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Scott Cover Says, on 6-24-2008 at 14:11:38     

I work extremely hard with my clients to teach them to use the customer service portal in Autotask for all but “site down - need assistance NOW” scenarios. Those other scenarios I have them trained to call.

I make it very clear to everyone that I only guarantee that I will check my mail before I start the day, somewhere around lunch and after work.

I also use a product a friend developed call Awayfind (www.awayfind.com) to help set the expectation of my inbox usage, so if people send me an e-mail and have a find me now problem they’ll get help quickly.

Truthfully, I keep an eye on my inbox most of the day and will probably hit back on something if it is important, but I really do try and hold off till the end of the day if at all possible.

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nvossburg Says, on 6-24-2008 at 17:09:05     

Josh,

We have real problems with email as well… We’re trying to move more of our day to day updates and department interaction to a company intranet but it takes practice and enforcing.

It seems like we’re always chasing our tail on productivity issues. Management tries to address productivity loses through new tools and processes but this eliminates one inefficiency and creates another.

Do you think we’d be better off moving the responsibility to the employee through performance based compensation or rewarding productivity efficiencies?

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Josh Says, on 6-26-2008 at 04:55:30     

The away find software looks interesting. I will have to try it out, although i believe it is addressing the issue of traveling and availability more so than productivity for employees that are in the office at their desks all day (our techs do all their work remotely). It does look like it would make cleaning out your inbox easier but I wonder how much better it would work than outlook categories.

Nvossburg, I think you are on the right track with putting productivity in the employees hands rather than enforcing it from the top down. We have begun empowering our people to create challenges for their individual teams as a way to drive core metrics. We let them come up with the challenge, decide the reward and implement the game. An example of this would be our recent focus on availability. The goal was to drive hold times down - the team came up with the idea of a ‘Quick Draw Challenge’ each day they would measure how many calls a rep picked up within two ring and the rep at the end of the week with the most quick pickups was rewarded with a half day of work on Friday.
This idea was created by the people we were trying to drive more efficiency from, had very successful results, and drove hold times lower than we would have thought possible as a management team. (we do have balancing metrics such as customer satisfaction to make sure our focus does not send our service in a bad direction).

Anyway, let me know how the intranet / wiki works for your group as we are thinking about similar initiatives.

JC

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Scott Cover Says, on 6-26-2008 at 14:05:35     

Josh -

Being as I usually keep an eye on my inbox no matter what I’m doing, it’s more of a way to help set expectations for people e-mailing me, as well as reminding them to submit a ticket or call if it’s an emergency.

Also, it gives them a solution path in case I actually am not available due to a meeting or in depth troubleshooting with another client.

I started using CentralDesktop for Customer Wiki information as well as document storage. Been a wonderful boon to my productivity since I’ve begun using it, and also gives the customer some insight into information about their network.

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