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Help Desk Software: 3 Humorous Things to Think About

Help Desk Software: 3 Humorous Things to Think About

If you are a Help Desk Agent, you have spent many hours waiting on the next phone call or e-mail and many more hours chasing down answers to customers’ concerns. What do you do during those idle hours? Have you got any really good or really funny thoughts or activities in which you engage?

Let’s take a look at three things help desk agents think about during their idle hours:

1. What does the customer look like? It is true the “customer” is probably a company in many cases, but the person who calls or e-mails is a real live person. What does that person look like? What is his role in the company? One great way to answer those questions is to start imagining Dilbert comic strip characters like dorky Dilbert, air-head Alice, awful Asok, elevated Ellen, or the diligent Dog. Check them out.

2. How am I supposed to get everything done that is expected of me? This one is a little like the recent For Better or For Worse comic strip. The kids and mom are Christmas shopping and see a Santa at the mall, one ringing a bell for the Salvation Army on the street corner, etc. One child looks at Mom and asks, “Mom, how come there are so many Santas?” Mom says, “maybe they’re all Santa Claus?” and the boy wonders, “Is that possible?” to which the Mom replies, “The job of being a Santa is pretty special . . . it’s just like the job of being a Mom. Everyone expects you to do everything and be everywhere at the same time!”

3. How could they break our product like that?! What did they do to it? Perhaps the thoughts turn to The Nutcracker and the broken nutcracker! Must have a been a jealousy thing. From there the imaginations run wild! Check out the story.

Give us some ideas about humorous things you or your help desk agents think about.

Single Help Desk Agent or Multiple Help Desk Agents?

I have a question for help desk supervisors: Is it better for a single person to handle an issue from beginning to full resolution or is it better to hand the client around to service agents that are best qualified to deal with the issue?

Here’s a little background as to why I am asking. I was recently in a meeting where one of the attendees was raving about how wonderful a particular company was. When asked why he thought the company was so great, his reply was, “No matter what I call to ask or I need help with, the person who picks up my phone call (in two rings or less – Always) is able to solve my issue and stays with me until it is solved.” This person works a one-man answer station for a small company, so he added, “That takes a tremendous amount of cross-training.”

Another person in the meeting piped up with, “I worked for a company that sold that kind of help desk agent as a ‘premium service’ and charge almost double what we charged for the normal help desk agent. For our company, each help desk agent had an area of expertise and when someone called with an issue, they were transferred to the agent that specialized in that situation — unless the company upgraded to the premium service which entailed much more training for each agent.”

So, what do you think? What does your company do? What would you like to do in an ideal setting?

Making Web Based Customer Support Easier

Customer Service #1

Customer Service #1

One of the biggest factors missing today on most “Help Desks” is the Human Factor. We have become a text-to-text world, eliminating the need for human personal interaction. Face-to-face has become iphone-to-iphone. Even between siblings, parents, grandparents and friends. Thus we are breeding a society of faceless relationships. I have chosen to disengage from this practice as much as possible. And have made it a practice to CALL people (yes, a phone can still do that) as often as I can. And my conversations are generally very short, because I am not a talkative type of person. But, I am determined NOT to allow my relationships to suffer as a result of technology.

And every time that I come in contact with a “Help Desk” agent, whether it is for technical customer support, support on a Web Based Help Desk or CRM Software System, I am bound and determined to improve that person’s day by leaving them with a personal gesture of some kind that will leave them feeling better than before. Now this doesn’t always happen, but I can assure you, I generally get what I want.

Awhile back I was trying to book a flight on SW Airlines. I was calling on the day of the 7 day advance, which is a day late by technical standards. The website, of course, would not allow me to book the flight without a huge penalty. So I decided to throw myself upon the mercy of the “Help Desk” agent over the phone. I began the conversation with, “I really need some help, and sincerely hope you can help me out.” Now most people are generally kind-hearted, and want to help their neighbor. I mentioned my dilemma and offered up that it was my fault for not calling several hours before, but things had snowballed on my schedule, etc, etc; The Help Desk support software agent for Southwest mentioned that they understood, that it happens to them sometimes as well. I mentioned that I realized in their job that they probably dealt with these excuses all the time, thus I really felt for them having to deal with issues like this every day, etc; we talked small talk for a few minutes on a personal level. It was obvious that the customer service agent was sympathetic with my situation, but was going to follow procedure. I asked the agent if we might be able to make any exceptions by talking to a supervisor. She said, generally not, but would be happy to get one on the phone. After 4-5 minutes on hold, she came back and said that she had talked at some length with the supervisor and that the supervisor had approved an exception due to my special circumstances.

Now I know from years of flying with different airlines that most strictly follow procedure, but I also know that if this agent and I had not spent enough time on the phone to become “personally attached” that I would not have had any chance of getting an exception. (I also know that Southwest has built a reputation for customer service which is why I use them every chance I get.)

So, keep that in mind the next time you make or take a service request on your CRM Software System. Personal contact can make the difference between a positive post on a blog that actually touts your company, or mentions of exemplary customer service for years to come verses negative responses and ill feelings from customers that a simple phone call could have made the difference for.

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