Rapid expansion challenges internal service functions to scale as quickly as demand requires. Insight Experience worked with a professional services firm to develop a business simulation to use with a large population of employees primarily responsible for serving an internal customer base. This program was developed to be a practical, applicable, and memorable customer service training experience.
A global professional services firm rapidly expanded to acquire new products, talent, and systems. These changes challenged internal functions to keep pace with service requests. The firm hired Insight Experience to design and deliver a leadership development program to highlight service expectations, train key internal service employees on the elements of effective customer service, and draw logical connections between internal and external customer service.
Insight Experience designed a half-day learning program, the Customer Service Mindset program, that features a two-round business simulation and is delivered virtually by a global facilitation team. Each round of the business simulation maps to one of two key customer service models, one that features learning content for daily customer interactions and the other for ongoing iterative improvement of service through systems and processes. Throughout the simulation experience, teams work together to make collaborative decisions about relatable but complex customer service issues, such as a request from a senior leader that conflicts with the team’s priority road map. Teams that are able to balance their interactions across the four Building Blocks of Excellent Customer Service as well as simplify and solve ongoing service processes achieve the best business outcomes.
In the Customer Service Mindset program, participants develop and improve skills to:
The program is designed to introduce learners to the Building Blocks of Excellent Customer Service before challenging them to consider ways to deliver enhanced customer service on an enterprise level. The issues faced by learners in the simulation mirror actual service situations faced historically by individuals in the firm.
A combination of small teams, cross-functional triads, and large-group discussions help learners better understand the business, diverse perspectives, and potential solutions to service concerns.
Virtual delivery of this program enables participants from different geographies and functional departments to learn together. This accommodates multiple time zones and develops individual insight into the types of service requests fielded in other functions of the business.
This half-day program includes two rounds of simulation decision-making, comparative debriefs, and learning discussions.
Sample Agenda:During the final debrief, facilitated discussion helps the learners connect customer service responses and business outcomes. After the conclusion of the program, participants receive a report that provides feedback for the decisions they made in the simulation, modeled business outcomes for their choices, and content handouts highlighting the models presented.
The Customer Service Mindset program features content on:
Excellent Customer Service Cycle
Before the program, participants read a case study of various situations encountered by an employee of a fictional professional services firm called BrightLights Services (BLS). Participants then respond to survey questions about which characters provided the best and worst service. Pre-program questions also provide facilitators with insights about what is happening in the departments of the various learners; this enriches conversation during the program.
During the business simulation, functionally diverse participants work together in teams to solve customer service requests fielded by employees of BLS. Thinking strategically to apply the Customer Service Models presented and relying on their real-life experience, teams are responsible for selecting appropriate responses to critical interactions and requests from other BLS employees (often functional leaders). Each interaction features a unique function, leader, and request, providing learners with diverse challenges and exposing them to many types of realistic customer service situations.
Since its launch in mid-2023, more than 6,500 participants from across the globe have completed the Customer Service Mindset program. In the final large-group debrief conversation of the day, participants share one action they plan to carry forward in response to their learning. Some responses received thus far are:
Here is what some participants have said about the program: