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Blair Pleasant
Blair Pleasant is President & Principal Analyst of COMMfusion LLC and a co-founder of ucstrategies.com, an industry resource on the...
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Blair Pleasant | July 19, 2010 |

 
   

Why I'm Pessimistic about Social Media and the Contact Center

Why I'm Pessimistic about Social Media and the Contact Center I'm doubtful that this great vision will happen the way we expect it to. I know how pitiful most customer service interactions are.

I'm doubtful that this great vision will happen the way we expect it to. I know how pitiful most customer service interactions are.

In the past few weeks I've had three briefings about contact center vendors’ social media and contact center offerings--I guess it's beyond a fad. I remember speaking with the VP of a major contact center vendor about six months ago, telling him that his company really needs to have a social media strategy, and he just poo-poo'd the idea. Not anymore--his company also recently announced a social media play for the contact center.

As Brian Riggs and Sheila McGee-Smith reported, Cisco, Siemens, and Avaya all announced their plans and strategies to integrate their contact center offerings with social media channels, although these products generally won’t be GA for several months. Still, it shows that these companies recognize the importance of social media for customer support and customer interaction, and want their customers to know that they’re on top of this important trend.

We all know that Twitter and Facebook are becoming important channels for customers to interact with companies in order to complain, get information, and provide feedback. In the very near future, companies will be able to route tweets and Facebook posts to their contact center agents, just like they do for voice calls, email, and web chat sessions. But wait--how many companies are actually routing emails and web chat sessions to contact center agents? The percentage is still very small, and an even smaller percentage route these non-voice interactions to telephone-based contact agents, and generally have separate agents handling text-based interactions. I assume the same will be the case for social media--there will be a dedicated and separate group of agents handling social media interactions.

While it doesn't necessarily matter who is handling the interaction, whether it's Twitter's #Comcastcares team or a call center agent, what does matter is that the enterprise treats these interactions just as they would a phone call to the contact center. This means having the tools to do reporting, workforce optimization, staffing, analytics, etc., providing the organization with the same information on the interaction as if it were a typical customer service phone call. While these tools will exist, I'm not sure how many companies will actually implement them and use them as they would in the formal call center.

During my briefings with the vendors about their plans for social media and the contact center, I get very excited to hear about their great plans--how they're going to tie in context and understand who the customer is--what is their value to the company based on purchases, how many Twitter followers they have, what other interactions they’ve had with the company, and so on. This is all great and exactly where the market should be headed.

But unfortunately, I'm doubtful that this great vision will happen the way we expect it to. As an analyst, I know about all of the useful customer service/contact center technologies and capabilities that exist. As a consumer, I know how pitiful most customer service interactions are. Just today I called my health benefits company, "spoke" my account number when the system asked me to, but then had to repeat the number when an agent answered the call. Come on, people--we’ve had CTI capabilities since the mid-late 1990’s – and we still have to repeat our account numbers?



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