Top image: 7 ways to improve CX with customer self-service

7 ways to improve CX with customer self-service

Customer service can be a challenge for both the customer and the agent. If someone is reaching out to your care teams, it's usually because they have a problem they expect you to solve. Ideally, everything will go smoothly for both parties, but that's difficult with today's modern consumer, who want things their way, at their speed, and generally, on their own terms.

What customers want after an inevitable mistake is the easiest possible path to a satisfying resolution. And what that typically means is customer self-service. Your customers crave it. What are you doing to deliver it?

Here are seven suggestions for improving the customer experience (CX) by enhancing the customer journey using intelligent self-service technology:

  1. Utilize digital self-service

  2. Deploy the bot broadly across the website

  3. Make self-service a core mobile app feature

  4. Set up the right knowledge base for your chatbot

  5. Power your organization with the same knowledgebase

  6. Mine customer queries for insights

  7. Enable seamless escalation

1. Utilize digital self-service

Most digital self-service experiences consist of an FAQ page or a keyword-based search, which rely on customers to find their own answers and translate them into their own context. Think of these tools like a librarian – they don’t really give you a precise answer, but they tell you where to find the answer yourself.

It’s not inherently ineffective, but the answers customers receive can be frustratingly vague. And FAQ pages are, well, far from a slam-dunk great idea for brands, either.

However, more sophisticated self-service tools provide customers with an AI-powered chatbot that engages in a two-way dialogue to understand the intent and context of their questions. This ensures customers are given accurate and personalized responses.

The chatbot acts more like a concierge than a librarian. For example, take the question, "How do I get tickets for a show?" A concierge looks at your question in context, inferring that because you are standing in a hotel lobby in New York City, you are likely asking about tickets to a Broadway performance, not to the movie theater.

They use AI and natural language processing to understand the nuances of a customer’s question. Take, for instance, a customer who asks, "Where do I buy coffee?" A smart virtual agent or chatbot, like a concierge, knows that this customer is looking for a cup of coffee to drink. However, if a different customer asks, "Where do you buy your coffee?" a concierge knows they probably want to know where the coffee shop sources their product. Even though these two requests differ by only a couple of words, a virtual agent understands they mean very different things.

In addition, chatbots provide another layer of personalization by incorporating data from other systems, such as membership information, location, or purchase history. Suppose a customer with a premier membership who recently purchased an appliance asks about the store’s return policy. In that case, the chatbot can supply the most exact answer possible: one that pertains to premier members for that specific product at the store nearest to him.

This provides a much better customer experience than digging through a long list of return policies to identify which one fits his situation. That’s part of the magic of the AI-powered chatbot: customers can get the personalized answers they need on demand, while your brand can reserve resources to deal with more complex issues.

2. Deploy the bot broadly across the website

Don’t make the mistake of hiding your chatbot in the Contact Us section of your website. Assistance should be where the customer is making their decision. Make interactive support easy to find on any page where a customer may have a question, like product pages or the shopping cart. Companies should design these experiences based on the customer’s perspective, not their own.

Self-service can even be proactive. Depending on the customer’s online behavior, the chatbot could pop up and ask if they need assistance. For example, if a customer has two identical items of different sizes in her shopping cart, a chatbot could ask if she needs a sizing chart.

3. Make self-service a core mobile app feature

Self-service should be an integral and well-thought-out component of your mobile app, not just a repeat of what’s on your mobile website. Carefully consider the experiences and activities you want customers to be able to perform from within your mobile app. Many brands — even those with excellent web self-service — currently struggle to provide great self-service experiences through their mobile apps. This is a huge area of opportunity for brands to differentiate themselves.

The best mobile apps use customer location information (e.g., standing in the airport terminal) to contextualize their answers. Another feature that makes apps more user-friendly is product scanning, so the customer doesn’t have to type in the product name to get information.

4. Set up the right knowledge base for your chatbot

A chatbot can’t respond effectively to customers’ questions if it doesn’t know the right answers. That’s where a knowledge base comes in.

The right knowledge base is right-sized, meaning it contains only the answers people actually need, not everything the business knows. The knowledge base should also be query-driven, using natural language processing and conversational abilities to provide accurate, contextualized responses.

Lastly, to ensure that the knowledge base stays up to date, it should be easy for business users to author content without involving IT resources. In addition, it should pull from existing content on your website to avoid having to update the same information in multiple places.

5. Power your organization with the same knowledge base

You’ve put all this work into perfecting your knowledge base — have your live agents and store associates use it too. Not only does this approach provide consistency throughout the customer journey, but it also leads to faster resolution times.

Advanced knowledge management software (KMS) can even tailor the same topics to different audiences depending on their needs, like a customer, a service agent, or a store employee. This leads to a lower training investment, higher return on investment in the KMS, and reduced case handling time. Having the right knowledge base makes all the difference when you don’t want your team spending all sorts of time looking up the same answers over and over again, leading to a better, more seamless customer experience.

6. Mine customer queries for insights

What better way to gain insight into what your customers want than analyzing what they ask? A KMS with natural language processing can cluster customer queries into actionable trends, allowing you to update the knowledge base or to adjust course on product strategy.

The system could identify 30 customer questions that don’t have answers in the knowledge base. The use of natural language processing can determine the intent of questions, allowing you to group similar topics and reduce the workload.

Machine learning can also analyze trending topics and provide a better understanding of content gaps in the knowledge base. This function also delivers insights into how customers are talking or thinking about certain topics, which brands can use to inform new product releases and marketing strategies.

7. Enable seamless escalation

It’s a reality of serving customers: escalation happens. Not even the most sophisticated self-service technology can eliminate all escalations. With this in mind, ensure your escalation experience is frictionless.

Allow customers to choose how they would like to escalate their issue, like through a chat, a voice call, or a video. Smart customer engagement systems also allow the brand to proactively escalate, like looking at whether a customer uses a certain word during an interaction, allowing the system to immediately offer to escalate their issue.

The transition from one service channel to another should be painless for your customers. Equip your service agents to deliver personalized resolutions by providing all the context of previous interactions with the customer. This way, moving between channels flows as a single conversation, instead of starting anew each time.

Key takeaway: Self-service gets results

Digital customer self-service is so much more than an email deflection tool. When done well, it’s a value-add for customers, a solution always at the ready when they need it. Applying even a few of the seven tactics above will bring significant customer experience improvements.

Just about every brand recognizes the importance of providing a quality customer service experience, but many haven’t devoted the necessary resources to ensuring customers can self-serve in a way that’s simple and seamless with the rest of what you’re doing. With Emplifi Bot, keep your service team agile and answer questions in seconds, giving customers the experience they want while freeing your team up to work more efficiently on higher-touch customer needs.

If you’d like to see how Emplifi can get you started, book a demo with our team today.

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