âExcuse me, do you speak
English?â is an opening sentence customer service agents often start their
conversations with. And while English has been the global language in business
for a long time, chances are some of your customers will not speak it.
Be it English or any other
language, if you fail to provide help to your customers in a language they
understand, your business can easily lose opportunities worth a lifetime of value
to your company.
In todayâs globalized world,
businesses are constantly expanding into new territories, as well as
increasingly focusing on creating a solid online presence. As a result, call
center operations have changed considerably in the last decade, with
multilingual call center services â providing customer service in several
languages â gaining significant ground.
Providing customer service in
the native languages of your customers will definitely improve your businessâ
overall customer experience. But how do you do it exactly? Find out below!
Determine the Languages
Although itâs the best to offer
support in your customersâ native language, depending on the size of your
business you may need to narrow down the list of languages your company has the
resources to offer customer support in.
So, which languages should you
support? In order to decide, as cliché as it sounds, youâll need to find out what
the primary languages your customers speak are. Looking at your data, in
particular, will help you see the bigger picture in terms of the languages
youâll need to cover.
The languages you choose will
also depend greatly on which countries you have the most customers from. In
some countries, such as in Scandinavian countries, English is so commonly used as
a second language that it may not be worth investing in providing customer
service in local languages. In other countries, however, for example in China, there
will probably be a greater need for offering customer support in the local
language.
Checking language trends can also be useful: according to this article, by offering the 16 languages mentioned in it, youâll be able to reach up to 90% of your potential business market.
Leverage Remote Agents
Did you know that 80% of customers prefer to be offered customer support in their own language, while 72% of them are more likely to buy a product or service when support is available in their native language?
Once you work out the languages you
need to offer customer support in, itâs time to find agents who can speak those
languages.
Recruiting agents with specialist language skills is no small feat, and even if you find them, they are likely to not come cheap. That is why utilizing a remote workforce is a great way to provide multilingual call center services and employ highly-skilled multilingual agents from anywhere in the world, without being limited by geographic factors.
Letâs say, for example, that
your company needs to operate a call center in Hungary, but needs to provide
customer service in German, Portuguese and Spanish. In such cases, by relying
on remote agents, you can easily hire a native workforce, instead of struggling
to find the right agents in Hungary and having to pay extra for their specialist
language skills.
Provide information and self-service options online
These days, people prefer to
solve their own problems by checking a companyâs website before calling customer
service lines. This is especially true for customers who do not speak the
language you mainly use for communication.
So, a great way to improve your
customer experience with multilingual call center services is to provide as
much information online as possible, in at least one globally-common language.
And an even better way is to provide that information in multiple languages.
After determining your core
languages, you can help keep your customer service lines less burdened by
translating your FAQ page and knowledge bases into the relevant languages.
And, although itâs a bit more costly, itâs definitely worth localizing your self-service tools, such as your IVR or chatbot solutions, into several languages as well.
Creating multilingual call
center services is not easy, but at the end of the day, they offer a unique chance
to be able to provide a smooth customer journey to your customers, wherever
they are in the world.