NETWORK WORLD NEWSLETTER:  LISA ERICKSON-HARRIS  ON 
NETWORK/SYSTEMS MANAGEMENT
09/06/04
Today's focus:  Is it 'self-service' or 'no service'?

Dear [EMAIL PROTECTED],

In this issue:

* Challenges around automating the service desk
* Links related to Network/Systems Management
* Featured reader resource
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Today's focus:  Is it 'self-service' or 'no service'?

By Lisa Erickson-Harris 

A thankless job! That's what some would call the role of the 
service desk technician.

Although this group of individuals is one of the most 
customer-facing functions in the company and is in a position to 
greatly affect customer satisfaction, the group is more often 
than not seen by executive management as a cost sink that is 
extremely labor-intensive, does not directly contribute to 
revenue generation, and is extremely difficult to measure in 
terms of performance.

Sure, there are plenty of metrics available through today's 
service desk software to evaluate employee performance, but they 
are difficult to use to get a real sense of contribution to 
customer satisfaction.

Meanwhile, service desk managers are looking for ways to avoid 
taking calls from customers. In a way this seems ironic given 
that their very function is to serve customers. But maybe not - 
there is a premise that says customers (or users) who are able 
to take control of their situation and begin to resolve their 
problems will walk away from the support experience more 
satisfied than those who sat on the phone with a real technician 
or perhaps multiple technicians until a resolution was reached.

To me, it is all about good support. If service delivery is well 
designed and well executed, then it's much more likely that 
customers will feel positive about the experience.

All types of systems are being put in place to divert calls from 
an actual technician. Many of these are not new, but they are 
becoming much more sophisticated. Some of these systems include:

* Automated, interactive voice response (IVR) systems that 
��attempt to walk customers through a solution or at least a 
��target group of support technicians over the telephone.

* Web-based self-service portals that are for customers with 
��appropriate access. These systems essentially place the burden 
��of initiating a trouble-ticket in the hands of the user and then 
��open access to a knowledge base that contains known problems, 
��solutions, and a host of other related information that may help 
��the user.

* Intelligent knowledge bases that employ various search 
��techniques that make it easier for the user to find the right 
��information.

* Video clips, instructional screen shots, and chats that are 
��available to help the user and minimize interaction with a 
��service desk technician.

One might question why this makes sense. Each time a company has 
the opportunity to interact with a customer or prospect, it has 
the opportunity to develop a relationship with that individual. 
Of course, this is only positive if the interaction went well.

Some of these implementations simply do not have the customer in 
mind - for example, the IVR system takes you through nine layers 
of menus, but in the end drops your call with a "thank you for 
calling" message because the company wants to prevent your call 
from reaching a live operator. Or the Web-based database that 
returns hundreds of results no matter what you use for search 
criteria. These are lost opportunities to build business, when 
it comes down to it. Customers will only tolerate so much 
frustration before they seek alternative providers.

That said, there are certainly ways to deploy self-service 
technologies so that customers do leave happy - maybe even 
happier. Placing control of issue resolution in the hands of 
customers empowers them in such a way that they feel resolution 
is moving forward, and that creates greater customer 
satisfaction.

The real trick is to make sure you know when customers are 
getting frustrated with the process and avoid the worst-case 
scenario of customers walking away angry without you being aware 
of it. There is still a need for real people who can intervene 
and prevent this scenario, and designing service delivery 
procedures to handle this is critical. It is hard enough to 
recover from a negative customer experience that you know about, 
and impossible when you lack this visibility.

RELATED EDITORIAL LINKS

Adding business smarts to service desk savvy
Network World, 10/06/03
http://www.nwfusion.com/news/2003/1006specialfocus.html
_______________________________________________________________
To contact: Lisa Erickson-Harris 

Lisa Erickson-Harris is a research director with Enterprise 
Management Associates <http://www.enterprisemanagement.com/> in 
Boulder, Colo., a leading analyst and market research firm 
focusing exclusively on enterprise infrastructure management. 
Lisa has more than 18 years of experience working in all aspects 
of IT, including network administration, software development, 
product management, and strategic partnership development. Her 
current focus at EMA is service-level management, partnership 
strategies, and management systems for the SMB/SME environment. 

She can be reached via e-mail at 
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  
Download a free copy of the new SLM Buyer's Guide at 
<http://www.slm-info.org/> 
_______________________________________________________________
This newsletter is sponsored by Statscout 
Blanket Network Performance Monitoring  

Monitor your entire network every 60 seconds with minimal impact 
on the network.  Businesses and organizations seeking detailed 
performance and troubleshooting reporting on networks of 1000 to 
200,000 network interfaces in size will benefit substantially 
from using Statscout.  Request your 30-day trial now, click here 
http://www.fattail.com/redir/redirect.asp?CID=79153
_______________________________________________________________
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