical support. Online will be the first place to look for help. Waiting in a queue to speak to someone for help simply won’t be tolerated. Is the end in sight for Call Centres as we know it? We think so.

Do you prefer online support to phone support? Would you do business with a company that refused to pick up the phone? We’d love to hear what you think.

Neil Armstong Products Director, Plusnet

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7 Comments
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7 Comments
beano
Grafter
I prefer online support where it's good and efficient, but I don't think I'd deal with a company that didn't clearly advertise phone support. Online queries are much easier to ignore. The fact that plus net advertised a geographic number (an 03 one would do as well) was a significant factor in my choice if supplier because it implies you're not afraid of your customers getting in touch with you, like Tiscali who only offer support via premium rate numbers.
Be3G
Grafter
I think I'm much the same: in general I will always use online support, but it would also be imperative that easy, cheap and useful phone support is available too, as I found when my broadband did stop working completely a month and a half ago.
grumpy_ol_git
Not applicable
What impresses me about plusnet and its CSC's is that I can phone you at 2AM on a Sunday and 1.get someone who actually knows what they are talking about, not just reading off a crib sheet and 2. Who speaks fluent English. Every time I tried to phone the tech support of my old ISP (BT) i got a bad line to Backwardstan and someone who spoke even less English than I do Urdu. Your phone support is first class, lets not lose it.
scribbler
Interested
I'd always prefer online support, and one of the major attractions when I migrated to Plusnet was the wealth of information on the website, and the ease of monitoring and managing one's own account. Having said that, another consideration was the availability of a geographic number for support. On the day of migration, there was a hitch which meant I was without broadband for 15 hours. I didn't actually feel too bad about it, as, being on a flat rate tariff, I was able to call support, at no extra cost, and all calls were answered in a reasonable time. Had I faced long queues on a premium rate or even 0845 number, I would have had serious doubts about staying with Plusnet. So, by all means, encourage customers to communicate online - it's got to be more efficient - but don't abandon the phone!
s_d_c
Dabbler
I can't see anything good about traditional phone support disappearing. Yes, it's great that there is online support available, however as ADSL is not a guaranteed service: if it goes down, what reliable methods of contacting you would there be without the old fashioned (but very reliable) phone?!
yorky
Not applicable
I can endorse many of the comments above.I changed to plus about 5 months ago and it was the best move I have made since acquiring a computer about 6 years ago. The availability of phone support included in my call allowance was a major factor.I have had to use it only twice, and on both occasions ithas beeneffective, quick and polite.
Scott_Magus
Not applicable
Having had problems with my previous ISP (SKY) for over a year, I switched to PlusNet. The problems with my slow and unreliable connection persisted and so I contacted PlusNet. Having spent a fortune speaking to Sky about the faults on my line and getting nowhere, I was able to test my line using PlusNet's online support tools, then contact them with the resultant fault details, for free! I had an engineer to me within days, who fixed the fault! I've had a stable and fast connection ever since. I was delighted with PlusNet's response to my complaint and cannot recommend them more highly for resolving in days what Sky failed to even acknowledge as a fault!