Unit 1 Customer Needs Identification
Unit 1 Customer Needs Identification
Management
Level-II
Fairness/politeness
Further information
Values
Customer service challenges don‘t go away. But if you don‘t handle them correctly, they
could cost you your existing and potential customers.
Below are 12 common and biggest customer service challenges businesses face daily as
well as solution ideas on how to turn them into relationship-building opportunities:
1. Not having an answer to the customer’s questions
o Handling this challenge is more about what you shouldn‘t do than what you should do.
o The key is to avoid being unclear in your response.
o If you do not have the answer, acknowledge the question‘s difficulty, ask them for time to find a
solution, then guarantee you‘ll contact them.
2. Transferring calls to another department
There will be times when the best way to help a customer is to transfer the customer to another
person.
o When that happens, you first need to let customers know you‘re transferring them to someone
that will help.
o But avoid the mistake of doing a blind transfer.
o Meaning you transfer the customer to another customer service rep without verifying they are
available to take their call.
o How do you think they will feel if someone is expecting a live person but gets a voicemail?
3. Failing to understand what customers want
Customers can have a hard time explaining what they want.
o They may not know the technical jargon to tell you exactly what the problem is.
o If possible, ask the customer to take you step by step through their issue.
o You might find it helpful to take notes while they explain.
o Consider sharing the problem with another customer support agent.
o A second opinion could help you solve the issue quickly.
4. Dealing with angry customers
o Even the best companies get calls from angry customers.
o The key is first to calm them down to find out how you can help them.
o One approach is to use the HEARD technique for helping customers Hear. Empathize.
Apologize.
5. Exceeding customers’ expectations
The trick to beating this challenge is setting reasonable customer expectations and meeting
and exceeding them.
Exceeding the expectations of customers can generate repeat business.
The key to doing that is to take a customer-centric approach.
Then, generate data that tells you exactly what customers want.
Use print, electronic, and social media to produce that kind of data.
6. Serving multiple customers
o Customers are okay with being put on hold if it helps resolve their issues.
o Telling customers that you‘re going to put them on hold to solve their problems buys you
time to talk with the other customer.
o Above all, avoid telling the first customer you‘re talking with a second customer. And don‘t
leave customers on hold for a long time.
7. An outage or other crisis occurs
Is there anything worse than having a power failure or a crisis? Severe emergencies, like security
breaches, can be deadly.
How do you handle them? First, put a crisis communication plan in place.
That tells employees precisely what they have to do during a crisis.
Then, when customers call, you need to apologize to customers for what they‘re going through.
Also, provide constant updates say once every 30 minutes to help reassure nervous customers.
Once everything‘s over, you can publish a post-mortem.
8. Customers want a discount you can’t give
o Discounting can get customers to buy from you. But it also devalues your brand‘s perception in
the customer‘s eyes. So, use this strategy sparingly.
o No customer likes to hear no from a customer service agent. Explain to them why you can‘t give
them the discount.
9. Customers want a feature you won’t or can’t add
The biggest challenge when speaking to customers is saying no. But sometimes you must.
Here‘s a way to do it gracefully: keep your tone positive, be personal, forget templated
responses, offer a workaround if one exists.
Sometimes you can find a workaround that provides the functionality your customers want in
your product. In other words, do what you can to help the customer.
10. Flooded with service tickets
o This challenge is common during the holiday season especially if you don‘t have an employee
working 24/7 or a reputable outsourcing provider like Unicom to provide round-the-clock
responses.
o Many customers expect an answer within six hours. When backed-up like this, focus on
responding instead of resolving.
o You can also have customer service agents write a personal email telling customers, We‘re
backlogged, but we‘ll be taking care of you soon.
o Also, give customers a hard deadline by which you‘ll help them.
11. You need to fire a customer
Some people are better suited for your product or service than others. But letting a
customer go is never easy. So, if you need to do it, do it with grace and respect.
Use this four-step approach:
Be positive and appreciative
Re-frame the situation as your fault
Make the customer whole
Apologize and offer an alternative
12. Reply/resolution times are slow
o Customers want answers now. Or better yet, five minutes ago.
o To start, review the ticket handling process you have in place.
o If you have tickets bouncing around from one department to another, find out why and
eliminate the problem. Strengthen your communication channels.
END OF CHAPTER ONE
THANK YOU!!