Businesses of all kinds are under increased competitive pressure to
improve customer satisfaction and loyalty while controlling costs.
Providing customer self-service can significantly impact these issues,
and many industries have already moved to this model. The travel
industry, bank ATMs, portrait scheduling within large retailers, and
online booksellers are everyday examples of businesses that
successfully offer 24/7 access to serve customers better. Forrester
Research estimates that an average Web self-service session costs $1,
compared to $10 for email responses and $33 for a phone call.
Customer
scheduling is often a very complex and costly process, especially if
your business spans multiple locations. And valuable customer data can
be lost if scheduling is done manually, adding to inefficiencies.
Moving scheduling to 24/7 self-service can present a great opportunity
to improve customer retention and loyalty while increasing business. It
also smoothes demand for walk-in services so businesses can better
estimate the resources required to handle anticipated customer volume.
But how do you know if the time is right for your company to move to self-service scheduling?
If
your business sells time as a perishable inventory that is monetized —
be it anything from consulting, dog grooming, bridal fittings, photo
studio portraits to health diagnostics, fitness centers or technical
support services — you might consider self-service scheduling.
Improving customer convenience in this challenging business environment
is critical. The Patricia Seybold Group estimates that the average
company loses 10 percent of its customers every year and decreasing
that defection rate by only 5 percent translates to profit increases
that can range from 25 percent to 125 percent. Customers remain loyal
because of good products, reasonable prices, and a strong customer
experience. Self-service scheduling can definitely improve the customer
experience.
Your customers are busy people too! Imagine if they
no longer were restricted to business hours for scheduling time with
you and could easily book their appointments from home or anywhere at
any time of the night or day. All they would need is a computer and an
Internet browser to visit your Web site — offering an opportunity to
market your services. With one click of a scheduling button on your
site they can find out what times are available for the services they
require and secure their appointment.
Change to a business’s
workflow however can be daunting, but it is not impossible if you
follow some guidelines and best practices when considering this new
self-service scheduling model.
How To Know If Self-Scheduling Fits Your Business
Your
first step in evaluating self-service should be to consider the
business challenges that self-service appointment scheduling can
address and see if any or all of them align with your company’s current
business challenges.
- Would you like better management
visibility into utilization of resources across your operations? Do you
want real-time access to better metrics that measure the effectiveness
of your operations?
- Would you like to smooth demand throughout the day to better utilize resources?
- Are you managing not only staff resources, but also facilities and equipment as part of the scheduling process?
- Is
the capture and confirmation of, and reminders for, appointments done
manually and are there costs associated with the manual process that
you would like to alleviate?
- How accurate is your appointment setting process – do you experience a high rate of “no shows” and double booking?
- Does rescheduling appointments or making last-minute resource changes wreak havoc on your scheduling process and workflow?
- Do
you have different types of appointments that need to be scheduled? Are
there multiple departments or groups within your company that schedule
appointments? Do they all have their own unique scheduling processes?
- Have you experienced customer dissatisfaction or loss of business due to long wait times?
- How well do you know your customers, their preferences and patterns? How is this customer information captured today?
- Do
you have a Web site? And how aggressively do you leverage the site for
marketing purposes? Do you want to better leverage your Web site to
help build your brand?
- Do you want to increase the number of
appointments you can schedule in order to grow your business but have
been challenged in doing so?
Selecting A Self-Service Solution
After
this analysis, if you have decided that self-service scheduling over
the Web might be a good solution for your business, the next step is to
evaluate what to look for in a solution that will enable you to
optimize the scheduling experience. You should also survey your repeat
customers to find out if they would prefer self-service scheduling if
it were offered.
To maximize the appointment scheduling process, a Web-based, self-service solution should be able to:
- Scale to handle any number of appointments across multiple locations or for a single location;
- Schedule multiple resources including staff, equipment, facilities;
- Provide the ability to adjust in real time;
- Be easily used and configured for your specific business application and workflow to minimize the impact on your staff;
- Enable
you to set up rules that meet your desired business workflow (e.g.,
specify the length of an appointment based on the type of service
requested or enable customers to select a preferred consultant);
- Provide
management reporting on utilization of resources such as daily schedule
summaries and individual customer appointment sheets;
- Enable
the capture of relevant information to better prepare for the
appointment before the customer arrives and for further sales
opportunities in the future;
- Automatically confirm
appointments through email and offer the ability to include “tips,”
directions and additional appointment-related information;
- Automatically send email, SMS or voice reminders;
- Seamlessly integrate with other business systems if required, including billing, CRM and other applications.
Ideally,
you will choose an on-demand self-scheduling solution, which eliminates
the requirement to purchase and maintain software. On-demand
self-service scheduling also minimizes IT involvement and significantly
reduces training requirements.
Certainly self-service scheduling
can be introduced while your manual process continues. This provides
time for your staff to point customers to the Website and ensure their
comfort (as well as your staff’s) with the new workflow.
Reap The Benefits
The benefits of customer self-service can be dramatic and include:
- Increased sales
- Lower administrative costs
- Reduction/elimination of errors and no shows
- Improved staff accountability
- Increased customer satisfaction and
- Freed-up valuable staff resources to focus on sales or other activities
Additionally,
scheduling appointments over the Web can add rules to the scheduling
process so that the same information is gathered each time and doesn’t
differ depending on who is booking the appointment. This ensures
accuracy and consistency.
Avoid The Pitfalls
While this
all this might sound good, you may be wondering if there are any
pitfalls to avoid when moving to self-service scheduling. Remarkably
there are very few:
- Don’t over-analyze the impact on your
employees of changing the workflow. Most employees welcome the change,
especially if they are made part of the process. The world has moved to
the Web and putting your business out front in accepting and leveraging
technology only makes them feel better about their potential for
success.
- Don’t try to over-customize a self-service
solution. By evaluating a solution against the guidelines mentioned
earlier, you will be ready to make it easy and efficient for you and
for your customers.
- Don’t assume that you have to move
directly (or wholly) to Web-based self-service. By utilizing a call
center, you can implement assisted-service scheduling first, then
offer/move to self-service scheduling. Your customer demographics will
help you decide the right approach for your company.
- If you
have multiple locations, don’t think you need to roll out self-service
scheduling to all locations simultaneously. Consider initiating the
project in early-adopter locations first, then roll out to other sites
once you can demonstrate success — both quantitatively and
qualitatively — through the early adopters.
- Be organized
before you implement self-service scheduling — know the goals and
benefits you want to achieve, the information you want to gather, the
rules you want followed in scheduling appointments, and the metrics you
want to set to ensure that you are fully leveraging the benefits.
Stay Competitive
The
risks in not considering self-service scheduling are that your
competitors provide this capability before you do. Many successful
businesses have shifted much of their e-commerce to the Web as well as
appointment scheduling. Virtually all the major portrait studios,
including Sears, Wal-Mart, Target, JC Penney and Ritz Camera, have
adopted self-service scheduling. Many healthcare facilities offering
imaging and diagnostics are smoothing demand with self-service, and
major retailers that are building brand with differentiated services
are also moving in this direction. An example is the Apple retail
stores, which implemented self-service scheduling to enable customers
to set a time to meet with experts at Apple’s Genius Bar to get
technical questions answered and receive guidance on products.
There
is a sea change occurring in forward-thinking organizations that see
the value of empowering their customers to make their own appointment.
Is it time to move your business to self-service scheduling?
Ed Mallen is CEO of Time Trade Systems. www.timetrade.com