Search our articles
Search

Featured articles

Conversational Commerce Strategy

AI in CX Webinar Recap: Building a Conversational Commerce Strategy that Converts

By Gabrielle Policella
0 min read . By Gabrielle Policella

TL;DR:

  • Implement quickly and optimize continuously. Cornbread's rollout was three phases: audit knowledge base, launch, then refine. Stacy conducts biweekly audits and provides daily AI feedback to ensure responses are accurate and on-brand.
  • Simplify your knowledge base language. Before BFCM, Stacy rephrased all guidance documentation to be concise and straightforward so Shopping Assistant could deliver information quickly without confusion.
  • Use proactive suggested questions. Most of Cornbread's Shopping Assistant engagement comes from Suggested Product Questions that anticipate customer needs before they even ask.
  • Treat AI as another team member. Make sure the tone and language AI uses match what human agents would say to maintain consistent customer relationships.
  • Free up agents for high-value work. With AI handling straightforward inquiries, Cornbread's CX team expanded into social media support, launched a retail pop-up shop, and has more time for relationship-building phone calls.

Customer education has become a critical factor in converting browsers into buyers. For wellness brands like Cornbread Hemp, where customers need to understand ingredients, dosages, and benefits before making a purchase, education has a direct impact on sales. The challenge is scaling personalized education when support teams are stretched thin, especially during peak sales periods.

Katherine Goodman, Senior Director of Customer Experience, and Stacy Williams, Senior Customer Experience Manager, explain how implementing Gorgias's AI Shopping Assistant transformed their customer education strategy into a conversion powerhouse. 

In our second AI in CX episode, we dive into how Cornbread achieved a 30% conversion rate during BFCM, saving their CX team over four days of manual work.

Top learnings from Cornbread's conversational commerce strategy

1. Customer education drives conversions in wellness

Before diving into tactics, understanding why education matters in the wellness space helps contextualize this approach.

Katherine, Senior Director of Customer Experience at Cornbread Hemp, explains:

"Wellness is a very saturated market right now. Getting to the nitty-gritty and getting to the bottom of what our product actually does for people, making sure they're educated on the differences between products to feel comfortable with what they're putting in their body."

The most common pre-purchase questions Cornbread receives center around three areas: ingredients, dosages, and specific benefits. Customers want to know which product will help with their particular symptoms. They need reassurance that they're making the right choice.

What makes this challenging: These questions require nuanced, personalized responses that consider the customer's specific needs and concerns. Traditionally, this meant every customer had to speak with a human agent, creating a bottleneck that slowed conversions and overwhelmed support teams during peak periods.

2. Shopping Assistant provides education that never sleeps

Stacy, Senior Customer Experience Manager at Cornbread, identified the game-changing impact of Shopping Assistant:

"It's had a major impact, especially during non-operating hours. Shopping Assistant is able to answer questions when our CX agents aren't available, so it continues the customer order process."

A customer lands on your site at 11 PM, has questions about dosage or ingredients, and instead of abandoning their cart or waiting until morning for a response, they get immediate, accurate answers that move them toward purchase.

The real impact happens in how the tool anticipates customer needs. Cornbread uses suggested product questions that pop up as customers browse product pages. Stacy notes:

"Most of our Shopping Assistant engagement comes from those suggested product features. It almost anticipates what the customer is asking or needing to know."

Actionable takeaway: Don't wait for customers to ask questions. Surface the most common concerns proactively. When you anticipate hesitation and address it immediately, you remove friction from the buying journey.

3. Implementation follows a clear three-phase approach

One of the biggest myths about AI is that implementation is complicated. Stacy explains how Cornbread’s rollout was a straightforward three-step process: audit your knowledge base, flip the switch, then optimize.

"It was literally the flip of a switch and just making sure that our data and information in Gorgias was up to date and accurate." 

Here's Cornbread’s three-phase approach:

  1. Preparation. Before launching, Cornbread conducted a comprehensive audit of their knowledge base to ensure accuracy and completeness. This groundwork is critical because your AI is only as good as the information it has access to.
  2. Launch and training. After going live, the team met weekly with their Gorgias representative for three to four weeks. They analyzed engagements, reviewed tickets, and provided extensive AI feedback to teach Shopping Assistant which responses were appropriate and how to pull from the knowledge base effectively.
  3. Ongoing optimization. Now, Stacy conducts audits biweekly and continuously updates the knowledge base with new products, promotions, and internal changes. She also provides daily AI feedback, ensuring responses stay accurate and on-brand.

