Showing 11 search results
One of the things that caught my eye in the Institute of Customer Services UK’s (UKSCI) most recent report on customer satisfaction was the suggestion that a growing number of customers are prepared to pay more for improved service.
It doesn’t seem too long ago that the introduction of interactive voice response (IVR) received a rocky reception with many customers citing that they preferred to speak to a ‘real human’.
The second year of the pandemic has seen more people in the UK slide further into debt and organisations need to recalibrate their response through empathetic collections.
Treating customers with empathy has been an increasingly important area of focus within the customer experience industry.
You have a problem. Someone else has been talking to your customer. The likes of Amazon, Apple, Nordstorm – and the other gods of customer service have been educating your customer in what excellent looks and feels like.
Customer loyalty is the holy grail of brand. Less than a decade ago, consumers told marketing research company IPSOS MORI that they trusted certain household brands (Heinz, John Lewis, Walmart) more than the Government.
A popular online brokerage prided itself on building a customer experience that made trading stocks as easy as swiping right or left to purchase a book online.
The Coronavirus pandemic is posing organisational challenges to many financial services providers and their customer service efforts – there’s no doubt about that
Automation will transform most jobs in the insurance sector over the next decade.
We must resist the robots... Should we? There’s no question that the pandemic forced organisations to rapidly introduce new ways of working.