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Have you ever worked in Customer Care?

13

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 20,237 ✭✭✭✭jimgoose


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,489 ✭✭✭Bazzy


    Worked in a phone call centre for a good few years

    Few things that stick out

    The woman who rang @ 23:59 ( we finished our shift at midnight) to see if her phone was working as her son didn't call to wish her a happy birthday was quite sad really that she was that far thru she decided to ring us.

    There was any amount of abuse Joe duffy etc always told them get Joe to ask for me when he calls with your permission i'll give him the full story that usually shut them up

    Your timed for everything we we're only allowed personal time toilet etc for 3 minutes a day when you should have been on the phone

    Been invited for a fight in the car park after work a few times.

    I got promoted and left the call centre world I kinda missed the buzz of fixing problems for people and being kept on your toes the stats where a pain in the hole

    In my last job I looked after all the incoming and out going calls when we were setting up the call centre. I made a point of playing back calls to people who had lied and trust me there was a lot of them

    i'd imagine in the world of outsourcing its only gotten worse we went to waterford to test one of the outsourcing centres and the office/centre was grim to day the least i wouldnt have fancied spending a 12 hour shift there anyway


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 907 ✭✭✭Under His Eye


    Agricola wrote: »
    So after about half an hour I realized her secret. You treat the person on the other end of the line much the same way that many customer's treat agents....ie an obstacle to be overcome. She didn't engage in any way with them on a human level, sounded robotic, but efficient and spent every short call trying to find ways to extricate herself from the situation. I was astonished how adept she was at placating the caller, giving them reassurance and some instructions and then telling them to go away and try that out. They'd come on tearing their hair out and five minutes later be whistling.
    The problem is if you do that to a customer and they ring back 5 minutes later you will have some other angry agents standing over your desk with daggers. Happened to me loads of times. I was told to cop on by other agents and engage the customer and to fix the problem.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 5,106 ✭✭✭PlaneSpeeking


    In my youth yeah, I've done my share in Call Centres.

    The bad side is well documented by all I'm sure but one of the best jobs was working for TypeTalk - it's a texting system for the deaf.

    On Saturday nights you'd be asked to type all manner of filthy talk!!!!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,097 ✭✭✭amcalester


    Worked for a large bookmakers taking bets over the phone, it was usually grand and paid the bills while I was studying.

    One call I asked the customer a fairly innocuous question and he went mental calling me all sorts of names and then went on to say that he had cancer and that people like me have no respect, more names and abuse blah blah blah.

    I replied, that it was no wonder he had cancer and hung up.

    Took off my headset and walked out the door, ne'er to return.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 51 ✭✭cocokabana


    Worked in a call centre in Clonmel for broadband support and tv support for UPC for 6 months. It was the most soul destroying time of my life. 99% of customers rang to complain they weren't getting the 100mbs of speed they were paying for despite us trying to explain it was UP TO 100mbs and having 50 different devises connected didn't help. It was torture.

    Worst shift was Saturday evening as drunk lad's playing online would ring shouting their internet was slow. It was just a merry go around of changing channels and telling them try that for a few days and sure enought they'd be back on shouting again.

    When I worked on the TV support 99% of calls were elderly people who couldn't use their remote and find the AV source to get the news on.
    Actually started crying on a call coz I had some psycho Spanish woman who'd come home from holidays and could't get the TV to work (av problem again) and no matter how many times I explained to her how to fix it she wasn't listening. I left not long after that. Said no job is worth crying over.

    I've a friend who works in that "notorious" call centre in Waterford, they are there 4 years but only work part-time. only way to survive there.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 18,067 ✭✭✭✭fryup


    Agricola wrote: »
    In my experience only two kinds of people can last. The ones that either are born with a thick skin or those that develop it.

    and thirdly those who are so thick in the head that they don't know any better jobwise


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 6,547 ✭✭✭Agricola


    The problem is if you do that to a customer and they ring back 5 minutes later you will have some other angry agents standing over your desk with daggers. Happened to me loads of times. I was told to cop on by other agents and engage the customer and to fix the problem.