Actionable takeaway: Block out time for that initial knowledge base audit. Then commit to regular check-ins because your business evolves, and your AI should evolve with it.

Read more: AI in CX Webinar Recap: Turning AI Implementation into Team Alignment

4. Simple, concise language converts better

Here's something most brands miss: the way you write your knowledge base articles directly impacts conversion rates.

Before BFCM, Stacy reviewed all of Cornbread's Guidance and rephrased the language to make it easier for AI Agent to understand. 

"The language in the Guidance had to be simple, concise, very straightforward so that Shopping Assistant could deliver that information without being confused or getting too complicated," Stacy explains. When your AI can quickly parse and deliver information, customers get faster, more accurate answers. And faster answers mean more conversions.

Katherine adds another crucial element: tone consistency.

"We treat AI as another team member. Making sure that the tone and the language that AI used were very similar to the tone and the language that our human agents use was crucial in creating and maintaining a customer relationship."

As a result, customers often don't realize they're talking to AI. Some even leave reviews saying they loved chatting with "Ally" (Cornbread's AI agent name), not realizing Ally isn't human.

Actionable takeaway: Review your knowledge base with fresh eyes. Can you simplify without losing meaning? Does it sound like your brand? Would a customer be satisfied with this interaction? If not, time for a rewrite.

Read more: How to Write Guidance with the “When, If, Then” Framework

5. Black Friday results proved the strategy works under pressure

The real test of any CX strategy is how it performs under pressure. For Cornbread, Black Friday Cyber Monday 2025 proved that their conversational commerce strategy wasn't just working, it was thriving.

Over the peak season, Cornbread saw: 

  • Shopping Assistant conversion rate jumped from a 20% baseline to 30% during BFCM
  • First response time dropped from over two minutes in 2024 to just 21 seconds in 2025
  • Attributed revenue grew by 75%
  • Tickets doubled, but AI handled 400% more tickets compared to the previous year
  • CSAT scores stayed exactly in line with the previous year, despite the massive volume increase

Katherine breaks down what made the difference:

"Shopping Assistant popping up, answering those questions with the correct promo information helps customers get from point A to point B before the deal ends."

During high-stakes sales events, customers are in a hurry. They're comparing options, checking out competitors, and making quick decisions. If you can't answer their questions immediately, they're gone. Shopping Assistant kept customers engaged and moving toward purchase, even when human agents were swamped.

Actionable takeaway: Peak periods require a fail-safe CX strategy. The brands that win are the ones that prepare their AI tools in advance.

6. Strategic work replaces reactive tasks

One of the most transformative impacts of conversational commerce goes beyond conversion rates. What your team can do with their newfound bandwidth matters just as much.

With AI handling straightforward inquiries, Cornbread's CX team has evolved into a strategic problem-solving team. They've expanded into social media support, provided real-time service during a retail pop-up, and have time for the high-value interactions that actually build customer relationships.

Katherine describes phone calls as their highest value touchpoint, where agents can build genuine relationships with customers. “We have an older demographic, especially with CBD. We received a lot of customer calls requesting orders and asking questions. And sometimes we end up just yapping,” Katherine shares. “I was yapping with a customer last week, and we'd been on the call for about 15 minutes. This really helps build those long-term relationships that keep customers coming back."

That's the kind of experience that builds loyalty, and becomes possible only when your team isn't stuck answering repetitive tickets.

Stacy adds that agents now focus on "higher-level tickets or customer issues that they need to resolve. AI handles straightforward things, and our agents now really are more engaged in more complicated, higher-level resolutions."

Actionable takeaway: Stop thinking about AI only as a cost-cutting tool and start seeing it as an impact multiplier. The goal is to free your team to work on conversations that actually move the needle on customer lifetime value.

7. Continuous optimization for January and beyond

Cornbread isn't resting on their BFCM success. They're already optimizing for January, traditionally the biggest month for wellness brands as customers commit to New Year's resolutions.

Their focus areas include optimizing their product quiz to provide better data to both AI and human agents, educating customers on realistic expectations with CBD use, and using Shopping Assistant to spotlight new products launching in Q1.

Build your conversational commerce strategy now

The brands winning at conversational commerce aren't the ones with the biggest budgets or the largest teams. They're the ones who understand that customer education drives conversions, and they've built systems to deliver that education at scale.

