stepford csr
- at the beginning of their inbound calls, our stepford csr's must introduce themself and the company and offer assistance in a friendly and upbeat manner.
- they are to verify the customer's name, full address and phone number.
- they are to obtain the customer's email address if possible.
- their voice must show sincerity, interest and willingness.
- they must address the customer/caller by name at least twice in the course of the call and outside of the verification process.
- they must offer an appropriate and immediate apology and empathize with the customer.
- they must listen attentively and comprehend issues.
- they are not allowed to interrupt the customer.
- they must speak with a clarity of voice and their choice of words should be appropriate and devoid of slang or jargon.
- they must manage the dialogue and flow of the call.
- the csr must assume ownership of the situation without placing blame on any other part of, or individual within, the company.
- in their judgments and decisions, our stepford csr's must balance doing what is right for the customer and the company.
- they must effectively "root cause," and solve the customer's reason for calling.
- they must offer correct solutions and options.
- they must be thorough in eliminating callbacks.
- they must escalate calls appropriately.
- they must make commitments which adhere to company policy.
- the csr must be current on company initiatives and communications.
- the csr must exhibit good judgment in making any account adjustments.
- if a call is to be transferred, the csr must handle the process efficiently.
- the csr must "upsell." (this means highlighting some product or aspect of our service the customer may not otherwise be familiar with and attempting to sell it.)
- the csr must attempt to walk the customer through our automated attendant in order to increase the customer's familiarity and comfort level with the same.
- they must accurately input all data into our computer system.
- they must correctly handle multiple requests.
- they must leave a note on the account if they have escalated it in any way.
- they must disposition every call. (this is to say they must tag the account to identify the nature of the particular call.)
- they must navigate through the computer system proficiently.
- they must multi-task.
- they must end all aspects of their call in a timely fashion.
- they must summarize their resolution actions with their customer at the end of their call.
- they must leave the customer with a favorable impression.
- they must close the call correctly, which is to say they must ask if there is anything else the customer requires help with and thank the customer for calling.
these csr's are graded on their performance monthly. eight recorded calls are listened to and scored based on the above criteria. a csr can score a zero, one or two, with two being the highest score and the one being weighted to 80% of a two.
this reference tool is new and we have been haggling over it for the last couple of weeks.
the real question all of this begs is which design will benefit the company/organization more? the one where management tries to exert an incredible amount of control over each and every word that spills from the mouth of it's robotic csr's or one in which a csr is treated as a human being and allowed room to be the same? do you gain more by nurturing a mutual respect and benevolence in the csr or by laying down a strict law and telling them to abide by it?
i don't know the answer to this question. i would we treated everyone as an individual and nurtured a trust and respect in our employees. on some inner level, i believe this would bode well for business in so much as the csr would perform better out of a sense of loyalty and respect. at the same time, i admit i could be ridiculously wrong about that. it seems to me more and more, the people coming in the door to take this entry level position prefer to be treated in such a way as they are told what to do and browbeat int submission in the process. it seems to me they have been programmed to pay the closest attention to what they have been told to do and to spend as much time wriggling out of responsibilities as trying to satisfy them. they are all but programmed not to trust their employers who are viewed as "the man," as much as a police officer driving down the street.
isn't this the difference between capitalism and communism? doesn't the capitalist say: man is essentially a lazy creature and he will try to avoid work and he will look for handouts if he is not motivated by means of the old pitchfork in the ass, while the communist says: man is essentially a good creature and if promoted and treated positively with respect and goodwill, he will respond in kind and achieve the greatest of all possible results through brotherhood and working for the common good?
i guess i'm a communist and the majority of my peers and contemporaries are capitalists?

