By Bri Hillmer on Support from April 17, 2014
Written communication with customers can be challenging. This is especially true when you have international customers with whom language might be a barrier. The mysteriously worded email ticket is about as ubiquitous in SAAS customer service as, say, hippies in Boulder.
The gut reaction to unclear requests is to ask the customer to give you more information or otherwise clarify their request. The problem with this is that it guarantees at least 4 back and forth emails before the customer has a solution. While I’m not an advocate for the one-and-done approach, assuming that any ambiguous ticket cannot be resolved with a single response is, simply put, wrong. This assumption causes support volume and creates a less-than-stellar customer service experience.
(I’m not sure that this is actually a thing, but the one-and-done approach I’m referring to is where reps try to resolve an email request with a single response, in all cases. I think that this can be as off-putting as a back and forth where the customer feels that they are being put off for the sake of support volume and response time stats.)
I’m serious. Make an educated guess. Most of these tickets will include at least a clue or two about what feature or area of your application they are inquiring about. So, make an educated guess. If they are asking about a particular reporting feature, ask yourself, “What are the most common sticking points for this report?” Then re-read the request and try to determine if any of these might apply.
Even if the request is so ambiguous that you can’t be sure, taking the time to compose a response where you give it a shot is a good idea for three reasons:
So here’s my recipe for responding to mysterious email tickets:
A thread might look like so:
Customer: Gobbeldygook gibberish show a question garbage nonsense mumbo jumbo.
Support Hero:
Hello there!Thank you for contacting SurveyGizmo Customer Support!
I’m not 100% that I’m on the right track but I am here to help! You mentioned “show a question” in your initial requests so I’m guessing you are looking to set up question logic within your survey. This can be a little tricky to set up the first time. The important thing to note is whether your target and trigger questions are on the same page.
Check out our Question Logic tutorial to learn more: http://surveygizmov4.helpgizmo.com/help/article/link/setup-question-logic
Please do let me know if I completely missed the mark!
Have a great day!
Customer: Thanks! This was exactly what I needed to get this set up!
Here’s an excellent real world example courtesy of SurveyGizmo’s lovely Full Service Survey Salon Stylist.
Customer: Why would I choose the likert scale option in setting up my survey when I can simply enter the responses manually? Does selecting the likert option ensure that the data gets reported differently than if I just entered it manually?
Support Hero: Thanks for contacting us today! I’m sorry, I’m not quite sure what you mean here. Do you mean to ask the difference between choosing a “pre-made list” of answer options, and entering your own? If so, there’s actually no difference — they will report the same way! Otherwise, can you clarify for me what you mean?
Thanks so much!Customer: Hello, thank you. You answered my question perfectly!
Well done Full Service Survey Salon Stylist. Well done indeed!
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