Cornbread Hemp's success comes down to three core principles: investing time upfront to train AI properly, maintaining consistent optimization, and treating AI as a team member that deserves the same attention to tone and quality as human agents.

As Katherine puts it:

"The more time that you put into training and optimizing AI, the less time you're going to have to babysit it later. Then, it's actually going to give your customers that really amazing experience."

Watch the replay of the whole conversation with Katherine and Stacy to learn how Gorgias’s Shopping Assistant helps them turn browsers into buyers. 

{{lead-magnet-1}}

min read.
Make AI Sound More Human

Make AI Sound More Human: How to Avoid Robotic Replies in Customer Support

Learn how small tweaks can make AI sound human and build trust in customer support.
By Gorgias Team
0 min read . By Gorgias Team

TL;DR:

  • Train your AI on your brand voice. A clear voice guide that covers tone, style, and formality helps your AI sound more natural and aligned with your brand.
  • Add short delays before AI responds. A one- or two-second pause can make AI responses seem more thoughtful.
  • Avoid generic phrases. Swap out formal responses for on-brand language that sounds like a real person on your team.
  • Mention customer context in replies. Referencing order history or previous conversations makes AI sound more human and builds trust.
  • Balance automation with human support. Let customers know when they are speaking to AI and escalate to a human when needed to avoid frustration.

Your AI sounds like a robot, and your customers can tell.

Sure, the answer is right, but something feels off. The tone of voice is stiff. The phrases are predictable and generic. At most, it sounds copy-pasted. This may not be a big deal from your side of support. In reality, it’s costing you more than you think.

Recent data shows that 45% of U.S. adults find customer service chatbots unfavorable, up from 43% in 2022. As awareness of chatbots has increased, so have negative opinions of them. Only 19% of people say chatbots are helpful or beneficial in addressing their queries. The gap isn't just about capability. It's about trust. When AI sounds impersonal, customers disengage or leave frustrated.

Luckily, you don't need to choose between automation and the human touch. 

In this guide, we'll show you six practical ways to train your AI to sound natural, build trust, and deliver the kind of support your customers actually like.

1. Train your AI on your brand voice

The fastest way to make your AI sound more human is to teach it to sound like you. AI is only as good as the input you give it, so the more detailed your brand voice training, the more natural and on-brand your responses will be.

Start by building a brand voice guide. It doesn't need to be complicated, but it should clearly define how your brand communicates with customers. At minimum, include:

  • Tone: Is your brand warm and empathetic? Confident and cheeky? Straightforward and helpful?
  • Style: How does your brand write? What is your personality? Short or long sentences, contractions or not, punctuation choices, and overall rhythm.
  • Formality: Do you use slang? Emojis? Address customers as “you,” “y’all,” or something else?
  • Friendliness: How personable should your AI sound? Is it playful, or should responses stay neutral and professional?

Think of your AI as a character. Samantha Gagliardi, Associate Director of Customer Experience at Rhoback, described their approach as building an AI persona:

"I kind of treat it like breaking down an actor. I used to sing and perform for a living — how would I break down the character of Rhoback? How does Rhoback speak? What age are they? What makes the most sense?" 

Next step

✅ Create a brand voice guide with tone, style, formality, and example phrases.

2. Delay responses to mimic human behavior

Humans associate short pauses with thinking, so when your AI responds too quickly, it instantly feels unnatural.

Adding small delays helps your AI feel more like a real teammate.

Where to add response delays:

  • Before sharing info that would realistically take a moment to look up, e.g., order history
  • Before confirming an action like issuing a refund or applying a discount
  • Transitioning or escalating between steps or agents
  • Emotional messages, like customer complaints and product quality issues

Even a one- to two-second pause can make a big difference in a robotic or human-sounding AI.

Next step

✅ Add instructions in your AI’s knowledge base to include short response delays during key moments.

3. Avoid generic phrasing and canned language

Generic phrases make your AI sound like... well, AI. Customers can spot a copy-pasted response immediately — especially when it's overly formal.

That doesn't mean you need to be extremely casual. It means being true to your brand. Whether your voice is professional or conversational, the goal is the same: sound like a real person on your team.

Here's how to replace robotic phrasing with more brand-aligned responses:

Generic Phrase

More Natural Alternative

“We apologize for the inconvenience.”

“Sorry about that, we’re working on it now.” (friendly)
“Apologies for the trouble. We’re resolving this ASAP.” (professional)

“Your satisfaction is our top priority.”

