Posts Tagged ‘Intelligence’

Sales and emotional intelligence

Friday, March 5th, 2010

The “gender” discussion highlighted by my Sell like a Woman project, articles and other research leads people to believe that women are doing things men cannot because of gender. And this is causing sighing and forelock tugging in some male circles. “Not another feminist on her soap box” or “all men are useless” I hear some say.

As stated previously, my approach is not to denigrate men or idolise women, but to bring you information and findings that give you food for thought to help you make decisions so that you can be more successful at what you choose to do (as long as you don’t hurt yourself or anyone else in the process, as my mother would say).

So let’s put this gender issue into perspective. We all would be mistaken to assume gender is the single distinguishing factor in anything except pregnancy and childbirth. What we are finding is the research is highlighting that women are bringing certain qualities and skills they use in other aspects of their lives to the world of business and, in particular, sales.

And what we are finding is whatever they are doing is working better than previous initiatives, especially now the landscape of sales is changing so markedly. The qualities these women exhibit are not the exclusive domain of women; they can be and are modeled by men as well. It’s just that this has been done at an unconscious level to date, with little if any recognition by management.

What these women and others like them are showing is that they are using higher levels of “emotional Intelligence” (EI).

Research into competencies of highly effective salespeople have generally identified three or four broad categories; Selling skills, General management or Business skills, Technical skills and Interpersonal skills, and more recently, EI.

Interpersonal skills were historically identified as an important category of competencies needed by highly effective salespeople. Their importance reflects the significant contribution of the salesperson’s ability to form and develop a relationship with their client to creating a profitable and productive relationship for both parties. Emotional intelligence is a psychologically more complex process than Interpersonal skills, involving a deeper process of analysing, reasoning and responding.

Our own research, involving over 300 interviews coupled with research findings from Australia and overseas, has found that superior performing salespeople and managers demonstrate greater use of competencies related to the use of EI. They display well developed self-awareness, self regulation, motivation, empathy and social skills.

A recent Australian study conducted by Genos also found that sales performance and EI are positively related. What was even more exciting was that they showed that EI can be learned and developed in people. (An 18% increase in EI for the managers and sales representatives that participated in the learning and development program).

And furthermore, developing the EI of sales professionals and managers results in greater sales returns. The Australian pharmaceutical company who put their sales managers and sales representatives through an EI sales development program found that the program has so far returned $6 for every $1 invested over a six month period.

These EI qualities are being used by high performers despite current management practices in most cases, however if raised to a conscious level and recognised for the value they bring to people, business, customers etc, then they can be selected in and/or trained and developed in people (men and women alike) to use effectively and purposefully in the workplace (and beyond).

If you are still not convinced consider this:

“Buyers do not buy products, services, or ideas; they buy states. Buyers buy emotion.” – George Ludwig, former National Sales Director for Johnson & Johnson (USA) “Emotions are part of the total communications experience, and they must be acknowledged.” – Janelle Barlow & Dianna Maul, Emotional Value: Creating strong bonds with your customers “Partnerships will never work if they are forced. It is important to provide ‘friendly’ service; however, organisations pull the legs out from under ‘friendliness’ by too tightly scripting the experience.” - Janelle Barlow & Dianna Maul, Emotional Value: Creating strong bonds with your customers

If you want further information on EI and sales let me know.

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Social Media Release: Symantec Announces February 2010 MessageLabs Intelligence Report

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

Social Media Release: Symantec Announces February 2010 MessageLabs Intelligence Report
Spam Volumes Surge in February While Message Size Shrinks

Read more on Marketwire

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Symantec Announces February 2010 MessageLabs Intelligence Report

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Symantec Announces February 2010 MessageLabs Intelligence Report
MOUNTAIN VIEW, CA–(Marketwire – 03/01/10) – Symantec Corp. (NASDAQ: SYMC – News ) today announced the publication of its February 2010 MessageLabs Intelligence Report. Analysis reveals a surge in spam levels in February to 89.4 percent, an increase of 5.5 percent since January mostly due to an increase in spam emanating from the Grum and Rustock botnets. Over the past year, Grum has experienced …

Read more on Marketwire via Yahoo! Finance

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Enhancing Contact Center Intelligence

Monday, March 1st, 2010

By Jose Allan Tan

Peter F. Drucker once said that a company which owns 30 percent market share knows only 30 percent of the market. That company has no clue about the other 70 percent of the market.

Having been in the IT industry for 20 years I can tell you, with certainty, that Drucker is even wrong about that 30 percent (at least in Asia anyway). For years, I worked for IT vendors and every day business managers complain that they don’t know enough about their customer to guarantee security for themselves and the company.

How to win new business from existing customers as well as potential ones is every company’s call-to-arms each day. The most common approach for touching those opportunities is the contact center. Whether it’s an in-house operation or outsourced, there is a growing dependency on these entities to bring in the dough.

