Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
No
Customer Left Behind |
by:
Jim
Edwards |
©
Jim Edwards - All Rights reserved
http://www.thenetreporter.com
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
As more companies make the jump to cyberspace
every week and billions of dollars flow
across the Internet, nobody can deny that
ecommerce plays a significant roll in business
today.
However, as the aisles of your local online
shopping site get more crowded, the tendency
for customer service issues and contact
to fall through the cracks increases dramatically.
The main problem for any site revolves around
the fact that email as a means of communication
has become unreliable over the last couple
of years.
Spam (unsolicited commercial email) lies
at the heart of the problem since it clogs
the email boxes of both the company and
the customer.
In an attempt to stem the tide of spam,
email gets filtered, lost, or deleted on
both sides, often leading to hard feelings
as customers think their emails have been
ignored when actually they've never been
received.
As a result, many companies, large and small,
have started using "help desk" software
to manage their customer communication.
Gone are the days of just emailing for support
and getting a simple reply back from a live
human being on the other end.
Spam makes it impossible for a company of
any size to operate with email-only support.
A help desk makes it possible not only to
maintain a "chain" of communication, but
also avoids messages disappearing into cyberspace.
Help desk solutions run the range from free
to several thousands of dollars for a custom
program.
Two very workable and reasonably priced
solutions are Kayako.com and Perldesk.com.
(You can also do a search in Google for
"free help desk software" if you don't want
to spend any money.)
Both offer the choice of installing the
software on your own server, or paying a
monthly fee to get a copy of the software
installed and maintained on the provider's
server.
Which option you choose depends on your
level of technical ability, level of customization
needed, and how much support you'll need
over time.
I suggest starting out with the hosted version
until you get the hang of the system, then
switch over to a version on your own server
to avoid the monthly charges.
An online help desk operates fairly simply.
A customer submits a ticket through a form
on your website, the customer support staff
(even if it's a staff of one) responds to
the ticket through the website, and all
communication gets posted on a private web
page.
Both Kayako and Perldesk enable customers
to search a "knowledgebase" or collection
of articles to try solving their problems
on their own (especially during non-business
hours), thus frequently eliminating the
need to get a live response.
Anyone who does business online should consider
installing a help desk solution from the
start rather than putting it off until the
future.
Get your customers conditioned to operating
with a ticket system rather than switching
on them in mid-stream once your business
gets too busy to handle support via email.
Here are a couple of other tips to help
you.
Designate one person to act as the "sorter"
answering the basic issues, then referring
off the ones they can't answer to other
staff members.
Also, post your help desk hours and stick
to them.
Answer questions the same day if possible,
but no later than the next business day.
About the author:
Jim Edwards is a syndicated newspaper columnist
and the co-author of an amazing new ebook
that will teach you how to use fr^e articles
to quickly drive thousands of targeted visitors
to your website or affiliate links...
Simple "Traffic Machine" brings Thousands
of NEW visitors to your website for weeks,
even months... without spending a dime on
advertising! ==> http://www.turnwordsintotraffic.com
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|