    True, that's assuming that you don't fix the problem. But quite often it's a matter of identifying the right fix quickly (or using a catch all fix which sorts a number of similar issues) and then letting them off to try that.
    This girl had it down to a fine art and since her call handling times were low and the metric which measured how many of her callers came back again was equally low, the managers were happy with her.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 5,106 ✭✭✭PlaneSpeeking


    Not strictly speaking a call centre per se but I've a pal in the UK works on the 999 line.

    Can you imagine the weekend calls ? "I need to get home and I missed the bus", is pretty typical.

    How he hasn't snapped yet is beyond me.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,758 ✭✭✭Laois_Man


    First job out of college was sort of a more advanced call centre where our customers were hi-tech system/network/hardware engineers, mainly at very large corporations across Europe

    First day out of training on the front line, and my very first support call was from a dude in Sweden moaning that his staff were suffering ergonimic injuries due to having to reach over and back between keyboard use and mouse clicks

    I didn't stay long.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,860 ✭✭✭Steve F


    Not strictly speaking a call centre per se but I've a pal in the UK works on the 999 line.

    Can you imagine the weekend calls ? "I need to get home and I missed the bus", is pretty typical.

    How he hasn't snapped yet is beyond me.

    I really do believe anyone that calls 999 in those situations has to be "mentally challenged":mad:


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 5,106 ✭✭✭PlaneSpeeking


    Steve F wrote: »
    I really do believe anyone that calls 999 in those situations has to be "mentally challenged":mad:

    Usually locked or stoned to be honest.

    They did have one not long back where a woman called 999 as her tattoo "didn't look right".

    He earns every last penny IMHO!!!!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,860 ✭✭✭Steve F


    Usually locked or stoned to be honest.

    They did have one not long back where a woman called 999 as her tattoo "didn't look right".

    He earns every last penny IMHO!!!!

    Truly unbelievable :eek:


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 5,106 ✭✭✭PlaneSpeeking


    Steve F wrote: »
    Truly unbelievable :eek:

    Thing is, I only speak to him about work perhaps a few times a month - I maintain you write ALL the dodgy calls down, you'd have a book in a fortnight.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 236 ✭✭Deiselurker


    I've worked in those roles for many years but hoping to either got a role off phones or move on to another employer as can't see myself doing it much longer. Call centre problems Facebook page sums it all up if anyone follows that. Most callers are fine but the odd one is abusive. A woman swore at me and hung up then today. The job is repetitive and stressful and senior management don't seem to care. There aren't many chances for promotion because everyone goes for a small number of positions. Time for a change at this stage.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,847 ✭✭✭Sebastian Dangerfield


    I have, in a few different places, worked for O2 before they became crap (2003/2004), then went to Chorus before they were bought out, have worked for Vodafone (ugh) and now working in customer care for an IP based motion detection cctv. All of them were quite different, all of them were crap in the end.

    I worked in O2 around the same time as you for a couple of summers. I got a shock the first week when I was told my toilet breaks were averaging 12 mins a day (you had to input a reason code when you left your desk), and could I keep it below 10 mins. Some genuinely hard to believe calls - e.g someone called the helpline to say the 9 button had fallen off their phone and what could I do over the phone. I think the number to call was 1909... figure that one out. Men calling up putting on womens voices trying to get their call info was fun too. But the worst was text alerts and ringtones taking peoples credit...they'd swear blind they NEVER signed up to a service, threaten you with Joe Duffy and everything else, then sheepishly concede when you proved they downloaded Crazy Frog. Bit of craic to be had at times, but I swore Id never do it again. Then I worked in Telesales and saw true hardship.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,482 ✭✭✭Gimme A Pound


    Yes I have - did a good stint of it during the recession. Actually I've just been on a thread in the Three forum where there is a valid grievance but as usual the poor customer service agent on a pittance with zero say is getting it in the neck. And otherwise rational people are ok with that. That's the thing about customer service - the stories can be astounding, absolute psycho stuff... but they're mostly normal nice people; your friends and family, who would be appalled by bullying and harassment otherwise but for some reason there is this blind spot when it comes to dealing with customer service agents, and it's somehow fair game to unleash one's inner demon on them. You'd have to work in customer service to appreciate it fully I think. Sometimes people think they have reasonable grounds for such behaviour - they truly believe that the agent is "in on" the process they take such issue with, but they actually have no more say than the customer has.

