How Testing Solutions Reduce Risk & Improve Customer Satisfaction

Imagine you’re trying to book a flight. You call the toll-free number and use the interactive voice response (IVR) to get through to bookings, but instead you are put through to the baggage area. You hang up and try again, but this time you wind up speaking to the airline lounge. Do you try a third time or call a competitor? I know what I would do.

The IVR is now a key component to delivering a great customer experience, so what steps should a business take to ensure these systems are working optimally? Do they take proactive measures, or just wait until a customer lets them know that something is broken? And, by the time it gets to this stage, how many customers may have been lost?

There are some businesses out there taking unnecessary risks when it comes to testing the reliability of their communications systems. Instead of performing extensive tests, they’re leaving it up to their customers to find any problems. Put bluntly, they’re rolling the dice by deciding to deploy systems that haven’t been properly tested. This is the primary line of communication with their customers and, in many cases, it’s also how they generate significant revenue, why would they put both customer satisfaction and revenue in jeopardy?

Businesses have quite a few useful options when it comes to proactive testing. We recently acquired IQ Services, a company that tests these environments on a scheduled basis to make sure they’re working properly. It’s an automated process that tests how long it takes to answer, makes sure that the correct responses are given, and even performs a massive stress test with up to 80,000 concurrent calls. (It’s very useful for scenarios such as a large healthcare provider going through open enrollment.) These testing solutions are the way that businesses can ensure that their systems are working reliably under heavy load without leaving anything to chance.

In a world where we think of people as risk-averse, it’s interesting to observe anyone who chooses not to perform these tests. It’s not necessarily a conscious decision if the situation were actually framed in a way where someone knew exactly what they were putting at risk, they’d probably make a better choice. You wouldn’t buy car insurance after you already had an accident. It simply wouldn’t do you much good at that point. The same thing applies to your communications systems. It only makes sense to take a proactive approach to make sure things are working as expected.

Now that you’re aware of what’s at risk if you don’t perform these important tests, don’t make the conscious decision to wait until something has already gone wrong. We’re talking about the potential loss of millions of dollars per hour (or even per minute in certain cases). Some strategic planning can give you the peace of mind you’ll avoid catastrophic loss of revenue in the future. Whenever you do go live with a new feature, you can do so with confidence.

We’ve brought these new Testing Solutions into the Prognosis family. Above and beyond, we want to make sure people understand these capabilities are available. You don’t have to be reactionary, there are proactive solutions to stop you from rolling the dice when it comes to your business and customers. Don’t leave the livelihood of your organization to chance. Of course, if you’re in the mood to gamble your money, there’s always Vegas.

Thanks to IR Prognosis for the article.

Top Ten Things You Learn from IQ Services’ Outside-In Monitoring

IQ Services- Top Ten Things You Learn from IQ Services’ Outside-In Monitoring
  1. Are carrier and toll-free services still correctly provisioned?
  2. Are cloud services working as expected?
  3. Are IVR and self-service applications up and running?
  4. Are host response times acceptable?
  5. Are speech recognition and TTS services available?
  6. Are failover/backup servers up and ready to take traffic?
  7. Did the right data pop on the agent’s desktop?
  8. Does call intelligibility degrade at certain times of day?
  9. Is your customer-facing technology performing 24 x7?
  10. Are customers having the issue-free technology experiences you planned for them?

IQ Services’ Outside-in Monitoring services for contact center and communications solutions use real single or multi- channel transactions (phone calls, browser sessions, faxes and emails) to ensure your end-to-end self-service contact center and communications solutions are available and performing as expected 24 x 7. Because transactions are generated remotely and interact with your technologies just like customers – at the “top of the stack” instead of at the server level – this type of monitoring offers a holistic view of the performance of your integrated contact center and communications solutions.

Every company should be concerned about the gap between internal monitoring and actual end-to-end performance and customer experience. Outside-In Monitoring is the right bridge to fill that gap.

Thanks to IQ Services for the article.

Multichannel and Multimodal Contact Centres: How Do You Know It All works Together?

IQ Services- Contact Centre Testing & Monitoring

The convergence of voice, web, social media and video means that solution providers are coming up with exciting and sophisticated ways to allow users to take more control of their customer service experience. Customers want to decide how they communicate with your company, and how your company communicates with them.

Two of the challenges facing contact centres today are “multichannel” and “multimodal” technologies. This article will explore these terms and introduce some ways to ensure that the performance of these capabilities can be maintained and optimized.

