Saturday, September 14, 2019
Customer Service and Order Processors
The Human Side of Management Assignment Repairing Jobs That Fail to Satisfy Learning Goals Companies often divide up work as a way to improve efficiency, but specialisation can lead to negative consequences. DrainFlow is a company that has effectively used specialisation to reduce costs relative to its competitorsââ¬â¢ costs for years, but rising customer complaints suggest the firmââ¬â¢s strong position may be slipping. After reading the case, you will suggest some ways it can create more interesting work for employees.You will also tackle the problem of finding people who are qualified and ready to perform the multiple responsibilities required in these jobs. Major Topic Areas Job design Job satisfaction Personality Emotional labour The Scenario DrainFlow is a large residential and commercial plumbingà maintenance firm that operates around the United Kingdom. It has been a major player in residential plumbingà for decades, and its familiar rhyming motto, ââ¬Å"Whenà Yo ur Drain Wonââ¬â¢t Go, Call DrainFlow,â⬠has been plasteredà on billboards since the 1940s. Leigh Reynaldo has been a regional manager at DrainFlow for about 2 years.She used to work for a newerà competing chain, Lightning Plumber, that has beenà drawing more and more customers from DrainFlow. Althoughà her job at DrainFlow pays more, Leigh is not happyà with the way things are going. She has noticed the work environmentà is not as vital or energetic as the environmentà she saw at Lightning. Leigh thinks the problem is that employees are not motivatedà to provide the type of customer service Lightningà Plumber employees offer. She recently sent surveysà to customers to collect information about performance,à and the data confirmed her fears.Although 60 percentà of respondents said they were satisfied with their experienceà and would use DrainFlow again, 40 percent feltà their experience was not good, and 30 percent said theyà would use a competi tor the next time they had a plumbing problem. Leigh is wondering whether DrainFlowââ¬â¢s job designà might be contributing to its problems in retaining customers. DrainFlow has about 2,000 employees in fourà basic job categories: plumbers, plumberââ¬â¢s assistants, orderà processors, and billing representatives. This structureà is designed to keep costs as low as possible.Plumbers make very high wages, whereas plumberââ¬â¢s assistantsà make about one-quarter of what a licensedà plumber makes. Using plumberââ¬â¢s assistants is thereforeà a very cost-effective strategy that has enabled DrainFlowà to easily undercut the competition when it comes toà price. Order processors make even less than assistantsà but about the same as billing processors. All work is veryà specialised, but employees are often dependent on anotherà job category to perform at their most efficientà level. Like most plumbing companies, DrainFlow getsà business mostly from the Yellow Pages and the Internet.Customers either call in to describe a plumbing problemà or submit an online request for plumbing services,à receiving a return call with information within 24 hours. In either case, DrainFlowââ¬â¢s order processors listen to theà customerââ¬â¢s description of the problem to determineà whether a plumber or a plumberââ¬â¢s assistant shouldà make the service call. The job is then assigned accordingly,à and a service provider goes to the location. Whenà the job has been completed, via mobile phone, a billing representativeà relays the fee to SHR034-6, 12-13 he service rep, who presentsà a bill to the customer for payment. Billing representativesà can take customersââ¬â¢ credit card payments by phoneà or e-mail an invoice for online payment. The Problem Although specialisation does cut costs significantly, Leighà is worried about customer dissatisfaction. According toà her survey, about 25 percent of customer contactsà ended in no service call because customers were confusedà by the diagnostic questions the order processorsà asked and because the order processors did not haveà sufficient knowledge or skill to explain the situation.That means fully one in four people who call DrainFlowà to hire a plumber are worse than dissatisfied: theyà are not customers at all! The remaining 75 percent of calls that did end in a customer service encounter resultedà in other problems. The most frequent complaints Leigh found in the customerà surveys were about response time and cost, especiallyà when the wrong person was sent to a job. Aà plumberââ¬â¢s assistant cannot complete a more technicallyà complicated job. The appointment has to be rescheduled,à and the customerââ¬â¢s time and the staffââ¬â¢s time haveà been wasted.The resulting delay often caused customersà in these situations to decline further contactà with DrainFlowââ¬âmany of them decided to go withà Ligh tning Plumber. ââ¬Å"When I arrive at a job I canââ¬â¢t take care of,â⬠saysà plumberââ¬â¢s assistant Jim Larson, ââ¬Å"the customer getsà annoyed. They thought they were getting a licensedà plumber, since they were calling for a plumber. Tellingà them they have to have someone else come out doesnââ¬â¢tà go over well. â⬠à On the other hand, when a plumber responds to aà job easily handled by a plumberââ¬â¢s assistant, the customerà is still charged at the plumberââ¬â¢s higher pay rate.Licensed plumber Luis Berger also does not like being inà the position of giving customers bad news. ââ¬Å"If I getà called out to do something like snake a drain, the customerà isnââ¬â¢t expecting a hefty bill. Iââ¬â¢m caught in a difficult situationââ¬âI donââ¬â¢t set the rates or make theà appointments, but Iââ¬â¢m the one who gets it from the customer. â⬠à Plumbers also resent being sent to do such simpleà work. Obi Ani i s one of DrainFlowââ¬â¢s order processors. She is frustrated too when the wrong person is sentà to a job but feels she and the other order processors areà doing the best they can. We have a survey weââ¬â¢re supposedà to follow with the calls to find out what the problemà is and who needs to take the job,â⬠she explains. ââ¬Å"Theà customers donââ¬â¢t know that we have a standard form, soà they think we can answer all their questions. Most of usà donââ¬â¢t know any more about plumbing than the caller. Ifà they donââ¬â¢t use the