    If they just knew how difficult it can be for someone having to put up with that crap constantly. People understandably get frustrated with having to wait for ages to get their call answered but that's because there aren't enough people to answer the calls quickly enough because it's hard to get staff/the turnover is so high. It's a human being just like anyone on the other end of the phone. Plus the entitlement culture, abdication of personal responsibility and persecution complexes of this country make it even worse.

    That said, I mostly liked it and got on ok at it too. A significant minority of customers are maniacs but the majority were grand/nice and I've no problem with people being annoyed when they've grounds to be, once they're not abusive.

    It gave me more empathy too towards frontline workers and an understanding of the running of a call centre (much more complex than you would think) and it makes you think more critically when you see these awful stories about particular companies on social media - there's likely more to the story than they're letting on. ;)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,105 ✭✭✭✭Potential-Monke


    Not strictly speaking a call centre per se but I've a pal in the UK works on the 999 line.

    Can you imagine the weekend calls ? "I need to get home and I missed the bus", is pretty typical.

    How he hasn't snapped yet is beyond me.

    I was a Garda for 9 years, spent a lot of time answering the 999 phone (you ring 999 here, you get through to ECAS in Navan, who route it to the local Divisional HQ). He's not lying. People ring 999 for the stupidest of things. I had to talk to one lad who bought a bag of basil instead of weed. Wanted me to prosecute the dealer, but wouldn't tell me who it was... Every division then has repeat callers. We had one who just rang up to abuse us. And you can't block the number, in case they have an actual emergency. He could ring at any time of the day or night. Mad thing is, it costs the state €2 per call answered in Navan, so this lad was costing the state hundreds every month, and not a single thing could be done about it. Not to mention he could have been tying up the line from someone else with a genuine emergency. But you get all sorts on the 999.
    Agricola wrote: »
    True, that's assuming that you don't fix the problem. But quite often it's a matter of identifying the right fix quickly (or using a catch all fix which sorts a number of similar issues) and then letting them off to try that.
    This girl had it down to a fine art and since her call handling times were low and the metric which measured how many of her callers came back again was equally low, the managers were happy with her.

    And that's why call centers are horrible places to work. One of my colleagues does 4 times the tickets as anyone else, but she picks and chooses the easy ones. And she's let do it, otherwise they would have to hire 4 more to replace her. It drives me mad, because I get pulled on small things she doesn't even consider doing. Quite annoying. Customer care should be about the care, not figures.
    Men calling up putting on womens voices trying to get their call info was fun too.

    We've come across this recently, and with the whole gender fluid thing, we've been advised to validate the call regardless of what the person sounds like, and if all information is correct, you work away. People need to be setting passwords for these things nowadays!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,576 ✭✭✭Paddy Cow


    That's the thing about customer service - the stories can be astounding, absolute psycho stuff... but they're mostly normal nice people; your friends and family, who would be appalled by bullying and harassment otherwise but for some reason there is this blind spot when it comes to dealing with customer service agents, and it's somehow fair game to unleash one's inner demon on them.
    You're spot on there.
    You'd have to work in customer service to appreciate it fully I think.
    It's not just customer service. It's any minimum wage customer facing job. People treat you like dirt and companies let them as "the customer is always right" :rolleyes:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,301 ✭✭✭John Hutton


    Four years in two call centres in Kilkenny. Still dream about murdering a particular prick of a TL . I was very good at my job which meant I got all the ****, and management still is basically to break you down and make you feel incompetent and constantly watched - almost worked on me but you see people there years who are so beat down by the job and management that they think they are stupid and lucky to have the job, when in reality they can do far better.

