Thinking Aloud
Monday, May 24, 2004 VOLUME 1 ISSUE 13  
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CONTENTS
Selling Skills for Non-Sales People
Camp WorldWIT: Upward Bound
How to Combat Workplace Backstabbers
Ask Liz
The Human Touch Will Never Be Replaced
Past Issues
Issue 12
May 17, 2004
Vol. 1 Issue 12
Issue 11
May 10, 2004
Vol. 1 Issue 11
Issue 10
May 3, 2004
Vol. 1 Issue 10
Issue 9
April 26, 2004
Vol. 1 Issue 9
Issue 8
April 19, 2004
Vol. 1 Issue 8

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WorldWIT Website Columns
As You See It : The Power of Positive Thinking – Benefit or Bunk? (Pam Thomas)
Do Ask, Do Tell : The Way Women Do It (Liz Ryan)
Guest Column : “I’m so busy!” (Kathleen Sears)
The Human Touch Will Never Be Replaced
by Rosanne D’Ausilio, Ph.D.

Historically, customer service was delivered over the phone or in person. Customers didn’t have many choices, and switching to competitors was cumbersome. Today, these methods are but two of the many possible points of entry for any given interaction. With all the options the Internet brings, competition is literally a click away.
           
However, online customer service is not good--to put it mildly. In fact, some people say it stinks. Why? The web is but one dimension. It doesn’t have the human response--the necessary for back and forth live communication--that is so critical. 
           
Twenty five years from now customers will still be human beings, still be driven by desires and needs. Virtual environments do not create virtual customers. Except for the simplest transactions, customers still need to be connected with and nurtured by a live person. Amazon.com has learned this. They employ hundreds of traditional customer service reps using phone lines to help customers with questions that cannot be dealt with online.  
           
In today’s competitive marketplace there is little difference between products and services. What makes the difference, what distinguishes one company from another, is its relationship with the customer. Who has the awesome responsibility for representing themselves, their companies, perhaps their industry in general? Front line representatives.
           
However, being great on the telephone doesn’t necessarily translate into the written word, whether it’s via e-mail, a fax response, or text-chat. As former Labor Secretary Robert Reich said, one out of six Americans is functionally illiterate. (New York Times, August 11, 1999).  
           
What can we do about this? Hire for attitude, train for aptitude. For instance, train for language skills, basic or advanced.  Train for communication and listening skills, rapport building, empathetic responsiveness, conflict resolution, anger diffusion, and other soft skills. Perceive training as an ongoing process, not an event. 
           
One of the most powerful documents in the world, the U.S. Constitution, begins with "We, the people..." Yes, ‘we the people’ make the difference.

ROSANNE D'AUSILIO, Ph.D., an industrial psychologist, and President of Human Technologies Global, Inc., which specializes in profitable call center operations in human performance management.  Over the last 20 years, she has provided needs analyses, instructional design, and customized, live customer service skills trainings.  Also offered is agent and facilitator certification through Purdue University’s Center for Customer Driven Quality.  You can reach her at rosanne@human-technologies.com or visit her website: www.human-technologies.com.


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