terms on the survey, we donââ¬â¢t understandà what theyââ¬â¢re talking about. A plumber would, butà weââ¬â¢re not plumbers; we just take the calls. â⬠Customer service issues also involve the billing representatives. They are the ones who have to keep contactingà customers about payment. Itââ¬â¢s not my fault theà wrong guy was sent,â⬠says Elisabeth King. ââ¬Å"If two guysà went out, thatâ â¬â¢s two trips. If a plumber did the work, youà pay plumber rates. Some of these customers donââ¬â¢t getà that I didnââ¬â¢t take their first call, and so I get yelled at. â⬠à The billing representatives also complain that they seeà only the tail end of the process, so they donââ¬â¢t know whatà the original call entailed. The job is fairly impersonal,à and much of the work is recording customer complaints. Rememberââ¬â40 percent of customers are not satisfied,à and it is the billing representatives who take theà brunt of their negative reactions on the phone.As you can probably tell, all employees have to engageà in emotional labour, as described in your textbook,à and many lack the skills or personality traits to completeà the customer interaction component of their jobs. Theyà are not trained to provide customer service, and they seeà their work mostly in technical, or mechanical, terms. Quite a few are actually anxious about speaking directlyà with customers. The office staff (order processors andà billing representatives) realise customer service is partà of their job, but they also find dealing with negativeà feedback from customers and co-workers stressful.Two years ago, a management consultingà company was hired to survey DrainFlow worker attitudes. The results showed they were less satisfied thanà workers in other comparable jobs. The following tableà provides a breakdown of respondent satisfaction levelsà across a number of categories:à à à SHR034-6, 12-13 DrainFlow Plumbers DrainFlow Plumber Assistants DrainFlow Office Workers Average Plumber Average Office Worker I am satisfied with the work I am asked to do. 3. 7 2. 5 2. 5 4. 3 3. 5 I am satisfied with my working conditions. 3. 8 2. 4 3. 7 4. 1 4. 2 I am satisfied with my interactions with o-workers. 3. 5 3. 2 2. 7 3. 8 3. 9 I am satisfied with my interactions with my supervisor 2. 5 2. 3 2. 2 3. 5 3. 4 The information about avera ge plumbers and averageà office workers is taken from the management consultingà companyââ¬â¢s records of other companies. Theyà are not exactly surprising, given some of the complaints DrainFlow employees have made. Top management isà worried about these results, but they have not been ableà to formulate a solution. The traditional DrainFlow cultureà has been focused on cost containment, and theà ââ¬Å"soft areasâ⬠like employee satisfaction has not been a majorà issue.The Proposed Solution The company is in trouble, and as revenues shrink andà the cost savings that were supposed to be achieved byà dividing up work fail to materialise, a change seems toà be in order. Leigh is proposing using cash rewards to improve performanceà among employees. She thinks if employeesà were paid based on work outcomes, they would work harderà to satisfy customers. Because it is not easy to measureà how satisfied people are with the initial call-in, Leighà wo uld like to give the order processors a small rewardà for every 20 calls successfully completed.For the hands-onà work, she would like to have each billing representativeà collect information about customer satisfaction for eachà completed call. If no complaints are made and the jobà is handled promptly, a moderate cash reward would beà given to the plumber or plumberââ¬â¢s assistant. If the customerà indicates real satisfaction with the service, aà larger cash reward would be provided. Leigh also wants to find people who are a better fit withà the companyââ¬â¢s new goals. Current hiring procedure reliesà on unstructured interviews with each locationââ¬â¢s general manager, and little consistency is found in the wayà these managers choose employees.Most lack training inà customer service and organisational behaviour. Leigh thinksà it would be better if hiring methods were standardisedà across all branches in her region to help managers identifyà recruits who can actually succeed in the job. Your Assignment Your task is to prepare a persuasive report for Leigh on the potentialà effectiveness of her cash reward and structured interviewà programmes. Make certain it is in the form of aà professional business document that you would giveà to an experienced manager at this level of a fairly largeà corporation.Leigh is very smart when it comes to managingà finances and running a plumbing business, but sheà will not necessarily know about the organisational behaviourà principles you are describing. As any newà proposals must be passed through top management,à you should also address their concerns about cost containment. You will need to make a strong evidence-basedà financial case that changing the management style willà benefit the company. When you write, make sure you touch on the followingà points:à à SHR034-6, 12-13 1.Although it is clear employees are not especially satisfiedà with their wor k, do you think this is a reasonà for concern? Does research suggest satisfied workersà are actually better at their jobs? Are any other behaviouralà outcomes associated with job satisfaction? 2. Using job characteristics theory, explain why theà present system of job design may be contributing toà employee dissatisfaction. Describe some ways youà could help employees feel more satisfied with theirà work by redesigning their jobs. 3. Leigh has a somewhat vague idea about how to implementà the cash rewards system.Describe some of theà specific ways you would make the reward systemà work better, based on the case. 4. Explain the advantages and disadvantages of usingà financial incentives in a program of this nature. What, if any, potential problems might arise if peopleà are given money for achieving customer satisfactionà goals? What other types of incentives mightà be considered? 5. Create a specific plan to assess whether the rewardà system is working. What are the dependent variablesà that should change if the system works? How willà you go about measuring success?
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