These 7 Charts Show Why Customer Service Needs to Get Smart about the Smartphone

Customer Service | 3 minute read

With the end of the year approaching, the predictions are rolling out! Last week, we were treated to two massive slide decks from respected analysts, Mary Meeker and Henry Blodget. Meeker of Kleiner Perkins released the Internet Trends Year End Update report and Blodget of Business Insider released The Future of Digital. With 250 slides combined, these decks covered every angle of the digital and internet economy, but one area that stood out from both was the momentum of the smartphone revolution.

This past year we also saw powerful studies on the direction of the call center (e.g. the American Express Customer Service study which I wrote about here). When you combine that data with the data from Meeker and Blodget, the picture is clearer than ever: The smartphone is the biggest thing to happen to the call center since the dial tone.

Call Centers have to adapt to changing consumer behavior

For most consumer-facing businesses, the call center is a major force in shaping the customer service experience. Consumer behavior is changing, and the call center must adapt in order to excel. The good news is that the shift to smartphones and tablets is a tremendous opportunity for the call center to break free of some old bad habits — putting consumers on hold or inflicting them with phone menu hell.

To build this case, I’ll use the new data from Meeker and Blodget to support three key points:

  1. Smartphones and tablets are becoming the dominant form of access
  2. Call Centers will soon be getting more calls from mobile devices than fixed lines
  3. eCommerce via mobile devices is growing quickly
Let’s dive in…

1) Smartphones and tablets are becoming the dominant form of access

When the iPhone was released, it ramped-up much faster than iPods — but iPad adoption rates are even higher.

Meeker, Slide 9

 

In the US, more than half of all phones are now smartphones. We passed that turning-point in the spring of this year.

Blodget, Slide 17

 

Shipments of “handheld” PCs (smartphones and tablets) surpassed those of traditional PCs (desktops and notebooks) 2 years ago. It’s clear now, that wasn’t a blip – the gap is continuing to grow.

Meeker, Slide 25

 

If we look across the world, far more people will be accessing the internet through a mobile device than through a traditional PC.

Blodget, Slide 13

 

2) Call Centers will be getting more calls from mobile devices than fixed lines

According to a report from Ovum, call centers will soon be getting the majority of their calls from a mobile device.

Quote from Ovum

That’s easy to believe when you look at this graph comparing fixed phone lines with mobile subscriptions.

Meeker, Slide 28

 

3) ECommerce via mobile devices is growing quickly

So far, this has all been about general smartphone and mobility growth. How does it relate to customer service and the call center?

Well, look at what’s happening to e-commerce.

Blodget, Slide 74

 

Folks are doing more and more of their shopping from their mobile devices. It’s well understood that access to a live agent can greatly increase conversion rates (and lower abandon rates). So it follows naturally – to accommodate the consumers’ primary access point, online retailers must get smart about connecting their call centers to mobile devices.

This next graph shows which categories are exploding in mobile use over the last year.

Blodget, Slide 71

 

The dramatic growth in the “online retail” category is obviously relevant, but if you stopped there you missed a big part of the picture. Consider “Electronic Payment”, “Classifieds” or “Auction Sites” – vendors in these categories need effective call center operations just as much!

Bottom line: Call centers must be optimized for smartphones

Now that we’ve looked at the stats from several different angles, the bottom line is clear: If your company has a consumer-facing call center, you must prepare for the world of mobile shoppers. If your call center is not optimized for smartphones, you will be delivering an experience that is inferior to your competitors.

What does it mean to be “optimized for smartphones”?

  • Replacing the tired old IVR with a visual interface
  • Replacing hold-times with a scheduled call-back
  • Maintaining the context between what your customer was doing on the phone and what the agent sees on his screen

And that’s just for starters!

Luckily, all this is getting easier to do.

 

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