In addition to speaking with an agent, today’s customers have access to a variety of self-service options; they can schedule a service call via the Web or an IVR by logging in with an account number, or they can send an email or chat with an online representative. The availability of multiple touch-points by which a customer can access your company is a multi-channel contact centre solution, with each transaction utilizing just a single channel at a time.

Even a chat session that results in a callback or click-to-call event uses only one channel at a time, even though the contact centre offers up multiple channels.

Enter Multimodal.

Now with SmartPhones and WebRTC, consumers have access to a much richer and potentially more powerful user interface. Add a Bluetooth headset to the SmartPhone and now the user can access the rest of the phone’s features while carrying on a conversation. Consumers are already tapping multimodal capabilities through features like Amazon’s Kindle Fire “Mayday” button and click-to-call interactions with insurance agents that allow the policy holder to take a video of damage to their car and submit it to the agent for an estimate – all while still talking to the agent.

But what about the contact centre side of that multimodal experience?

With SIP pipes into the centre and WebRTC extended to the agents wherever they may be, this multimodal scenario is possible today. But now, in addition to the communications pipes being converged, the content (previously segregated and siloed), must be integrated as well. These are new frontiers for contact centre architectures and just like the technologies that emerged previously (IVR and web self-service, speech reco, CTI, IPT), they will run into some bumps in the road.

And that’s where IQ Services comes in.

IQ Services offers testing and monitoring services that determine whether all your customer facing solutions work as desired under load and continue to be available 24/7 in production.

  • Do you know if an increase in voice traffic adversely affects response time of your web self-service solution?
  • Can your SIP pipes handle the same sudden increase in incoming traffic your old-fashioned TDM boxes handled sitting down?
  • Are you concerned about your process for logging-in remote agents via the web and delivering calls to them?
  • How about proving that your converged queuing process properly elevates high-profile chat customers over lower priority voice customers?

Our systems can easily be configured to interact with your multichannel or multimodal contact centre solutions to ensure it all works together, whether it’s one channel at a time or across multiple channels. The insight we provide will give you confidence that the experience your customers have is the one you intend – one that delivers on your company’s brand promise. Contact us to learn more.

Thanks to IQ Services for the article.

Using Virtual Customers® to Optimize Customer Service Experience

IQ Services VC 101

Providing Contact Centres with Reliable, End-to-End Performance Metrics

Many people believe they are best served by real people, not by voice robots. That’s the rationale behind GetHuman.com. But the economics and utility of self-service as an alternative to live agent interactions are so compelling that self-service solutions are here to stay.

Providing multiple touch-points is a huge technology investment. Technology is great, but you can’t just diligently manage the implementation process and then assume all is well with the customer service experience. Because nothing is static in this world, it is extremely important to confirm from the customer perspective that your contact centre technology really is capable of delivering the experience you intend, one that defends your brand promise and delivers on it every day in production.

In 18 years of supporting clients through the installation phase and into the production phase of the contact centre lifecycle, we’ve learned many lessons about how to best evaluate and optimize the Customer Service Experience (CSE) that is the foundation of delivering your brand promise. This article introduces the process we’ve built based on our experience. It’s a process that ensures the contact centre technologies for which you’ve spent hundreds of thousands of dollars and count on to take care of your customers the way they want to be taken care of is, in fact, offering up the customer service experience you intend, an experience that delivers on your brand promise and doesn’t push customers away.

How?

IQ Services VC 101Introducing the Virtual Customer® Process

The Virtual Customer Process positions the customer service perspective as a key element of your technology management toolkit. It’s a proven process that ensures the customer service experience delivered is aligned with the intentions of the Customer Experience & Brand Management teams, because its first step is identifying key customer types and defining how they will interact with the contact centre technology you put in place. By doing so, the Virtual Customer Process goes beyond using only internal metrics that confirm everything is Working As Designed (WAD), it monitors and measures actual customer service experience as it’s delivered.

Once you have actual Customer Service Experience data, you can create a feedback loop by tweaking your systems and observing the impact on the actual CSE delivered, not just on internal metrics such as CPU time or QoS.

When you know the service experience delivered by your contact centre technologies defends your brand standards, you can also be confident the experience delivered increases satisfaction, builds loyalty and creates advocates.

What is the Virtual Customer Process?

