nordwood-themes / unsplashCollections calls often involve a distraught customer who can’t consistently pay and an agent asking for the past due amount anyway. Learn to use both the art and science of navigating this landscape.
While navigating a difficult collections call isn’t specifically an art or a science, one could argue that it does require a little bit of both disciplines. This blog highlights how collections operations can enable agents to become expert navigators of difficult collections calls.
The Art of Communicating with Empathy: Natural to Some, but It Can Also be Taught
Not everyone has a natural ability to effectively interact with distraught customers. It requires a perfect blend of level-headedness, empathetic communication and job knowledge. Your seasoned collectors may already have these skills, but newer agents are still a blank canvas. Newer agents likely far outnumber the seasoned vets, especially because on average, debt collectors stay in their jobs for 1-2 years, with total employment in the industry has decreased 19%.
Building a training program that focuses on empathy will develop your collectors’ ability to listen. Consequently, an increased ability to listen promotes a customer’s feeling of being heard. When a customer feels heard, the likelihood of an escalated or difficult collections interaction significantly decreases.
Increase the empathy level of your collectors by taking three steps that drive results:
- Focus on success profiles and behaviors. This ensures that collectors know the required behaviors to drive success in their role.
- Develop and deploy a consistent call model. This way, collectors follow a consistent call flow with a clear understanding of how to recognize triggers and dig deeper for root cause.
- Practice and role play with collectors regularly. This promotes desired behaviors to use when speaking to customers.
Documented Customer Journeys Put Collectors in the Customer’s Shoes
There is an art to customer journeys. Though some may dismiss journeys as hypothetical scenarios that do not paint an accurate picture of reality. This can be a true statement if they are generalized. However, if meticulously created to align with actual/known customer behaviors, customer journeys can become a critical component of collector development.
Viewing a difficult situation from a customer’s perspective is not always top of mind for collectors. Being exposed to difficult scenarios before they happen on a call can be a game changer. Incorporating customer journeys into regular feedback routines acts as reinforcement for collectors. Also, it serves as a mechanism for them to become familiar with unique situations.
We strongly recommend documenting customer journeys. While tangible artifacts are the goal; the process of documenting the journeys may also result in identification of process gaps. These process gaps could contribute to customer dissatisfaction. The more opportunities there are for dissatisfaction, the more opportunities that exist for difficult conversations to occur.
Science: A Robust Hardship Program Ensures No One Is Left Out
The mechanics of a collections call involving a customer hardship can be complex and difficult. The customer will likely be hesitant to divulge details, and to obtain them, the collector must precisely convey the proper balance of empathy and tact. A limited suite of hardship programs to offer the customer automatically puts the collector at a disadvantage; and the call can instantly turn into a difficult conversation.
RELATED CONTENT: Coming to the rescue during tough financial hardships
A vigorous hardship program includes options for all product types. Options should include varying degrees of short- and long-term solutions and should include some form of a calculated metric in the decision (e.g., debt or expense to income ratio) where applicable.
We recommend having many hardship options in place. But equally important are the decisions to weigh those options to determine which is appropriate. This decision must be objective. A standard set of questions and/or required documentation will prevent any claims of preferential treatment; which could ultimately lead to UDAAP scrutiny. If possible, drive the decision for eligibility and program applicability systematically to eliminate all subjectivity from the decision.
Self-Service and Digital Channels Stop Difficult Collections Calls Before They Start—Focus on the Science of Exclusionary Criteria
If a call never occurs, then it has no chance of becoming difficult or escalated. Keep customers engaged with available self-service or digital channels. Today more than ever, customers will engage digitally; so make this a high priority if not already established. If given the opportunity, most customers will feel enabled and have a positive reaction to self-service options.
CLIENT SUCCESS: Accelerated digital collections implementation
Digital solutions are easy for current customers, but past due customers can be tricky. There are certain scenarios where you want a customer to talk to a collector. Consider your exclusionary criteria from digital and self-service channels carefully. Avoid unjustifiable exclusions that set roadblocks for customers. If engaging via outbound digital channels, target the customer’s preferred contact channel to drive engagement even higher.
Digital or self-service solutions that offer a robust selection of payment options and hardship programs will most likely prevent future difficult conversations from occurring.