Customer expectations don't match the reality…
By Tim Ferguson
Published: 7 March 2008 16:36 GMT
European businesses are failing to meet customer expectations due to ineffective use of Customer Relationship Management (CRM) technology - and UK consumers are suffering the most.
More than half of consumers feel customer service operations are ineffective, according to research commissioned by Oracle.
Green IT from A to Z
Click on the links below to find out more...
A is for Abroad
B is for Blades
C is for Carbon footprint
D is for Data centres
E is for Energy sources
F is for Freecycle
G is for Government
H is for Homeworking
I is for Ice caps
J is for Jobs (Steve)
K is for Kilowatts
L is for Landfill
M is for Mercury
N is for Nanogeneration
O is for Offsetting
P is for Paperless office
Q is for Queen
R is for Recycling
S is for SmartPlanet.com
T is for Travel
U is for Upgrade
V is for Virtualisation
W is for WEEE
X is for Xmas
Y is for You
Z is for Zero emissions
Brits are the most likely to criticise customer service with 40 per cent of respondents rating the service provided by call centres as ineffective.
Common complaints include long call queues, repeating queries to different people and receiving differing answers.
A similar proportion of consumers (39 per cent) said telecommunications companies are the worst offenders for poor service, while 37 per cent said financial service organisations are the best.
Call centre managers say better information and staff training are the best ways to improve customer service but more than half said they had no plans for online self-service portals despite customer demand.
Loic le Guisquet, senior VP for CRM at Oracle, said the tech exists to address these failings and companies should apply intelligence to data they hold in order to meet expectations.
Analyst house Gartner recently came out with seven ways in which businesses could improve customer service including acting on customer feedback and being more accessible to customers.
Other tips included personalising products and experiences and changing employee attitudes to address customer issues more effectively.
The Oracle research covered 1,500 consumers and 250 contact centre managers across Europe.
The way to fix awful customer service is not to re...
A Miguel
CRM = Customer Rejection Methodology
Sadly many...
Charles Smith
Technology does not fix CRM problems - the ONLY wa...
Roger Huffadine
Junior SAS / SPSS Consultant Immediately required! London 40k Immediate vacancy for a Junior SAS Consultant Do you have good communication skills and ...
BANKING SOFTWARE BUS DEV/ACCT MGT SALES LONDON 100K-140K Permanent My client is market leader in banking software, outsourcing & professional ...
The Trade Representation team provides guidance and support to the business projects, which will be the publishers or consumers of messages using the ...
CIO50 2008
The silicon.com CIO50 2008 profiles the most influential and innovative tech chiefs in the UK across all industries and organisation size, from the biggest FTSE100 companies to high growth dot-com start ups and the public sector. The list was voted on by the UK CIO community and a panel of experts. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page
Ged Keogh-Peters
Take stock for tough times
Opinion: Even with falling sales, innovation creates an edge
Simon Levine
Legal Eye: Bogus brands face web crackdown
But who should carry the can?
Tim Ferguson
How did the Heathrow T5 launch go so wrong?
Shiny new terminal, same old story... right?
Julian Goldsmith
Retail leaders will open up in tough times
Rather than cut back, the best will innovate to ride the slump
Penelope Ody
Retail in a rut: IT to the rescue?
Technology needs to meet changing consumer demands...
silicon.com
Online age verification Bill is cynical manipulation
Leader: More about political ambition than protecting children