“We want to make sure this works for you.” (friendly)
“Let us know how we can make this right.” (professional)

“Please be advised…”

“Just a quick heads up…” (friendly)
“For your reference…” (professional)

“Your request has been received.”

“Got it. Thanks for reaching out.” (friendly)
“We’ve received your request and will follow up shortly.” (professional)

“I will now review your request.”

“Let me take a quick look.” (friendly)
“I’m reviewing the details now.” (professional)

Next step

✅ Identify your five most common inquiries and give your AI a rewritten example response for each.

4. Use context to inform answers

One of the biggest tells that a response is AI-generated? It ignores what's already happened.

When your AI doesn't reference order history or past conversations, customers are forced to repeat themselves. Repetition can lead to frustration and can quickly turn a good customer experience into a bad one.

Great AI uses context to craft replies that feel personalized and genuinely helpful.

Here's what good context looks like in AI responses:

  • Order awareness: The AI knows the customer placed an order yesterday and provides an accurate delivery estimate without asking for the order number again.
  • Conversation continuity: If the customer reached out earlier that week from a different support channel, the AI references that interaction or picks up where things left off.
  • Customer type: First-time shopper? VIP? The AI adjusts tone and detail level accordingly.

Tools like Gorgias AI Agent automatically pull in customer and order data, so replies feel human and contextual without sacrificing speed.

Next step

✅ Add instructions that prompt your AI to reference order details and/or past conversations in its replies, so customers feel acknowledged.

5. Balance automation with human handoff

Customers just want help. They don't care whether it comes from a human or AI, as long as it's the right help. But if you try to trick them, it backfires fast. AI that pretend to be human often give customers the runaround, especially when the issue is complex or emotional.

A better approach is to be transparent. Solve what you can, and hand off anything else to an agent as needed.

When to disclose that the customer is talking to AI:

  • You can disclose it at the start of the conversation, or include a disclaimer in your chat widget, contact page, or help center to let customers know AI may assist
  • When the customer asks to speak to a human or expresses frustration
  • If the AI cannot fulfill the request and needs to escalate
  • Anytime the AI is making decisions, like issuing refunds or processing cancellations
  • When transitioning from AI to a human agent

For more on this topic, check out our article: Should You Tell Customers They're Talking to AI?

Next step

✅ Set clear rules for when your AI should escalate to a human and include handoff messaging that sets expectations and preserves context.

6. Add intentional imperfections to sound human

We're giving you permission to break the rules a little bit. The most human-sounding AI doesn't follow perfect grammar or structure. It reflects the messiness of real dialogue.

People don't speak in flawless sentences every time. We pause, rephrase, cut ourselves off, and throw in the occasional emoji or "uh." When AI has an unpredictable cadence, it feels more relatable and, in turn, more human.

What an imperfect AI could look like: 

  • Vary sentence length and structure. Some short and choppy, others long. 
  • Add subtle grammatical “mistakes” like sentence fragments or informal punctuation. 
  • Mix in casual phrasing or idioms where appropriate. 
  • Avoid mechanical-sounding transitions. 
  • Occasionally use filler phrases like "kinda," "just checking," or "I think."

These imperfections give your AI a more believable voice.

Next step

✅ Add instructions for your AI that permit variation in grammar, tone, and sentence structure to mimic real human speech.

Natural-sounding AI is easier to set up than you think

Human-sounding AI doesn’t require complex prompts or endless fine-tuning. With the right voice guidelines, small tone adjustments, and a few smart instructions, your AI can sound like a real part of your team.

Book a demo of Gorgias AI Agent and see for yourself.

{{lead-magnet-2}}

5 min read.

AI Chatbot Not Working? 7 Common Issues and How to Fix Them

If your AI chatbot is looping, escalating too fast, or giving wrong answers, here’s how to fix it.
By Christelle Agustin
0 min read . By Christelle Agustin

TL;DR:

  • If your AI is giving wrong answers or getting stuck, it’s likely due to missing or conflicting knowledge. Ensure your AI is trained with up-to-date documents and add guardrails to prevent off-topic replies.
  • Loops and escalations usually mean your escalation rules aren’t specific enough. Define when AI should step in, when it should hand over, and create “escape phrases” that trigger human takeover.
  • Customers still want human help. Always offer a path to a real person and make sure your agents get full conversation context when a handoff happens.
  • Inconsistent tone between AI and agents can make disjointed experiences. Align your brand voice across all support channels and choose tools that let you customize AI tone.
  • AI works best when its role is clearly defined. Decide which topics it can handle, train it using real conversations, and review performance regularly to fine-tune your setup.

