Finally Ofcom Act - Is this what everyone has been waiting for?

Categories: Industry News
Written by Mike on 31/10/2005 at 6:02 pm

Interesting to see what everyone thinks of this once they’ve had time to digest…
The link to Ofcom’s consultation document on persitent misuse:
http://www.ofcom.org.uk/consult/condocs/misuse/misuse.pdf

Best regards,

Mike


Waxing lyrical...

Do You Really Care?

Categories: Call Centre Talk - Guru Thoughts - Ramblings
Written by John on 14/10/2005 at 1:19 pm

Hi folks. It’s been a while since last I wrote, due to time demands and some travelling (Peru - magical place, but I’ll put some notes on that next week). Anyway, for better or for worse, I’m back.

Today’s topic is one that I’ve suspected for some time: there are a lot of people working in customer service who really couldn’t give two hoots about customers.

At the risk of tarring everyone with the same brush, let me clarify something: there are a great deal of customer service workers who genuinely do give a damn about their jobs and the people their jobs bring them in contact with. I’ve had a little hassle with a large computer firm recently. After a month and more of getting nowhere, I finally chanced across one of these individuals, who put in a great deal of time and effort to sort out the tangled mess that other customer service personnel had left. I’d love to name him, but that wouldn’t be fair to the myriad of good, effective customer service workers out there - they all deserve credit.

However, the dark side of customer service is that, for many, it’s just a job. A way of earning a basic crust, and filling in the awkward gap between Sunday and Saturday. It doesn’t help that the job is often less than appealing; wages can be quite poor, the hours can be demanding and the public perception is of an industry that doesn’t look out for its own. Quite a number of people drift into customer service when they’re really rather be doing something else. This is the crux of my point: customer service is VERY important as it’s usually the attitude of the employee toward the customer which forms the basis of the perceived ‘friendliness’ of an organisation.

I think every organisation ought to do its best to make the job appealing, well-rewarded and with opportunity for progression. For if they don’t, you may not always attract the right kind of person.

John


Darryl on the Piste

Customer service week

Categories: General
Written by Darryl on 3/10/2005 at 8:01 am

Today, I’m told, is the start of National Customer Service Week.

As much as I’m tempted, I’m not going to comment about how we now have “weeks” for everything. In truth, I’m still trying to work out how we make 52 of them go around.

What does customer service week mean to you? I’d be interested to hear.

From the ICS website:

National Customer Service Week (NCSW), is designed to reward staff for all the hard work they do during the year. By hosting an event within your organisation, no matter how big or small, serious or fun, the NCSW aims to raise company-wide awareness of the crucial role customer service plays in your organisation’s reputation and success.

I’m not sure I’ve got this right: Is the main idea to celebrate good customer service by taking agents off the phones en mass? What effect is this likely to have on customer service?

Regards,
Scrooge


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