The anatomy of a successful call starts with a simple call model that agents can modify based on call type. First, break down the “must haves” for each section in the model and define expectations as part of your adaptive call model framework.
Once you understand what you want the call to sound like, you can identify what competencies your agents will need to possess to execute the call successfully.
Let’s break this down into three activities:
Defining a successful call starts with an adaptive call model framework comprised of four parts:
Opening: During the opening you verify the customer; talk to the right party; read required disclosures and build rapport by acknowledging the caller’s situation.
Assessing: When assessing, you ask open-ended questions to determine the reason for the call or to understand the customer’s ability, stability, and willingness to pay. It’s critical to avoid duplicative questions and select the best payment option.
Resolving: To resolve the situation, you align a solution to help the customer and review the solution in detail to ensure the customer fully understands and can accept the plan of action.
Closing: As part of closing, you confirm the customer’s understanding of next steps and set expectations for what the customer is to do and what your company will do. Lastly, always thank the customer for their time.
When you define call expectations for each section of the call model, you end up with a chronological plan to follow.
Expectations: Use the OPENING to ensure that you contacted the right party and take the opportunity to establish a professional rapport-building relationship.
How to do it:
Expectations: During ASSESSING AND RESOLVING, gather all the necessary information to understand the situation. Do this in an authentic manner demonstrating a genuine desire to help the customer.
Customers may be overly optimistic and will promise to send payments that don’t match what they can afford. This takes a delicate balance of questioning.
How to do it:
Expectations: The CLOSING ensures that the customer understands what you have discussed and knows their obligations. When you close the call, you make the customer feel valued and appreciated by using phrases that create value-added emotion.
How to do it:
Identify Competencies — Assess roles to identify competencies (skills, abilities and personal attributes) that will drive performance and customer satisfaction.
How to do it:
Build Success Profiles — Each competency requires a success profile, so agents and management have a map for how to achieve expected results.
How to do it:
We’ve developed call model expectations and built listening and coaching programs for clients to increase call quality and provide a lift in collections rates.
The complete program makes sure that agents understand what is expected of them and get the training and tools for ongoing success. Contact us today to talk about how to improve your call performance.
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[Editor’s note: this article was written by Kristin Stolp, former Bridgeforce Senior Program Manager]