You’ve chosen your AI tool and turned it on, hoping you won’t have to answer another WISMO question. But now you’re here. Why is AI going in circles? Why isn’t it answering simple questions? Why does it hand off every conversation to a human agent?

Conversational AI and chatbots thrive on proper training and data. Like any other team member on your customer support team, AI needs guidance. This includes knowledge documents, policies, brand voice guidelines, and escalation rules. So, if your AI has gone rogue, you may have skipped a step.

In this article, we’ll show you the top seven AI issues, why they happen, how to fix them, and the best practices for AI setup. 

{{lead-magnet-1}}

1. AI sends the wrong answer — with confidence

AI can only be as accurate as the information you feed it. If your AI is confidently giving customers incorrect answers, it likely has a gap in its knowledge or a lack of guardrails.

Insufficient knowledge can cause AI to pull context from similar topics to create an answer, while the lack of guardrails gives it the green light to compose an answer, correct or not.

How to fix it: 

  • Update the AI knowledge base. Create a new document that covers the affected topic in its entirety. To ensure AI follows every step, write your instructions in a when/if/then format.
  • Define topics that AI should not handle. As a preventive measure, specify the topics the AI should skip and hand over to a human agent. For example, add words such as ‘disappointed’, ‘bad’, and ‘unacceptable’ to your AI off-limit list, so that human agents automatically handle negative-intent tickets.

2. Customer is stuck in an AI loop 

This is one of the most frustrating customer service issues out there. Left unfixed, you risk losing 29% of customers

If your AI is putting customers through a never-ending loop, it’s time to review your knowledge docs and escalation rules.

How to fix it:

  • Double-check for conflicts in knowledge. You may have provided multiple resolutions for the same issue across different knowledge sources, such as uploaded documents, website pages, and in-app instructions.
  • Add “escape routes”. Choose a set of phrases that automatically escalate conversations from AI to your support team. For example, “it’s not working” or “I already tried that”.
  • Set a max number of failed interactions before escalation. Opt for a one-fail-and-escalate approach for every conversation, or specify the number of failed interactions for certain topics.

3. AI escalates too quickly, even for easy questions

It can be frustrating when AI can’t do the bare minimum, like automate WISMO tickets. This issue is likely due to missing knowledge or overly broad escalation rules.

How to fix it:

  • Train AI on your FAQs and common issues. Which customer questions do you repeatedly receive? Create a document that lists out every question and its answer.
  • Update vague escalation rules. AI works best with specificity. For example, if you told it to escalate conversations about “returns,” it may even escalate frequently asked questions about return eligibility.

4. Customers can’t find a way to reach a human

One in two customers still prefer talking to a human to an AI, according to Katana. Limiting them to AI-only support could risk a sale or their relationship. 

The top live chat apps clearly display options to speak with AI or a human agent. If your tool doesn’t have this, refine your AI-to-human escalation rules.

How to fix it:

  • Set phrases to trigger escalation. In your knowledge docs, define which phrases should tell AI to hand a conversation over to your support team. For example, “I want to talk to someone” or “Can I talk to a human?”
  • Add a visible option to connect with a human. This can be a button in your chat widget, a note in your contact page, or even a link in your website footer. At minimum, give customers an easy-to-find way to reach a real person.

5. Handoff happens — but the agent gets no context

If your agents are asking customers to repeat themselves, you’ve already lost momentum. One of the fastest ways to break trust is by making someone explain their issue twice. This happens when AI escalates without passing the conversation history, customer profile, or even a summary of what’s already been attempted.

How to fix it:

  • Use rules to auto-tag conversations based on AI activity. Set up logic to tag tickets when certain conditions are met — like when AI attempted a specific action, couldn't resolve the issue, or triggered escalation.
  • Audit your escalated tickets. Look for patterns where context is missing, and adjust the AI-to-human transition logic accordingly.
  • Use an AI platform that provides automated ticket summaries. Choose a tool like Gorgias that provides a quick overview of every ticket.

6. The tone between AI and agent is jarring

Sure, conversational AI has near-perfect grammar, but if its tone is entirely different from your agents’, customers can be put off.

This mismatch usually comes from not settling on an official customer support tone of voice. AI might be pulling from marketing copy. Agents might be winging it. Either way, inconsistency breaks the flow.

