The Problem With Technology At The Point Of Sale In Financial Services plus
articles and information on Sales Background There's a conundrum that currently
exists between the customer and the seller in financial services. The customer
buys and the seller sells. The customer is focused on their wants as much as
needs
Michael Kors Outlet ,
and whilst the seller often says they are focused on the customer's needs, all
too often the focus is on products and profit. Indeed a wider examination of the
decline in customer service might also do well to address the issue of
remuneration systems which reward sales but not customer service. This latter
practice merely confirms the customer's suspicion that the seller has more to
gain from any advice or transaction than the buyer. Included in the mix is
regulation. Regulation was meant to assist and protect the consumer.
Instead
Michael Kors Outlet
UK , we have witnessed a massive exodus from providing advice
whilst pliance costs rocket skywards. The continuation of bad press on sales
practices; fines of major firms; and the inability of the industry to speak with
one voice leads many to believe that protection for the consumer is a by-product
not an aim. In addition the customer is now faced with an overloading of the
sales or customer relationship process with paper, which include endless
questions to plete even the simplest transaction and massive fact finds covering
every conceivable piece of information imaginable. Rather than act as a fort to
customers these processes have merely heightened their suspicions. Yet insofar
as technology is concerned
Michael Kors Outlet Online Sale
UK , whilst the customer trusts the technology, they do not trust
the person operating the technology. Point of Sale systems In this scenario it
is hardly surprising that Point of Sale systems continually fail to pay back the
investment. In most cases it's not that the system doesn't work
Michael
Kors Value Spree UK , it's just that working the system requires
different skill-sets and a realisation that the customer is wary of being asked
questions. These are behavioural issues and yet whilst Point of Sale systems by
design are based upon a customer's past buying behaviours and potential future
buying propensity they tend to lack an appreciation of: - a) The reluctance of
the seller to use technology at the point of sale b) The physical environment in
which customer interactions take place c) The amount of time it takes to learn
to operate new technology with confidence in front of a customer Reluctance of
sellers to use technology at the point of sale Many experienced and qualified
advisers now rely heavily on technology. This explosion of the use of technology
has led all software and hardware suppliers and IT departments to believe that
the future is bright, the future is technology. In the rush to design and
implement systems however
Michael
Kors Value Spree Sale , some basics have been overlooked: a)
Sellers are as opposed to sales processes as are customers b) Introducing
technology at the point of sale involves a significant change of behaviour on
the part of the seller c) Sellers experience great difficultly in changing their
behaviour d) Most sellers in the type of financial services organisations that
can afford to buy Point of Sale systems are junior front-line staff with the
consequence that - their feedback on the reality of using these systems in front
of customers is often ignored - where they provide feedback it is often guarded
- pilot launches are always used with 'champions' who provide a minute insight
into the difficulties which will be faced when launching the system to a wider
audience. In addition many of the results of pilots are widely exaggerated in
order to bolster the confidence of those who have already embarked upon
considerable expenditure and of those who will continue to be used as champions
e) The ability of sellers to convince managers that the system is being used
when it is not (this in itself is one of the main reasons for Point of Sale
systems not realising any return on investment) f) The ability of sellers to
convince managers that customers do not like the new system whereas the opposite
is almost always the case. What customers do not like is the behaviour they
experience from the seller. Clearly if the seller is reluctant to use the system
they will adopt a less than enthusiastic set of behaviours in front of the
customer g) The ability of sellers to convince managers that changes should be
made to the system in order to make the customer feel more fortable The physical
environment Most Point of Sale systems are information hungry and therefore the
programme requires the seller to either input or to read a significant amount of
data. This results in the seller and customer seating positions being such that
almost always exclude the customer from seeing what is going on. The customer
bees wary. The seller senses the disfort of the seller and reacts aordingly. The
customer senses the disfort of the seller ? and so the cycle continues. Time to
learn In all cases, the time estimated and used to teach sellers the new system
is inadequate. By the time sellers return to the workplace most will have
forgotten 90% of the details of the system. This then requires them to teach
themselves how the system works during lulls in normal customer interactions.
This fragmentation of learning takes place without reinforcement or feedback and
certainly without the practice of using the system in front of a customer.
Within a very short time-scale sellers have taught themselves to use the system
without the customer being present. When the opportunity then presents itself to
use the system live with a customer the leap from theory to practice is too
daunting and therefore delayed until the seller feels more confident. This
simply never happens.