The Virtual Customer Process is a multistep approach that first defines and then deploys Virtual Customers (VCs) to perform real, end-to-end transactions for the purpose of evaluating application and technology performance variables that impact Customer Service Experience.

What are “Virtual Customers?”

Virtual Customers are automated processes that follow test case scripts to interact with the Contact Centre just like real customers, performing real transactions.

How Does the Virtual Customer Process Work?

The first step in the Virtual Customer process is a communications assessment. During this step, key customer activities are identified, the associated Virtual Customer interactions are defined and scripted, and the plan for deploying the VCs so they can collect actionable data is mapped out. The challenge is selecting the best type(s) of VCs to perform the activity required to evaluate contact centre performance. Actionable data is CSE information that can be used to evaluate business solution performance relative to defined CSE objectives and metrics.

Deploying Virtual Customers

Once the VCs are defined and the ramp-up and rollout plans are established, the VCs are deployed as test traffic to access contact centre technololgy from the outside-in, providing your company with reliable, end-to-end performance metrics from the customer perspective.

Key considerations in deploying VCs include:

  • Risk analysis and consequences
  • Section of the right VC interactions
  • Clearly defined availability and performance objectives and metrics
  • Benchmark assessment
  • Reporting and notification criteria

What is CSE Optimization?

  • A process for deploying VCs to collect data that can be used to evaluate and improve business solution performance, relative to defined objectives and metrics
  • An iterative process that tunes CSE delivered

Conclusion

Properly implemented, the Virtual Customer Process® is a critical element of an integrated continuous improvement process. It hones and perfects a customer service experience that defends your brand promise, thereby positively impacting key metrics such as customer effort, customer loyalty, and net promoter score. Experiences that mirror your brand promise ultimately have bottom line impact. Optimizing customer service experience is a direct path to enhancing ROI.

Thanks to IQ Services for the article. 

Testing IVR at the Top of the Stack: How and When to Stay on Top of the Caller Perspective

The IQ Services Difference

In the world of computing technology and communications solutions, the last twenty years have been one revolution after another. Faster processes, niftier appliances, smarter phones, and virtualized services are everywhere. Contact centers have grown from hunt groups and operator consoles to full-blown CRM solutions riding on top of evolving, complex technologies.

Many of us are excited to use the new technologies because of three potentially significant benefits:

  • generate cost savings
  • facilitate increase revenues
  • provide better customer service

Many businesses are really good at tracking the cost savings and revenue generation benefits associated with technology deployment and upgrades. But a recent IQ Services poll revealed that 68 percent of respondents did not have a proactive way to track the customer service quality offered by their IVR and other customer-facing technologies. Some of these businesses use internal monitoring to see if all the individual technologies are working. But they do not have an effective way to test or monitor from the top of the stack or the critical end-to-end caller perspective.

How to Get the Caller Perspective

So how do you get to the “top of the stack” of caller perspective of IVR and end-to-end contact center solution performance and service quality?

Although the answer to this question is “it depends on your business requirements, practices and objectives,” there are four general best practices almost any business can quickly use to get and maintain a holistic view of service quality delivered by customer-facing technologies:

  • secret shoppers
  • customer satisfaction interviews/surveys
  • social media monitoring
  • IVR application testing and monitoring

The first three best practices – secret shoppers, surveys and social media – tend to receive a lot of buzz in CRM and technology circles. There is no lack of information about these critical outside-in techniques for assessing a business’ customer-facing technologies and customer service practices.

IVR Application Testing and Monitoring

Let’s briefly explore the fourth, less explored bullet – IVR testing and monitoring. To ensure IVR and customer-facing technologies perform and deliver the expected service quality, testing and monitoring techniques must be used before and after deployment. Before initial deployment or before any significant change in capacity, infrastructure, or application functionality is finalized, the following testing must be completed to ensure optimal service quality:

Application feature testing: helps ensure the whole application – every logical twist and turn – works as specified

Application load testing: confirms the integrated customer-facing technologies perform as specified under full load

Application usability testing: delivers crucial insight as to whether prospective users/customers are befuddled by the application or they can quickly and efficiently navigate the menu options.

