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Five9 and the International Customer Management Institute Reveal Why 60 Percent of Companies Are Not Formally Supporting Social Customer Care
Five9-Sponsored Survey Uncovers the Top 8 Challenges Preventing Companies From Providing Social Customer Care
Tweet This: 2014 research by @Five9 & @CallCenterICMI reveals why 60% of companies are not formally supporting #social #custcare http://bit.ly/1lS9tVc
Download the Full Report, Social Playbook, and see the Infographic here.
"With more than 1.2 billion people on Facebook and 500 million plus tweets sent daily, it seems like everything is either being said or done through social media. Organizations need to consider, with the overwhelming number of daily social interactions that occur, how they decide what really requires a response; and how they can respond as quickly and efficiently as they do to inquires over the phone."
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Consumers Seek Support on Social Media
According to the ICMI survey almost 40 percent of consumers already use social media for customer service. Additionally:
- 53 percent last used Facebook for a support interaction
- Of those that use Twitter, 21 percent have tweeted a request for service
- In the last week, 48 percent watched a support video online and 60 percent read a brand's blog
- 86 percent say they'd be more satisfied if offered their ‘channel of choice', including social
- If a brand doesn't offer the preferred communication channel, but still gives good service, 47 percent of customers would still move to a competitor that gives them both
Companies Realize It's Critical to Support Customers Via Social Channels
More than 68 percent of businesses say social is a necessary service channel. The ICMI research also illustrated that:
- 55 percent of companies feel social support is a competitive differentiator
- More than 38 percent think they will lose customers without social support options
- Higher customer satisfaction is reported by the 61 percent that offer social care
- 58 percent say social care increases their customer loyalty
- The risk of negative sentiment going viral is reduced by 35 percent for those companies that offer social service channels
However, More than Half of Companies are Not Formally Supporting Social Media for Customer Care
Most companies don't feel they have the right resources or tools in place to support customers via social media. The biggest challenges that customer service teams face when trying to offer support via social media include:
- Providing accurate reporting and analytics - 80 percent
- Listening to all the social activity - 74 percent
- Integrating social with CRM - 73 percent
- Observing and coaching agents - 68 percent
- Prioritizing customer responses - 66 percent
- Arming agents with tools to quickly and effectively solve problems - 63 percent
- Eliminating SPAM from agent queues - 58 percent
- Routing posts to the correct agent - 53 percent
Caring for Social Customers in a
Researchers at ICMI have compiled a set of recommendations for how companies can successfully provide social customer care. The advice includes: how companies can get started; how to pick the right technology solution; implementing a social playbook; identifying the right team and more. Read the full set of recommendations here.
"Fewer and fewer companies are debating the necessity of providing social customer support. The conversation has shifted, focusing on how to provide customer support on social channels, rather than on the why. That's where technology comes in. If the contact center is given the right social engagement and analytic tools that empower agents, delivering excellent, next generation social customer experience will happen."
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To download the full report, click here.
Survey Methodology
This survey was conducted online by the
About Five9
Five9 is a pioneer and leading provider of cloud software for contact centers. For more information visit www.five9.com.
Five9
Sarah.Rolfing@Five9.com
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Five9PR@shiftcomm.com
Source: Five9
News Provided by Acquire Media