How to fix it:

  • Create shared brand voice guidelines. Align tone, formality, and language rules across both AI scripts and agent responses.
  • Define emojis and punctuation use. A consistent visual style helps conversations feel smoother and more human.
  • Use AI tools that allow tone control. Choose platforms that let you customize the voice and personality of your AI to match your brand.
  • Train your agents with examples of ideal tone. Give your team brand voice examples of how conversations should continue when handed off.

7. You haven’t defined what AI should actually handle

When AI is underperforming, the problem isn’t always the tool. Many teams launch AI without ever mapping out what it's actually supposed to do. So it tries to do everything (and fails), or it does nothing at all.

It’s important to remember that support automation isn’t “set it and forget it.” It needs to know its playing field and boundaries.

How to fix it:

AI should handle

AI should escalate to a human

Order tracking (“Where’s my package?”)

Upset, frustrated, or emotional customers

Return and refund policy questions

Billing problems or refund exceptions

Store hours, shipping rates, and FAQs

Technical product or troubleshooting issues

Simple product questions

Complex or edge‑case product questions

Password resets

Multi‑part or multi‑issue requests

Pre‑sale questions with clear, binary answers

Anything where a wrong answer risks churn

How to set up AI that actually works

Once you’ve addressed the obvious issues, it’s important to build a setup that works reliably. These best practices will help your AI deliver consistently helpful support.

1. Define clear AI boundaries

Start by deciding what AI should and shouldn’t handle. Let it take care of repetitive tasks like order tracking, return policies, and product questions. Anything complex or emotionally sensitive should go straight to your team.

2. Train it using real customer conversations

Use examples from actual tickets and messages your team handles every day. Help center articles are a good start, but real interactions are what help AI learn how customers actually ask questions.

3. Set up fallback triggers

Create rules that tell your AI when to escalate. These might include customer frustration, low confidence in the answer, or specific phrases like “talk to a person.” The goal is to avoid infinite loops and to hand things off before the experience breaks down.

4. Make sure agents receive full context

When a handoff happens, your agents should see everything the AI did. That includes the full conversation, relevant customer data, and any actions it has already attempted. This helps your team respond quickly and avoid repeating what the customer just went through. 

An easy way to keep order history, customer data, and conversation history in one place is by using a conversational commerce tool like Gorgias.

5. Keep tone and voice consistent

A jarring shift in tone between AI and agent makes the experience feel disconnected. Align aspects such as formality, punctuation, and language style so the transition from AI to human feels natural.

6. Review handoffs regularly

Look at recent escalations each week. Identify where the AI struggled or handed off too early or too late. Use those insights to improve training, adjust boundaries, and strengthen your automation flows.

If your AI chatbot isn’t working the way you expected, it’s probably not because the technology is broken. It’s because it hasn’t been given the right rules.

AI that works your way and knows when to escalate

When you set AI up with clear responsibilities, it becomes a powerful extension of your team.

Want to see what it looks like when AI is set up the right way?

Try Gorgias AI Agent. It’s conversational AI built with smart automation, clean escalations, and ecommerce data in its core — so your customers get faster answers and your agents stay focused.

Get started with Gorgias AI Agent →

min read.
Create powerful self-service resources
Capture support-generated revenue
Automate repetitive tasks

Further reading

Customer Effort Score

Why You Need To Monitor Customer Effort Score (& How To Do It)

By Halee Sommer
12 min read.
0 min read . By Halee Sommer

It’s true that a great customer experience is key to winning happy customers — but to keep a pulse on customer satisfaction, you need to dig a little deeper. 

To understand the quality of a customer’s experience with your brand, you need to track Customer Effort Score (CES). This metric lets you evaluate your customer service efforts by tracking the level of effort a shopper must exert to fix an issue with your customer support team.  

In this article, you’ll learn exactly how to track and monitor CES, as well as how to optimize your support strategy to minimize customer effort as much as possible.  

{{lead-magnet-1}}

What is Customer Effort Score (CES)?

Customer Effort Score (CES) is a way ecommerce brands can accurately measure how much effort a customer has to exert in order to interact with your support resources. 

This metric is relevant to any interaction a shopper might have that touches your customer support strategy, like: 

  • Talking with a rep through Live Chat 
  • Navigating a return
  • Answering tricky product questions 
  • Canceling an order in progress 

The easiest way to measure customer effort score is by sending customers a survey after their interaction with customer success ends. In this survey, ask them to rate their service experience on a 1-10 point scale. 

We’ll dive into the details behind how to create a survey to measure the amount of effort your customers take shortly.  

