I have been working the phones in customer service / tech support for almost 3 years. I have worked cable tv, internet, and digital phone. Far and away, the vast majority of irate customers get that way because of communications breakdown.
Agents are rarely taught how to effectively relate or interpret information. How often do you hear an agent repeating the same sentence over and over, with increasing volume? It should be obvious that, if the caller did not understand the first time, they won't with increased repitition. Irate callers are mostly frustrated with a) no one seems to be able to fix the problem, b) no one cares enough to find out what the problem actually is, and c) no one really gives a damn if the problem ever gets addressed. In fact, for many agents this is true. Add to that process and access issues which can prevent the problem from being fixed and both agent and customer are frustrated.
I have found that the best way to deal with all customers is to forget all the jargon from the my moniters and simply talk to the person on the phone. Once the wall between agent and caller is gone, 2 people can discuss things rationally. Empathy, good communications, and so on, all fall into line. One also needs to recognize a couple of simple facts: profanity is not necessarily abuse, it may just be part of that persons vocabulary; abuse does not require profanity or even negative language, consider passive-aggressive speech; and finally, we tend to respond with anger when frustrated. Being willing to listen to the customer and to help, or at least coherently explain why help is not possible, will eradicate the frustration and return some basic civility. If nothing else, the customer will fall back to "you have been great. Your company sucks, but you have been wonderful."
Finally, there is the issue of the irrational caller. Obviously, you cannot give blanket authority to agents to drop calls; no calls would get processed! On the other hand, the if-you-ever-hang-up-you'll-be-fired approach removes basic dignity and humanity from the agent. Agents need to have some recourse when faced with a caller who refuses help and only wants to abuse someone. A somewhat effective approach is for the agent to be able to get floor support or a supervisor to listen in and approve the release.
There are very few of these calls. Of the 30k calls I have taken, I'd be surprised if more than 10 fell into this catagory. To qualify as beyond help, the caller must be talking so fast / loud that you cannot respond, must cut you off when you do begin to respond, and must refuse to provide account information and/or description of the problem. Refusal to troubleshoot can also put one in this catagory.
I have been known to goad callers out of their anger by either talking louder than them, talking so quiet that they have to calm down just to hear me, or simply asking, "Ma'am, do you actually want help or would you just like to vent? I only ask because I need to know what you want." The latter stands a good chance of making the caller hang up. For me, I am willing to take the consequences of dropping a call, so I devised my own rules:
a) until you give me your account information, you are not a customer. You are just a lunatic.
b) if you don't want my help, then go yell at someone else. this is not abuse-an-agent.
c) yelling, screamin, crying, swearing, and freaking out may be entertainment for you, but it is not for me. If you can not be more rational than my two-year-old, you need a time out. Call back when you have regained your senses.
To summarize: 99% of angry callers are just frustrated and can be calmed by showing that you are listening and willing to help. The other 1% probably need sedation and are not your responsibility. |