Telcos want one face
The investments that telecommunications service providers are making in reshaping their online properties into customer-centric portals reflects the growing maturity of self-service and Internet uptake in the industry, says KEVIN MELTZER of Consology.
Many
telcos around the world are overhauling their websites to offer customers more
holistic portals that give them a single point of entry into the organisation.
They
are doing so because they recognise that service will be a key point of
differentiation for their businesses in a market that is becoming increasingly
competitive. They have also realised that they have a major opportunity to
shift customers away from expensive contact centres towards low-cost electronic
channels.
In the
past, most telecommunications operators ran multiple sites across multiple
domains and subdomains. These web-based properties were built around the way
that telcos structured their own businesses rather than around the needs of the
customer. But we are now seeing the leading operators take a more user-centric
approach to the way that they design their web and mobile sites.
This
coincides with a change in the industry from slicing customers into numerous
segments and then serving them across a range of functional and product areas.
For example, many operators split customers into prepaid and postpaid segments
or voice and data users, distinctions that are becoming less meaningful in a
world of technology convergence. They now want to present a single face to the
customer rather than servicing the subscriber through silos.
These
changes are starting to percolate through to operators’ customer service and
sales strategies. Telcos are starting to pull together disparate products and
services that once resided across multiple sites into customer service portals.
These
sites put a wide range of information at the subscriber’s fingertips, he adds.
Increasingly, for example, subscribers can log directly into their accounts
from the operator's homepage and then access a wealth of services and
information. This marks an evolution from the fractured and inconsistent
customer experience of the past.
Leading
operators are even thinking about how their Self-Service platforms should be
integrated with social media strategies to allow customers to pay their
electronic bills or top up airtime with a single click from within a social
network.
Whereas
Self-Service portals on telco sites were once purely about account management
functions, they increasingly offer far richer functionality. In addition to
allowing subscribers to pay their bills and check their account information,
they are also increasingly becoming the first stop for service and commerce.
Operators
have started to recognise that splintering their e-commerce, service and
account management functions simply makes no sense. Customers want to be able
to do everything through one interface rather than needing to visit two or
three Web sites, or eventually possibly needing to phone a call centre or visit
a store for certain transactions.
Integrated
and easy to use online customer service channels will be central for telco
operators who want to be competitive in the markets of tomorrow. They form an
advantage in an industry where it will be customer relationships rather than
cost or service that drive loyalty and purchasing decisions.
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