Brendan Read : The Readerboard
Brendan Read
TMC
| Contact Center/CRM Views and Analysis

TMC Heads to Boston for Video Interviews of Industry Companies

Some important TMC corporate news I wanted to share. TMC is hosting TMC’s Special Executive Editorial Event in Boston, MA next week....

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Salesforce Cloudforce NY 2011 Live Blog

I am headed to NY as I post. Check back for updates throughout the day.Heading to the keynote there was a DJ...

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iMainGo XP Portable Stereo Speaker & Case for iPad Review

Portable Sound Labs has a cool new product called the iMainGo XP (model: 11BWB04), which is a portable stereo speaker for the...

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iPhone to Get 4 Inch Display?

Two weeks ago I discussed my smartphone envy after using the Samsung Galaxy S II smartphone which sports a dual-core 1.5 GHz...

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AT&T Sneaks One In

AT&T sneaks in a note that says they set aside $4B for a break-up fee during the Thanksgiving break. AT&T withdrew its...

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Localphone Offers Free Calling Thanksgiving Promo for 4 Days

For four days (from 5am GMT Thurs 24th to 5am GMT Mon 28th) Localphone, a 4 year old company based in Sheffield,...

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Samsung Mocks Apple Fanboys in Hilarious Galaxy S II Ad

Business Insider's Steve Kovach has an interesting interview with Todd Pendleton, Samsung's Chief Marketing Officer, and Brian Wallace, Samsung's VP of Strategic...

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Gratitude

Just a quick note to say Happy Thanksgiving! Although we have had a crazy ride these last few years, this is the week...

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Just in Time for Christmas, Xbox Live Gets an Update

Just in time for Christmas, Microsoft is releasing a new update for Xbox Live, which surely will only enhance the frenetic ripping...

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Drop the Phone in a Toilet and Still Use it!

Many of us have been there – you walk into the bathroom, the phone rings, you see who is calling and...

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Microsoft Surface Update Available. It's an iPoffee Table

The new Samsung SUR40 for Microsoft Surface is now available for $8,400 or approximately the same price as 42 Kindle Fires...

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Polycom RealPresence Connects Non-standard TIP TelePresence Systems

I've written about Polycom supporting TIP (Telepresence Interoperability Protocol) and Cisco's response to Polycom supporting it. Well, today Polycom announced a...

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Oh no! VoIP is Going Down. Big Bad Bear Economy Taking its Toll

Well, whaddya know, the VoIP industry is not invincible to the Great Recession, which started way back in 2008. For the longest...

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Big Week for Tor and The Privacy Minded

Two big pieces of news are out this week for the privacy minded users of Tor who would like to surf anonymously...

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Scientists boost battery strength by Drilling Holes in Battery. Say what?

Now you would think it would be counter-intuitive that poking millions of minuscule holes in a lithium-ion battery would result in more...

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The (Social) Customer Isn't Always Right

June 8, 2011

There appears to be a tendency with social media as a new and highly visible channel to overstock the value of the sentiments expressed in the posts and Tweets, that they do accurately represent the voice of customer and that the complaints are accurate and well-founded. And that those who made them must be supplicated to keep them as customers, lest they tell hundreds of others never to do business with one’s company ever again.

These set of attitudes with social media reflect the cliché “the customer is always right.”

Nonsense. Balderdash. Rot.

The New Customer Self-Service: Ourselves

May 19, 2011

Leave aside well-trained live agents, subject matter experts reachable via presence and knowledgebase-connected automated IVR/speech rec and web self-service.

One of the best (and the most affordable) answers to customer service issues--from basic product information to fixing problems—may come from each one of us, which can be termed as peer service or peer support. That is provided that this method is set up and managed right.

Peer service/support is exploding in popularity thanks to social media which has taken it from the rarefied confines of IT bulletin boards, whose establishment predates the Web and whose participants were likeminded geeks to the hoi polloi in the virtual universe. The social media/channel has virtualized a core human behavior i.e. reaching out to others for help just as it has done for buying decisions.

"Managing" The Anonymous Customer

May 16, 2011

It has long been a given in more recent customer attraction and retention strategies that knowing your customers is key to connecting and staying connected with them to obtain maximum lifetime value including, with the advent of social media, the value of those they can influence.

The ability to accurately identify customers and to determine their incomes, demographics, purchasing patterns, likes and dislikes enables more personalized, targeted and successful offers and service that hopefully leads to repeat business, recommendations and referrals.

Customers in turn expect that when companies contact them or when they reach out to firms that they know them well enough to meet and anticipate their needs.

Or do they?

Are there and are there many (and growing) customers who prefer to remain anonymous, their mantras being “don’t contact us, we’ll contact you”?

I suspect there is. In today’s environment the customers are in charge and in many instances they i.e. us want to investigate companies before making their buying decisions without alerting them.