📚 Related: 13 live chat support metrics

Why customer effort is the key to customer loyalty

No shopper wants a high-effort experience. According to The Effortless Experience, 96% of high-effort customer experiences drive a customer to be disloyal to your brand — making retention nearly impossible. 

Customer disloyalty

Clearly, it's worth the effort to make life a little easier for your customers — doing so will convince many of them to shop with your brand again. 

When you calculate your customer effort score, you’re able to keep a pulse on exactly what it takes to create seamless experiences that lead to increased loyalty. The metric is a strong predictor of customer retention and can help identify pain points in your customer support strategy. 

A quick-start guide to measuring CES with surveys

As we mentioned earlier, you can measure customer effort by sending customers a customer effort survey.

In this survey, customers are asked to rate their experience with customer support on a Likert scale from “less effort” to “a lot of effort”. 

Let’s walk step-by-step through how to build a CES survey and how to send them to your customers. Then, we’ll look at how to interpret results once you’ve compiled enough data. 

When to send a CES survey

You can send a CES survey immediately after any customer interaction, like post-purchase.

To zoom in even more on customer effort, consider only sending a CES survey once a shopper has a service interaction with your support strategy, like chatting with a live agent, visiting a self-service portal, or clicking through an interactive FAQ page. 

This way, you’re able to get an accurate idea of how easy, or how frustrating, your support touchpoints are. 

How to create a CES survey

A CES survey typically has one simple question that asks, “How easy was it to solve your problem today?”

Every brand tracks responses a little differently, using a scaled system. Here’s a few examples of different kinds of scales you can choose from: 

Word-based scale

A word-based scale lets respondents share their experience by choosing a word or phrase ranging from “very easy” to “very difficult.” 

CES survey question scale

Sentiment scale

A sentiment scale gives customers the option to share their experience using angry, happy, or sad faces to depict the emotion they felt while seeking support from your brand.

Sentiment scale marked by smiley faces

Numerical scale

A numerical scale lets customers share their experience using a scale of 1 to any number of your choosing. Some brands like a scale of 1 to 10, while others prefer scales of 1 to 5. 

No matter what thresholds you set, 1 should always be the lowest, meaning the worst, and your end number should be the highest, meaning the best. 

It's important to note that no option is better than another. The survey type you choose all depends on your shop’s needs. 

Some brands might also ask an open-ended question as a follow-up so customers can share specific details about their experience. 

You can send a CES survey question through email, SMS, or a similar channel to customers who recently reached out to your support team. 

Of course, you can send a customer effort score question manually, but it takes precious time away from your reps who are busy handling active tickets. Automating the process means your agents can focus on more meaningful work, like following up with disgruntled shoppers. 

Gorgias integrates with Delighted to provide easy-to-use survey templates to automatically distribute customer surveys, including for CES. Once a customer makes a purchase, it triggers Gorgias to automatically send a customer effort score survey to that customer. 

Gorgias product

How to calculate your CES score

Like many other customer service metrics, you want to calculate your average CES in order to get a snapshot view of how most customers perceive their experience with your support resources. 

If you want to calculate customer effort manually, start by tracking response data from your CES surveys over a given period of time. 

The timeframe all depends on your goals. You can look at a month, quarter, half-year, etc. Ultimately, it's more important to be consistent with the timeframes you measure. That way, you can accurately track how your CES changes over time.

Once you’ve collected enough data, plug it into this simple formula: 

Divide the number of customers who agree the interaction was easy by the total number of responses. 

CES formula

To put it in actual numbers, if 100 people responded to your CES survey, and the total sum of their scores amounts to 800, that means your CES score is 8 (out of 10).

What drives a high CES?

Like most other customer service metrics, there is no such thing as a standardized “perfect” benchmark for customer effort. 

That’s because it all goes back to your brand and its goals. What makes sense for your customer effort might not translate to another ecommerce shop. 

As a general rule of thumb, when it comes to CES you want your score to be as high as possible. 

A high CES shows that your support strategy is clear cut and that customers have to exert minimal effort to have their problems resolved. Conversely, a low CES means customers find their experiences with your support resources arduous — putting your brand at risk of a high churn rate. 

The best way to drive a high CES is to provide a painless and straightforward experience. If your CES isn’t quite as high as you’d like it to be, start by asking yourself these questions: 

  • How many touchpoints did the customer have before their issue was resolved? 
  • How long did it take for an agent to respond to a customer ticket? 
  • Are all your links up-to-date for important self-service options like a knowledge base, forum, or FAQ? 
  • Do you agents have access to the resources they need to make well-informed decisions? 