What irks me about this is that contact centers are becoming the single largest repository of data for which little is being mined beyond the campaign. For example, if an agent receives a call asking for helpdesk support, the agent’s task is to clear the support call as quickly as possible. For an outbound campaign such as telemarketing, the goal is to make as many calls as possible from a prospect list. In either case the communication that happens during the period when the customer is engaged with the agent is just as important as the final outcome.

Contact center agents do this day in and day out.

One caveat though is that with the proliferation of contact centers throughout the region, you can expect a growing disparity in the level and quality of service delivered by each. For sure the larger providers are able to leverage best practices, tools and experience. The mom-and-pop type contact centers, however, offer flexibility in campaigns and willingness to work the extra mile.

Added extras

Roger Woolley, senior vice president of Marketing and CMO at Autonomy Etalk, believes that organizations need a combination of traditional performance tools and intelligence-based functions to get the most from their contact centers. “While delivering quality service within the contact center is certainly a key to success, it is critical that the organization be able to analyze and understand their customers on a deeper level based upon daily communication,” says Woolley.

This level of analysis enables the responsibility of customer service improvement to be expanded to the rest of the organization, making back-office operations, product development, sales initiatives, promotions, and marketing a key part of the service initiative.

Jaehoon Wee, vice president of ASEAN and Korea for Genesys Telecommunications Labs, notes that many call centers in Asia operate as processing centers, where customer requests and queries are processed and day-to-day questions are answered.

The issue here is that as the quality of customer handling falls, this may well impact the company’s ability to sell products or services in the long run.

A research study of consumer attitudes and how Asia-Pacific Contact Centers are managing self-service titled “Contact Centre Realities” reported that 85 percent of consumers said they would stop using a company’s product or service based on a bad call center experience. Conversely, 76 percent of consumers stated that they would buy from a company again based on a good call center experience.

“Customer service strategies must be adapted to meet the needs of this increasingly sophisticated customer base, one that can easily defect to the competition,” adds Wee.

Contact center technologies like CTI, vXML-based IVR systems, advanced call-routing, virtual call centers and workforce management have enabled customer service executives to consistently enhance service for customers while simultaneously reducing costs. However, the most profound improvements have come from those, which have provided unprecedented opportunities to serve customers at greatly reduced cost, and make organizations more readily accessible to the general public.

Wee advices that “no matter what the size of the business, companies need to implement more business-driven customer service strategies. These strategies allow you to automatically identify callers and incorporate customer segmentation to deliver business value across both inbound and outbound communications to your customers, creating revenue-generating opportunities.”

Woolley concurs and adds, “Most organizations have not been able to track, manage, or access most of their unstructured data. This includes web pages, audio files, emails, chats, and documents that are scattered throughout the enterprise. And for businesses that record customer interactions, the amount of unstructured data is constantly increasing. Without a way to process and share this data, businesses are missing out on critical sales, marketing, and service opportunities.”

Adding intelligence to deepen experience

How would you like it if the person on the other end of the line is able to quickly answer your queries and respond to you in a manner befitting a long-time acquaintance?

Some contact centers now incorporate business intelligence (BI) tools and processes into the arsenal of technologies to deepen the information derived from the contact center database. BI tools help to improve the management of contact centers, and provide deeper insight into how these complex systems work (or sometimes don’t work!). However, Wee warns that BI tools are only as useful as the level of expertise in the domain-specific metrics that are available. Unless one is measuring and analyzing the most relevant metrics, BI tools will yield little useful insight (this is true in any industry).

“BI technologies combined with information from an Intelligent Contact Center helps provide a multi-dimensional view of the customer that allows the examination of purchasing, sales, or preference trends with valuable qualitative data directly from the customer,” says Woolley.

Another aspiring strategy has to do with understanding the context of the data and arriving at relevant information that can be used to make business decisions.

Meaning Based Computing enables users to search and access information across the organization, no matter where it is located or what format it is in. This technology is unique because it searches for data based on its inherent meaning, not just by a key word or phrase that exists in the file. This allows users to not only find more relevant data, but also to access information they didn’t even know existed.

Woolley notes that MBC provides a competitive advantage because “it processes data in real-time, it delivers actionable information that can be applied to decision-making processes, product and service development, and creative business strategies.”

Genesys’ Wee concurs. “Meaning Based Computing allows computers to understand the relationships that exist between disparate pieces of information and perform sophisticated analysis operations with real business value, automatically and in real-time,” he says.

Properly understood and executed, meaning based computing provides call center agents or business managers with valuable supporting material and even richer customer intelligence to apply to their business and customer-service objectives.

Whichever technology or processes you want to adopt, benefits can only be realized if the whole organization understands what the problems are, what the customers want, what the technology or process change is meant to achieve, and why it is important for the whole operation to take the change seriously.

Failing that, you may start looking for something better to do.

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