March 31, 2021
March 31, 2021
Contributor: Gloria Omale
To fully capture the benefits of outsourcing, customer service and support leaders must prioritize customer experience to protect customer loyalty.
Faced with tightening budgets, customer service and support leaders need to reduce costs and, therefore, consider outsourcing. But what activities are best suited to be outsourced? And what impact does business process outsourcing (BPO) have on customer experience (CX)?
Outsourcers often perform activities at a lower cost because they can leverage existing technologies, which reduces spend on technology investments or upgrades, work on a larger scale by serving customers across multiple companies and conduct business in markets with lower labor and operating rates.
For these reasons, cost savings can be readily calculated in most instances when discussing customer service outsourcing. However, it is harder to directly quantify the value of improving CX through outsourcing, so it is often overlooked in outsourcing decisions.
“Outsourcing may have some advantages when it comes to cost saving,” says Deborah Alvord, Senior Director Analyst, Gartner. “But CSS leaders must not lose sight of CX needs when deciding what to outsource to prevent customer disloyalty.”
Restrict outsourcing to service activities with limited influence on CX. To determine the criticality of an activity to CX, assess how greatly the service activity influences these factors:
Competitive advantage: Does this activity help the company differentiate its brand(s) from competitors?
Loyalty driver: Does this activity significantly influence CX and, therefore loyalty, among high-value customers?
Elevated risk: If something went wrong with this activity, would it create significant risk to the company?
Customer proximity: Does this activity occur close to the customer?
“Those activities that highly impact these factors are the highest-value opportunity for service centers to improve CX and therefore should be left in-house,” says Alvord.
Activities that have less of an impact on CX, like collections, data analytics, basic support for general inquiries and claims processing, are more suitable for an outsourcer. That being said, CX should still be a priority.
Outsourcing tasks can have an impact on customer loyalty, so service leaders must set and communicate CX expectations to their providers. Typical contracts contain service targets, such as average handle time (AHT), average speed of answer (ASA) and abandon rate (ABN), but too singular a focus on these metrics can be misleading. While it’s true that outsourcers deliver cost savings by prioritizing efficiency, too much emphasis on managing “numbers” instead of people leaders can promote the wrong behaviors.
To avoid focusing solely on efficiency, for example, contracts should also define qualitative behavioral expectations for the service center. Leaders and business process outsourcers should align on the CX vision to meet customer expectations and ensure that all staff have a customer-centric mindset.
To realize benefits from customer service outsourcing, service and support leaders responsible planning and operations must:
Maintain brand equity by keeping service center activities that are critical to CX in-house (for example, loyalty programs, top advocate support and escalation care).
Mitigate risk to CX and fully realize cost savings by defining CX priorities and “what good looks like” with the business process outsourcer (for example, defining specific customer-centric behaviors expected of the agents during transactions).
Engage internal frontline employees through growth and developmental opportunities to achieve maximum CX benefits from high-value activities kept in-house.
This article has been updated from the August 2019 original to reflect new events, conditions and research.
Join your peers for the unveiling of the latest insights at Gartner conferences.