    Honestly say I would rather sit on the dole than be in a call centre again. It was such a novelty not to be timed when having a dump when I got a normal job. Once got a lecture for taking an additional 30 seconds over the allotted 10 mins a day.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,187 ✭✭✭bilbot79


    A lot of people do this. Why would they stay in it though?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,046 ✭✭✭martinedwards


    I love it!

    I was in UK Passports for 18 months and one of the big UK banks now for coming up on 4 years.

    as to Call centres having a revolving door employment policy..... well, some people don't stay long, but in my team of 12 I'm the newest at 3 yrs 8 months.....

    several of my colleagues are over 15 yrs in the same place.



    yes, many customers are idiots.

    but there are a tiny number of abusive fools "you stole my money" "no we charged you for using your overdraft" there is a great feeling when you help someone who genuinely needs support.

    I'm in online support now, which gives us access to the customer's online log. not passwords or anything, but we can say "that payment that you say you didn't make...... at 2:23 am on thursday 24th...... you used the same phone that you're speaking to me on now to log into the app, set up the new recipient, get the automated verification call to this same number, then you went back in and sent the payment. and yes, we CAN see the reference that you put on it."

    seriously takes the wind out of their sails!

    as to references on payments?

    the guy organising the work trip to the Panto.... "behind you" "Oh no he isn't" etc.....
    "sexual favours" is common.....
    "dildos and anal beads" I've seen more than once.....

    One guy was paying back a loan to his Mother in law and genuinely didn't know that the MASSIVELY abusive reference would appear on the poor dear's statement.....

    My back is screwed so I need a sit down job, so I had to pack in teaching, but I've worked in restaurants and retail, and I love it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,594 ✭✭✭DoozerT6


    I haven't worked in customer service per se, but I do deal with the public on a front-line level and all I can say is people are fcuking stupid.

    That is all.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,187 ✭✭✭bilbot79


    In fairness you tend to walk out the door at 5:30 which other lines of work don't always offer


  • Posts: 2,812 ✭✭✭ [Deleted User]


    "Why cant I see my bank account on my banking 365?

    Whats your account number?

    12245443

    Ok thats an ulster bank account

    So?

    This is Bank of Ireland

    So? You should have all my accounts"

    Worked in a bank for 6 years, both phones and customer facing....stuff of nightmares


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,932 ✭✭✭The J Stands for Jay


    "Hi, is that director enquiries? I need the number for a hotel that hasn't been built yet."


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,932 ✭✭✭The J Stands for Jay


    McGaggs wrote: »
    "Hi, is that director enquiries? I need the number for a hotel that hasn't been built yet."

    The amount of people who ask you what page of the phone book a number is on when you get it for them...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 315 ✭✭Nitrogan


    Life Hack Rule #1: Be nice to people

    Life Hack Rule #2: Be nice even if they're a ****.

    Rule 2 is a lot easier said than done but it's worth it if you can.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,932 ✭✭✭The J Stands for Jay


    I know someone who worked in a bank and the customer complained to them that they said their balance as if it wasn't a big amount of money. Maybe they didn't sound awed enough. They probably were just depressed at needing to work for 3 years, pay no tax and spend nothing to get a similar bank balance


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,482 ✭✭✭Gimme A Pound


    bilbot79 wrote: »
    A lot of people do this. Why would they stay in it though?
    They don't. :D

    It's true you don't have to take your work home with you but you may not finish at 5.30, you may finish at 11pm! (In fairness though, people know this when they sign up). Despite this though, if the abuse is constant it would grind people down.

    That's so funny about those phoning one bank and expecting it to have the details in another bank. Sometimes the brain-dead stupidity is worse than the abuse.

    No way would I be nice to someone if they're being a **** - people I know who attempt that approach just get an even worse time. I find the key is to be extremely polite and informative... but not nice! :D


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