Do-Not-Track Online Act Will Make The Web Less Creepy By Shooing Away "Nasty Sister"

May 10, 2011

Going online and going mobile has become a creepy experience with companies tracking your movements: virtually and in-person. There is something disturbing about for example web ads for companies that one does business with (or the case of biz journalists, one covers) when they appear on general newspaper sites. Including when one is mobile and is at home. Equally disturbing are ads from one’s own country displaying on a site belonging to a firm in another.

9-11-01 to 5-01-11: Honoring Contact Centers Who Were, And Are, On The Line

May 2, 2011

I have not yet found the words to fully and adequately describe my reaction when I heard and saw the news late Sunday night, 05-01-11, that Osama bin Laden had been killed by U.S. forces.

The closest is a heartfelt thanks to the brave men and women both uniformed and civilian who have been relentless in pursing the perps and bringing them to justice at the risk to their lives. And to the families who support them.

My prayers go out to the families of the victims…

My wife and I had witnessed the attacks on the World Trade Center while commuting from our-then home on Staten Island to midtown Manhattan. We saw the smoke billow from the north tower.

Forget Government Big Brother, The Real Evil is the Private Sector "Nasty Sister"

April 15, 2011

It is not the Orwellian government “Big Brother” citizens have to worry about in protecting their privacy and freedom. It is instead “Nasty Sister” i.e. private companies that aggregate vast amounts of data on individuals and track their every move.

Of the two Nasty Sister is more evil because “she” on the surface is sweeter and seemingly more benign. After all, “she” can’t put you in jail or rob you of your freedoms.

Well…that’s not exactly the case…because the data collected by “her” can and does impact individuals’ abilities to obtain and keep credit, pay bills, acquire housing and get and retain employment.

The Dangers of Social Media Commentary

March 29, 2011

There is one cardinal rule of social media: that it is media. Anyone who comments on these sites and uses these tools is acting no differently than if they were facing a camera, have a mike in their face or are glancing at someone scribbling in a notebook. Employees or others who are acting on behalf of organizations who go on social media must have the same skills and discipline as those who appear on-camera, on the air and on the record.

I have been warning of the risks of having individuals who lack this training, discipline and experience, namely contact center agents, to go on social media. Why? Because I know firsthand as a reporter, as a spokesperson and as a political and community activist and as a onetime public office candidate how careful you must be when making media comments.

More Reasons to Question Loyalty Programs

March 22, 2011

It is much more profitable to retain customers than to continually attract new ones. Yet I am deeply skeptical about customer loyalty programs to achieve that goal because the truest way to win and keep customers is by getting the fundamentals right. That is: consistently providing what customers want with high product/service quality and deliverability at the right price. Everything else is just a gimmick.

Are Contact Centers Supporting Customers Via Social Media?

March 7, 2011

According to an excellent recent blog entry by Tim Passios, Director of Solutions Marketing, Interactive Intelligence, not as many as may well be warranted by well-publicized incidents e.g. “United Breaks Guitars” .

Tim lists some very impressive social media statistics:

* Almost 640 million users of Facebook (SocialBakers)
* Over 90 million tweets a day
* Over 156 million blog sites (BlogPulse)

Tim wrote: “most contact centers just aren't feeling the absolute need to support it as a channel for now. As one of the customers I spoke with told me, "The majority of people are going to call you long before they are going to tweet or blog about bad customer service. Our job is to take care of that customer at the time they call and not give them a reason to use Social Media."

They, and Tim, have a point.

Letter Responding to Jan. CIS Logout "To Improve Quality and Profits Get Rid of "HR"

February 25, 2011

Here is a letter written in response to my Logout column “To Improve Quality and Profits Get Rid of "HR" that appeared in the January 2011 Customer Interaction Solutions.

In the piece I decried the too-often poor contact center agent and supervisor hiring and screening practices, such as job descriptions having little to do with the reality of the work, as a result of the human resource "HR" mentality--treating people like raw materials rather than as individuals.

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Brendan –

I read your article (Customer Interactions Solutions, Jan 2011 issue) and couldn’t agree more.  HR serves very important functions in any organization; however executives should not assume that HR staff are experts at recruiting talent. 

Inside every great organization today, their executives understand the importance and priority on their “human assets”. They get personally involved in their talent acquisition and employee retention initiatives.  Recruiting and hiring great employees on a regular basis is a science just like any other profession.  You cannot expect administration or operations staff (or computer software) to achieve this for you.  As they say, “the quality of the hire directly maps to the employee’s work performance” and also “you’re only as good as your people”.

Employers who believe in these statements get it right.  Organizations that have been cutting back on their internal and external recruiting resources these last 2-3 years have been getting it wrong.

John Alexander
Partner/Co-Founder
Berkshire Search Partners
Hackettstown, N.J.
http://www.berkshiresp.com/


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