Build Stronger Relationships with Customer Issues
The well-known Russian Playwright Anton Checkhov once wrote "Knowledge is of no value unless you put it into practice". Nothing could be truer when it comes to achieving efficiency in customer management.
The "practice" of knowledge as it relates to customer service
varies by organization, but clearly the goal should be (for any
organization) the desire to establish an efficient, consistent
process for meeting the demands on the most frequently requested
(and thereby necessary) knowledge bits and bytes that live at
the heart of your product offering.
Careful listening is by far the very best way to build
credibility in customer service - why? Your relationship with
that customer becomes stronger each time you are able to service
their individually unique articulation of a particular question,
problem, or issue. I truly believe there is a significant
difference in customer impact when a problem is solved with
written communication as opposed to a passing conversation.
Furthermore, any future customers that encounter similar
problems will make an identifiable connection through the
benefit of written communication -- consider the reasons why --
someone took the time to document precisely what their question
or issue was the problem was already experienced by someone
else, or perhaps many others by responding in writing, customer
support genuinely endorsed the validity of the issue.
Thus, the "practice" of knowledge from a tools perspective
manifests itself in the form of a knowledgebase of reusable
artefacts. You would be hard pressed today to find a helpdesk or
CRM system that does not have this feature, but there are some
distinct differences when it comes to how much work (and what
kind of flexibility) it takes to develop a good solid library of
reusable artefacts.
The first place to start when it comes to looking for a CRM or
Helpdesk knowledgebase feature is the capability for a customer
or external constituency to report and self-manage questions,
issues, and problems in their own words. This ensures that your
tool can capture the level of granularity that your customer may
want to start with, and that once the knowledgebase article is
added it will contain a solution that truly reflects customer
intent.
How much work does this cause your administration on the inside
of your company if you wish to create a closed-loop
knowledgebase artefact, strengthen the relationship with that
customer, and service the repeatability aspect of others in need
of the same solution? Consider some "must have" features to
create a positive collaborative environment for knowledge
sharing:
State Change - look for a system that enables a CSR or admin to
create state change on a customer-originated issue. The state
change would transition the issue from open to (for example), to
"closed - knowledgebase" without having to create the article
from scratch.
Publishing - look for systems that enables instant publishing as
opposed to batch processing or convoluted processes that slow
artefact approval.
Content - create solutions that contain rich content - many of
today's knowledgebase tools have added document-editing panels
(similar to MS Word) that provide word processing features,
enabling you to create rich content.
Flexibility - demand a system that gives you options on how your
knowledgebase articles will be displayed - when it comes to
knowledgebase preferences, you can please some of the people
only some of the time with a "one-size fits all" approach.
Security - ensure that knowledgebase articles have security
settings so that certain types of external users are limited in
what artefacts they are able to access.
A bit of solution shopping and careful consideration up front
will go a long way in building stronger relationships with
customers with well planned, collaborative knowledge sharing.
About the Author
Leandro Goldberg is a frequent blogger and CRM Advisor Email:
lgoldberg@supportfusion.com Company:
www.supportfusion.com
Blog: supportfusion.blogspot.com.

