When customers have great experiences with companies, they buy more, they tell others and are less likely to leave. Forrester research (The Revenue Impact of Customer Experience) and dozens of others have calculated that those positive feelings can amount to hundreds of millions and even billions in additional revenue. If you’ve looked at reviews of companies or asked friends for suggestions, you’ve been part of that engine.
Despite what seems common sense, the usual field services experience doesn’t conjure delight. Instead, one can feel a stomach knot thinking about the ensuing hassles across a many B2C and B2B industries, including telecommunications, utilities and manufacturing. Typically the interactions include:
Businesses and consumer alike view on-site visits as a disruption. Make it worthwhile by using these visits as an opportunity to build a personal relationship with the customer. Improve the customer experience and recognize the fantastic opportunity to engage customers. To do this:
Be Proactive: Hone big data to create proactive service. Smart firms will use big-data and predictive analytics to understand the root causes of service call variance and take actions to mitigate them. Even better, they will pre-empt problems entirely and focus on customer success with products and services, whether that’s through the crucial first 90 days or as part of an on-going relationship. Internet-connected sensors embedded in machines allow firms like Abbott Diagnostics to collect terabytes of data monthly that enables the firm to predict when a machine is about to fail and proactively dispatch a technician with the right equipment ahead of time to prevent the failure. Preventing problems not only has a big impact on the overall experience, it can positively impact your clients’ bottom lines.
Be Different: Re-think dispatch: When Uber and Lyft created their ride-sharing businesses, they didn’t just create a mobile app – they re-invented dispatch to better match resources with customer needs and along the way essentially eliminated the contact center. Design self-service with relevant customer data to automate dispatch and make it easier to make and schedule requests with flexible service levels. Examine the routing of field-based crews and re-think the dispatch model to maximize customer-facing time with tools like Salesforce Field Service Lightning. Every time a field-tech needs to return to his office or warehouse for a part or tool, they lose critical customer facing time. Consider mid-air refueling: rather than stop to get gas, the gas comes to you and you stay in the field. When feasible, bring the right material to the field to save time.
Be transparent: Create flexible and visible delivery windows. With 1-Hour delivery windows, Safeway shoppers can schedule a grocery delivery at an available time that perfectly fits a tight schedule. Shoppers can also save money by selecting an available 2-Hour window or an environmentally friendly “Green” 4-Hour window. Comcast’s “Uber-esque” mobile app sends customers an alert when a technician is about 30 minutes away…and allows users to track the technician on a map (Graphic source: Comcast.com). Build in redundant back-ups, such as additional technicians to pick up slack when one visit goes long.
Be empathetic: Move beyond installation to customer success. While she was the VP of branded customer experience at Time Warner Cable, Catherine Cattrell initiated a pilot aimed at improving customer experience out in the field. She recruited a set of high-performing technicians, gave them a more professional uniform, provided them soft-skills training to empathize with customers’ needs, and instructed them in how to not just install the cable services but rather to make sure the customer could do what they wanted on it. While these house calls took longer, they also reduced future calls to contact center and increased the speed that customers experienced the value of the services they purchased.
Be attuned: Change to customer-focused metrics. Internal performance metrics often have little connection with the actual customer experience. Think about “on time departure” for airlines. How many times do airlines pull back from the gate to comply to an on time departure target only to sit 10 feet from the gate for 90 minutes due to an air traffic delay. Leading edge contact centers at firms like American Express have eliminated outdated internally-focused metrics like call handling time in favor of more engagement and better experiences that lead to future revenue – field services organizations should follow suit. Elevate customer-focused metrics like “ease of doing business” and “likelihood to recommend” (Net Promoter Score) while putting resolution time on the back-burner.
Your customer’s expectations – regardless of industry and despite being a business-to-business company – are being set by Amazon, Uber and Apple. They don’t care about the complexity of your internal operational environment or the challenges of your old and outdated IT systems. They want interactions to be easy and not waste their valuable time. Firms that succeed see customers who do more business with them and who become a powerful marketing advocate through their word-of-mouth.