NETTING IT OUT
Sometimes customers need your help to perform ecommerce activities. They’d
like to escalate from self-service to assisted-service in order to complete
their work. We call that help assisted-service for ecommerce.
IBM Sales Center for WebSphere Commerce is IBM’s assisted-service for
ecommerce offering. Sales Center was introduced with IBM WebSphere Commerce
V6.0 in May 2006 and is available as a separately orderable add-on. To date,
IBM claims that approximately two dozen customers have purchased Sales Center.
On the PSGroup Report Card for Assisted-Service for Ecommerce, IBM Sales Center
for WebSphere Commerce exceeds requirements for operational functionality,
analytic functionality, and company viability. It needs improvement in channel
support.
We recommend IBM Sales Center to every organization that has implemented WebSphere
Commerce as the mechanism for delivering assisted-service for ecommerce and
a cross-channel customer experience for ecommerce. For those organizations
in the process of selecting an ecommerce platform, IBM Sales Center makes
IBM WebSphere Commerce a much more attractive choice.
ASSISTED-SERVICE FOR ECOMMERCE
Helping Your Customers Explore, Select, and Purchase Your Products and Services
In our customer service research and consulting practice, we talk about cross-channel,
cross-lifecycle customer service. By cross-lifecycle, we mean that customers
want and need your help at every phase of their lifecycles, from their initial
contact with you through their retirement. By cross-channel, we’ve
meant that customers want your help on every channel through which they interact
with you—the Web and email for self-service, your contact center, stores,
and your field service force for assisted-service.
Ecommerce systems use the Web self-service channel to let customers perform
activities within the "explore, select, purchase, and maintain" lifecycle
phases. They’re your self-service Web marketing and sales application.
Most commonly, ecommerce systems let customers learn about your products, compare
them, configure them, price them, buy them, and even return them. Ecommerce
systems also have account management capabilities. Your customers create
ecommerce accounts in order to register their payment methods, shipping methods,
and name and address in order to pay for and receive your products.
In Table A, we list these activities within each lifecycle phase in a little
more detail.
Customer Ecommerce Activities
(Please download the formatted PDF to view
the table at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1571/pr02-21-08cc.)
Table A. Typical ecommerce activities that customers perform are listed in
this table within their lifecycle phase.
Customers Need Assisted-Service for Ecommerce
Sometimes, customers need assisted-service to perform these activities. For
example, your ecommerce system may be missing important services or content
around the products in which they’re interested such as the detailed
description and configurator for a brand-new bundle. Or you don’t provide
content about replacements and compatibility for products that you’re
about to discontinue. Or you don’t let them change their username online.
At other times, customers need assisted-service because they have difficulty
using your ecommerce facilities to perform these activities. For example,
they can’t find they product they want to buy by using their terminology
in your ecommerce search service. Or your product descriptions don’t
include the information critical to their selection approach like laundering
instructions. Or they’re confused by the wording of your “two
for” promotion. Or your account registration form has a field that
they don’t understand.
At still other times, customers need assisted-service because they can’t
or won’t use the Web to do business with you. Telephone assisted-service
with your agents is their preferred or only available channel.
Multi-Channel Ecommerce Applications
The best approach to assisted-service for ecommerce is multi-channel ecommerce
applications that support Web self-service and Web chat and contact center
assisted-service. Multi-channel ecommerce applications should provide role-based
access to the data and services that agents need in order to perform the
activities for which customers need assisted-service. For example, the customer
service agent role should provide the service that lets agents view and update
the product, quantity, price, payment, or shipping of any item of any
customer’s order. It should also provide a service that lets agents
view and offer any of the promotions that you’ve created for a particular
product. In addition, multi-channel ecommerce provides role-based access
to additional assisted-service capabilities such as changing prices, authorizing
returns, and making accommodations.
Extending ecommerce to multiple channels can have bottom-line impact, reducing
costs and increasing revenue and making assisted-service for ecommerce a
critical component of your customer experience.
Multi-Channel Ecommerce Applications Have Recently Become Available
Recently, ecommerce suppliers have recognized requirements for multi-channel
ecommerce. They’ve expanded the channel support and the customer service
functionality of their offerings to implement the assisted-service for ecommerce
that we’ve just described. They offer assisted-service “in the
box” as an add-on feature or via integration with an external assisted-service
product.
•
If your ecommerce supplier offers assisted-service capabilities, then you should
seriously consider their implementation in your ecommerce system.
•
If you are evaluating new or replacement ecommerce applications, then support
for multi-channel ecommerce should be a critical evaluation and selection factor.
We’ve extended our framework for evaluating ecommerce products to help
you make your selection and implementation decisions. The framework is presented
and discussed in the next section of this report.
EVALUATING ASSISTED-SERVICE FOR ECOMMERCE PRODUCTS AND SERVICES
We’ve adapted and combined our frameworks for ecommerce and for cross-channel,
cross-lifecycle customer service to create a framework for assisted-service
for ecommerce. The top-level criteria of this evaluation framework are listed
and described below. The top-level criteria and sub-criteria are shown graphically
in Illustration 1.
•
ROLES AND OPERATIONAL FUNCTIONALITY. Operational functionality makes up the
ecommerce activities that your customer service agents can perform on behalf
of your customers. In our evaluation of operational functionality for assisted-service
for ecommerce systems, we assess the lifecycle activities a product supports
and the customer roles that can perform those activities.
•
CHANNEL SUPPORT. Assisted-service can be delivered across a range of channels.
While telephone communication via the contact center is the obvious assisted-service
channel, other channels like Web chat are also important. For channel support,
we examine which channels a product supports.
•
ANALYTIC FUNCTIONALITY. You need to be able to measure, analyze, and refine
the assisted-service that your agents deliver. Within analytic functionality,
we examine and evaluate the collection and presentation of agent behavior and
performance information.
•
ARCHITECTURE. In architecture, we examine the implementation of an assisted-service
for ecommerce product in order to evaluate its integrated with your existing
ecommerce and customer service systems.
•
PRODUCT VIABILITY. This evaluation criterion allows us to
assess the business and risk in implementing an assisted-service for ecommerce
product.
•
COMPANY VIABILITY. Where product viability examines product-oriented risk factors,
company viability examines risk factors with the product’s supplier.
We will use this framework to evaluate IBM Sales Center for WebSphere Commerce.
PSGroup Evaluation Framework for Assisted-Service for Ecommerce

©
2008 Patricia Seybold Group, Inc.
Illustration 1. This illustration shows the evaluation criteria and sub-criteria
of the PSGroup evaluation frame-work for assisted-service for ecommerce.
IBM SALES CENTER FOR WEBSPHERE COMMERCE
IBM Sales Center for WebSphere Commerce is IBM’s assisted-service for
ecommerce offering. “Sales Center” is a separately orderable add-on
feature of WebSphere Commerce Professional and Enterprise Editions. It was
introduced with WebSphere Commerce V6.0 in July 2006. Its next version will
be introduced with WebSphere Commerce 7.0 sometime in 2009.
To date, IBM claims that about two dozen organizations have purchased Sales
Center. Most are currently in the deployment process. The organizations are
in a range of industry segments and cover a wide range of organization sizes.
Sales Center deploys on an Eclipse-based, rich client platform and uses a messaging
approach to access the same WebSphere Commerce data that customers have access
to. While agents can also perform the same ecommerce activities that customers
perform, the distinguishing feature of Sales Center is the wide range of
assisted-service activities that agents can access and perform through its
messaging interface. Activities around quote, orders, returns, and customer
accounts are very rich. They’re key differentiators and the strength
of the offering.