When? Before Deployment

Rigorous application feature testing, load testing and usability testing are required to ensure IVR applications are easy to use and implemented according to business rules. There are so many things to be learned from these techniques:

  • Does the application respond as expected?
  • Are your premium customers treated in the manner you expected?
  • Are unexpected results associated with a particular dialog state or call flow?
  • Does the application “sound” right?
  • Do early smoke test results conducted throughout development indicate discrepancies between the development effort and the design?
  • Do critical flows through the application work as designed?
  • Do global commands work at every state?
  • How does the solution respond to an out-of-grammar or invalid input?
  • What happens after consecutive invalid inputs?
  • How does the system respond to a valid input after invalid input?
  • What happens when an input barges into a playing prompt?
  • What happens if no inputs are made?
  • Does the application perform under expected load? Under peak conditions?
  • Can callers complete the self-service transactions you’d most like to keep in the IVR?

For each best practice and service quality technique, there are a range of approaches that vary in terms of cost, resource commitment, value of insight delivered and more. Each business must evaluate the insight and value against the cost and risks of each approach to determine the right combination.

There’s the manual approach. Since you already have a captive staff to carry it off, you ask your coworkers and employees to use the IVR. They let you know whether or not they think the application flows as the documentation you sent them said it should. You assign each person to a handful of paths selected from hundreds of possibilities and ask them to email the results.

This approach can help minimize front-end costs. But it is not always efficient or effective since your co-workers may be busy and many of the things you need to learn from application testing are hard to uncover without a more structured and automated approach to testing. In the end, you can incur costs you did not plan for with this approach.

You can hire an army of testers – people who are trained to make test calls. With this approach, you can avoid over-burdening your existing staff. However, you may be dealing with the imprecision of people making phone calls, interpreting responses and taking notes. It may also mean you can only test a subset of the application’s functionality.

You might consider buying test equipment.

Automation adds precision. Someone must be trained or hired who knows how to program the test cases, connect the device to the network and run it. The results must still be evaluated and reported.

You could outsource the project. By using a company with facilities and expertise to comprehensively exercise all features of an IVR application, you avoid burdening your overworked team. You also know the most updated techniques and tools are leveraged to test report results.

Whatever option you choose, application testing MUST take place. There is too much at risk to put a system into production without having validated its functionality, usability and robustness.

When? After Deployment

Once an IVR or customer-facing solution is in production, a business must know it keeps working around the clock to take care of your customers.

There is no need to run through all the test cases every hour just to be sure. You need a quick snapshot of how the solution is performing from the caller perspective. Most likely there are a handful of paths through the IVR application that will signal a problem. By running through these paths in the application every few minutes – or even once an hour – you can be confident the overall system is delivery quality service from the caller perspective. As with pre-deployment testing, there are a variety of approaches to monitoring service quality of production technologies, manual calls, purchased equipment or outsourced services.

Whatever approach is right for your business, it is critical that you not simply trust all is well. Immediate warning about issues, daily metrics and other monitoring reports give you the oversight you need to deliver top notch customer service through IVR and self-service solutions.

Stay on top of your IVR and customer-facing technology performance by testing at the top of the stack. You owe it to your customers and to the business stakeholders who expect as much value from the technology as possible.

Thanks to IQ Services for the article.

The Improving Image of IVR

Speech Recongnition

Since Interactive Voice Response (IVR) systems were first introduced as a customer service tool, there have been many detractors. However, a recent Forrester Consulting survey indicates that the tide has turned and customers have accepted IVR and, in some cases, even prefer it to live operators. Speech-enabled self-service IVRs have become so commonplace that many consumers report that they prefer to use such systems for simple tasks such as checking account balances, flight statuses or shipment tracking. The survey results show that more than 50% of participants reported a preference for speech-enabled IVR for most simple transactions.

The survey also suggests a positive consumer response to proactive IVR systems. Such systems are being used to place courtesy calls to customers as reminders of appointments or other important upcoming activities. Of course there is nothing new about the practice of proactive calling, but customer acceptance of the technology is improving along with the general trends in IVR acceptability. Despite all the positive marks for IVR systems, there is still room for improvement.

Although customers appreciate the ability to handle simple tasks themselves, they still want the option to easily bypass the IVR to speak to a live operator. Respondents also said that improving speech recognition and accuracy would greatly improve their calling experiences. IVR systems are still the best method for cost savings in a call center environment and are unlikely to be replaced by any other technology in the immediate future. However it is important for developers to regard negative feedback from consumers as constructive criticism and a means to improve service and performance. Overall the results of this survey are very positive but continual improvement and meeting customer expectations will result in increased business for everyone involved in the IVR industry.

Thanks to Ezinearticles.com for the article.