Article • 6 min read
Making spirits bright: 5 ways to support your CX team during the holidays
Make the holidays merrier for your customer service staff during the busiest time of the year.
Von Erin Hueffner, Staff Writer
Zuletzt aktualisiert: March 1, 2024
It’s the holiday season, and this year is looking like one to remember. Thanks to supply-chain issues, popular items were out of stock or delayed before the shopping season even began. I bought a fancy scarf online in October, thinking I was going to beat the rush. Within a week, I had a backorder email. Two weeks later, no word—until about a month had passed, and my order was finally canceled.
It’s been a weird year, but consumers aren’t more forgiving of mishaps: they’re more likely than ever to try new brands after an annoyance like my scarf scenario. Even so, analysts predict this holiday has the potential to shatter retail records.
When spending is up and inventory is down, it puts extra pressure on busy customer service teams at a time when ticket volume is already high. How can you support your frontline team through what can be a challenging season? Here are five ways to help your team through the busiest season of the year.
2. Get your teams connected
When your teams are talking to each other, they’re more likely to be able to anticipate potential snags. And they can take proactive steps to support the business as a whole. For example, if items are out of stock or delayed, let your ecommerce team know to update your website as soon as possible. If there’s a deadline to order in time for a holiday, your staff and marketing pieces can make sure it’s clear to customers they have to shop in advance. If things get dicey, you can put a halt to promotions for sold-out items to help reduce customer frustration. You can keep everyone connected with customer service software that triages tickets and automates workflows, and lets teams collaborate easily.
Support requests are up 20 percent since the start of the pandemic, and they’ll be even higher during the holiday season.
It’s no fun to tell a customer that something they just saw in an email is already gone, so staying on top of product availability is key—so is letting your customers know what to expect. According to the Zendesk Customer Experience Trends Report, support requests are up 20 percent since the start of the pandemic, and they’ll be even higher during the holiday season. Empowering your team with the right information can help them get out in front of issues.
4. Shine a light on what’s happening behind the scenes
One of the best strategies is being proactive with your customers, according to Stephen Cizmar, CSO at Lang.ai. He advises setting up an automated reply within your ticketing system to let people know their questions were received and when you’ll respond. Many systems easily allow you to send auto-replies, but during the holidays, you may want to adjust the messaging to acknowledge that volume is higher than usual, that you appreciate your customers’ patience, and to affirm that your team will reply.
“Quick transparency and honesty is a good way of setting trust with your customer base.”
Stephen Cizmar, CSO at Lang.ai
The anxiety that results from being left in the dark leads to extra support tickets. “That quick transparency and honesty is a good way of setting trust with your customer base,” says Cizmar. “Because the alternative is being swamped with volume, your response times go down, your backlog goes up, and then you basically leave your customers in the dark.”
Great customer service puts a bow on holiday success
When people are rushing around shopping for gifts and feeling stressed, it’s a kind human touch that can make things a little better. Customer support is often the thing that makes someone loyal to a brand, and it can really help your company shine in the midst of the hustle and bustle. Research shows that 75 percent of customers will spend more to buy with companies that give them a good customer experience. On the flip side, one bad experience is enough to make them consider shopping elsewhere.
When you’re investing in your team and providing them with the tools they need to succeed, you pass the spirit on to your customers—even if, like me, they’ll have to reorder their holiday scarf.