As a manager, do you just assume your people know how to write properly? If your people are communicating with their external customers through email (as many are), are you risking long-term relationships by focusing on their telephone and verbal skills and ignoring their writing training?
The “e” world is fast becoming businesses’ favorite form of communication. To use computer terms, we are engaging in e-versations™.
Release 1.0 was email.
Release 2.0 was the online chat.
Release 3.0 is social media.
We are leaving our people to figure out the process, words to use and the etiquette of these three releases without any training or advice from management. This may be because many managers have never received any training themselves.
I used to teach “Business Writing.” As late as 2000, most business writing focused exclusively on letters, memos, and reports. In 2001, Cingular Wireless contracted me to provide them with a customer service email program. But my appeals to other companies fell on deaf ears.
The world of e-versations™ has only become more complicated since then. To answer this complicated landscape, many companies have reverted to the forms that made their telephone conversations with customers seem stilted and impersonal: scripts.
If I’m going to talk to a customer service representative or any of your employees, I expect to be treated as a person, not as a situation you can address with a script. If your people are talking to their customers on the phone, you would expect that talk in a conversational way. Now, they are increasingly talking to customers by email and chat. Customers expect the same conversational, non-scripted responses. If you don’t think your customers can see that your “chat rep” pressed a key that threw a pre-scripted response on the screen, think again.
As e-versations™ become more popular in most cases and the norm in many, your people need training in how to write conversationally and to be more customer-centric in their responses. This is essential as the world of customer communication moves forward.
Throw away the scripts. Train your people. It’s not rocket service™.