This answers the question: How can companies gamify customer service and customer experience without creating winners and losers? Answer: Companies can gamify customer service by having employees compete against themselves, not against others, which builds CX awareness, creates better habits, strengthens the company culture, and delivers a better customer experience. The inspiration for this article […]
This answers the question: How can companies gamify customer service and customer experience without creating winners and losers?
Answer: Companies can gamify customer service by having employees compete against themselves, not against others, which builds CX awareness, creates better habits, strengthens the company culture, and delivers a better customer experience.
The inspiration for this article came from playing golf this past weekend. It wasn’t that I was better or worse than the guys I was playing with. But I was better than the last time I played. That felt like a win.
That made me think about how some companies use gamification in customer service. Many companies have created a customer service game, similar to running a sales contest with rankings and leaderboards. That means there are winners and losers, and that can demotivate the majority of employees who aren’t at the top of the list.
But what if gamifying customer service wasn’t about competition, but instead, about personal performance? What if, instead of competing against others, every employee, whether they are on the phone, the sales floor, or supporting their internal customer (a colleague or fellow employee), simply focused on getting better with every interaction? Instead of competing against others, you compete against yourself.
I firmly believe that customer service is common sense. My annual customer service research found that the No. 1 experience customers want is a kind and helpful employee. That’s all about attitude. And once you know you’re capable of the proper attitude, it becomes about awareness. Are you aware, in the moment, of how you’re treating the customer?
This is where the game begins.
As in golf, I recommend a personal scoring system. After an interaction with a customer or fellow employee, you score yourself on a scale of 1-5 in the following areas:
A perfect score is 25, which would mean that you scored yourself a 5 in the first four areas and recognized someone else doing a great job. But don’t worry about perfection. Be honest about your score. That’s where the learning happens, and habits are formed. You’re not playing against others. You’re playing against yourself, and being aware in this interaction will help improve the next one.
Leaders, managers, and supervisors should support their team with individual feedback and team recognition. There are a number of benefits, and here are three of the obvious ones:
Shep Hyken is a customer service/CX expert, award-winning keynote speaker, and New York Times bestselling author. Learn more about Shep’s customer service and customer experience keynote speeches and his customer service training workshops at www.Hyken.com. Connect with Shep on LinkedIn.
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