Warc, 26 May 2014
TORONTO: A majority of consumers are more interested in
receiving an efficient customer service experience as opposed to a personalised
one, a new survey has found.
IntelliResponse, a supplier of virtual agent technology,
polled 1,000 US online consumers asking what sort of relationship they wanted
from those companies they bought goods and services from.
Over half (59%) preferred an efficient, transactional
relationship while around one quarter (24%) characterised their relationship as
a friendship, where they get personalised service.
Brands need to stop trying to "surprise and
delight", according to IntelliResponse, and instead focus on the changing
approach of consumers towards customer service.
More than two thirds of respondents (68%) said that a
company's website is now the first place they go when looking for information
regarding a product or service. And three quarters (74%) thought they should be
able to get the same answers from that source as from speaking to a call
centre.
For younger consumers, whose lives are increasingly centred
around their smartphone, mobile apps were the solution.
Some 61% of respondents aged 18-24 and 60% of those aged
25-34 said they would rather use a mobile app for a customer service question
than call a contact centre to speak to a live representative.
"Consumers want the ability to find the answers to
their customer service questions, at the time and place of their
choosing," said David Lloyd, CEO of IntelliResponse.
"Companies need to empower their customers with
self-service channels that can instantly deliver the single, right answer to
service questions and ultimately provide the efficient experience consumers are
looking for," he added.
The importance of the customer experience was emphasised in
an article in ANA Magazine, which noted that the proliferation of consumer
touchpoints had increased the opportunities for things to go wrong, or right.
"Any weak link along the way undermines the brand
experience," said Jerry Wilson, former chief customer officer at
Coca-Cola, who saw the future being in enabling customers to design their own
customer experience.
Data sourced From PR Newswire; additional content by Warc
staff
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