How Global Brands Create Insanely Great Customer Experiences
retailciooutlook

How Global Brands Create Insanely Great Customer Experiences

By: Mark Wang, Chief Data Scientist, Alorica

Mark Wang, Chief Data Scientist, Alorica

Wouldn’t it be great to be able to predict when and how customers will be delighted, or predict which ones will churn? From online streaming services to social media platforms, some of the most successful companies have figured out how to do it right. Unfortunately, they won’t tell you how it’s done.

However, as the chief data scientist at Alorica, the world’s leading platform for all customer interactions, I can tell you it’s all about how data analytics and customer experience (CX) intelligence strengthen our employees to provide the best service.

Feedback is a Gift

It might be painful to analyze where your brand is falling short, but consider feedback from your customers as a gift, not a pain point. Believe me, they would rather not call, email, text or send an instant message to resolve problems. They’d prefer not having problems to begin with, but when they do engage a brand, it’s best to view those interactions as opportunities to find ways to cost-effectively help those customers.

The place to start is with data. It’s a gold mine of information, a proverbial window into all the broken processes, policies, products, and services of a company that frustrate its customers. However, there’s a right way and a wrong way to unlock actionable insights from your CX data.

Data Analytics is a Game-Changer, but not Actual Magic

Let’s start with what not to do. Don’t hire data scientists, forward them data, tell them to find something useful and then walk away. After all, nobody would expect a medical doctor to diagnose their illness just by reading numerical vital signs. A comprehensive consultation between doctors and their patients is critical for doctors to understand the context of their patients’ condition and to prescribe a course of action. The same holds true for data scientists — they can’t do their job in a vacuum.

"It might be painful to analyze where your brand is falling short, but consider feedback from your customers as a gift, not a pain point"

The best working model is when a brand focuses on their core product and/ or service expertise and partners with a customer service provider that excels at taking the customer experience to a world-class level using technology. When both parties leverage their expertise, build their partnership on a supervised learning model and share CX data, brands achieve synergies they could never realize alone.

One reason why is because a brand’s business and operations experts likely have a “gut feel” for which factors are correlated to which CX outcomes. They’re in the unique position to provide context and offer a broad direction in which the data scientists should begin their exploration.

Exploration Begins With Supervised Learning

Predicting customer behaviors depends heavily on machine learning algorithms used for “supervised learning” models. We “train” these models by feeding them data that contains known historical outcomes. This is nearly the opposite of “unsupervised learning” models in which a set of data are unlabeled and without context.

For example, a supervised learning model to predict customer drinking behaviors would require historical contextual data about where customers drink (e.g. in a donut shop, at a New Year’s party, in a football stadium, etc.) and the actual drinks they consume (e.g. coffee, beer, milk, champagne, soda, etc.).

That’s because customer behavior is highly contextual. Customers in a donut shop eating a hot donut, for example, are more likely to buy milk or coffee to go with it than a light beer. Revelers in Times Square on New Year’s Eve are more likely to be holding a plastic cup of champagne than a vegetable smoothie.

Sharing is Caring

When brands share contextual data on the “state of the customer” with their customer service partner, the possibilities for revolutionizing the customer experience are boundless. Imagine, for example, customer engagement experts being able to anticipate which incoming calls are frustrated customers and knowing the most likely reason why they’re calling. Immediately after answering a call, the engagement experts could state the most likely issue causing frustration and ask callers if that’s why they were calling — that’s white glove service that would impress most people. From a data analytics perspective, this is a similar approach to how online retailers provide product and service purchasing recommendations to customers surfing their websites.

What’s most exciting in the CX space is the emerging technologies that didn’t exist just a few short years ago. For example, Alorica recently deployed robots that automated repetitive order fulfillment and billing tasks for a client, freeing up our engagement experts to focus on more complex assignments for the client. Within our talent acquisition department, we now use chatbots to streamline the recruiting process to facilitate faster staffing ramps to serve clients in highly seasonal industries. Another technology solution our clients are using is AI to match the personality profiles of incoming callers with customer engagement experts best able to help, improving customer satisfaction and loyalty while reducing costs.

However, one of the most innovative and promising technology solutions is advanced speech analytics. We can now more deeply analyze the recordings of incoming client calls on a vast scale that’s not possible with manual processes or random surveys. In near-real time, the company can share critical insights with clients, including emerging customer topics, the root causes of complaints, which operational processes need to be fixed and a variety of other observations.

It Begins and Ends With Partnership

From supervised learned models to sharing contextual customer data, partnership is the key for any global brand working with its customer service provider to elevate their customer experiences. Match that partnership mindset with a provider that has a vast network of customer engagement experts (think 100,000!) across multiple continents who are empowered by the best technology and you have a formula for growing in today’s competitive global marketplace.

Weekly Brief

Top 10 Retail Tech Companies in APAC - 2018

Read Also

How to Operationalize Digital Transformation Strategy?

How to Operationalize Digital Transformation Strategy?

Andrea Marks, VP of Digital Transformation at Walmart
Gain an Edge or Get Edged Out

Gain an Edge or Get Edged Out

Nick East, VP, and Andrew Hoyt CTO & VP Engineering, NCR Retail
Three Industries Artificial Intelligence Will Transform Over the Next Decade

Three Industries Artificial Intelligence Will Transform Over the Next Decade

Eric Redmond, Global Director, Technology Innovation, Nike
Leveraging Challenges to further Build a Solid Foundation: Org Culture and Tech

Leveraging Challenges to further Build a Solid Foundation: Org Culture and Tech

Rosemary Smith, Director, Supply Chain Development, LEGO Group
The 4th Industrial Revolution: Retailer's Must Do or Die

The 4th Industrial Revolution: Retailer's Must Do or Die

Dr. Mark Chrystal, Chief Analytics Officer, rue21
API Driven Adaptive Architecture for the Post-Covid Business Agility

API Driven Adaptive Architecture for the Post-Covid Business Agility

Srinivasan Rajamanickam, Head of Global Architecture and Omni channel technologies, Tapestry