From there, you can look into ways to optimize your support strategy to boost your customer effort score.

How to improve your Customer Effort Score

To improve your customer effort score, you need to build pathways to make it as easy as possible for customers to find the answers they’re looking for. That means decreasing the number of steps it takes for a customer to complete a task and optimizing your first response time.

Research from Genesys shows that 94% of customers intend to make a purchase after a low-effort experience — versus 4% of customers after a high-effort experience. 

Clearly, it’s worth the effort to optimize your customer experience. 

Let’s look at some of the easiest ways ecommerce brands can lower their CES using functions commonly found in helpdesks. 

1) Build out a thorough knowledge base

Customer knowledge base

A knowledge base is a portal, of sorts. It connects your shoppers to both sales and customer service so they can make an empowered purchasing decision. 

The beauty of a knowledge base is that is goes way beyond just a static library of articles. 

BrüMate's Help Center is a learning environment where customers can go to in-depth knowledge about their products. 

BruMate help center

2) Lean on self-service

Customer self service

Customers might not reach out to your agents immediately. 

According to Gartner, 70% of customers seek out self-service options before contacting support. 

Offering more self-service options also means you can deflect low-priority tickets so your agents can focus on solving more challenging customer issues. 

We’ve already discussed a popular self-service option: knowledge bases. Here are some other examples of what customer self-service might look like: 

  • FAQ page: Answer your customers’ most frequently asked questions with key information like operating hours, product availability, pricing, return policy, basic troubleshooting, and more.
  • Forums: Build community among your shoppers and encourage them to talk to each other about their experiences so that they can empower themselves to resolve low-effort problems.  
  • On-demand webinars: Educate your customers with step-by-step tutorials about your brand’s products. Record webinars so that you can publish them as evergreen content on your website for customers to access anytime.  
  • In-product tutorials: Give customers step-by-step instructions in the moment its needed. In-product tutorials are effective at helping customers get value out of your product quickly.

3) Harness automation

Customer service automation

Many of the tickets your agents handle are repetitive. 

Sure, tracking a customer’s order is important, but automation can handle these kinds of straightforward questions for your team. 

In customer service, automation likely won’t replace your hardworking support reps. Rather, automation can work with your teams to improve workflows and optimize communication with your customers by tackling redundant manual work. 

A helpdesk like Gorgias can help you completely automate 60% of repetitive tickets with a 0-second response time.

WISMO

4) Auto-prioritize tickets to reduce response times

Processing emails

Assigning ticket priorities is a best practice to empower your team to become more efficient. But you could spend all day on this task alone.  

Ticket prioritization is another useful form of automation, assigning low-, medium-, and high-value to every incoming request. This way, your team can handle the higher-priority issues first. 

Gorgias comes with advanced intent and sentiment detection features to automatically assign value to incoming tickets based on Rules that you can set. 

Customer intent

5) Use Macros to streamline responses

Macros are another form of automation that optimize a customer support team’s workflow. 

Macros are pre-written, automatic responses to incoming customer requests. 

Gorgias Macros automatically pull customer data into your messages, like name, order number, and shipping addresses. This makes for a more efficient conversation and helps customers get to a resolution with minimal effort for both the customer and the agent. 

Shop2App message in Gorgias

Other important customer experience metrics to consider

Customer effort is a big slice of the pie when it comes to monitoring your customer experience, but it can’t show the whole picture on its own. 

We recommend bolstering your CES efforts with additional metrics in order to add helpful context to your customer support strategy. 

Customer satisfaction metrics such as CSAT score, Net Promoter Score (NPS), and customer churn rate (CCR) can all provide helpful insights into how your support team is performing. 

Plus, it gives you a better look into the customer’s journey, so you can see how shoppers experience your brand — and give you ideas for how to boost satisfaction and drive loyalty. 

Customer Satisfaction (CSAT)

CSAT

Customer satisfaction score (CSAT) is a metric to measure your customer base’s level of satisfaction with their experience. 

The metric is one of the most important measurements your support team can track. Satisfied customers are the key to unlock loyalty, reviews, and referrals, along with returning customers that boost revenue for your brand. 

With Gorgias, you can automatically send a customer satisfaction survey after each interaction with customer support:

Customer satisfaction surveys in Gorgias

Net Promoter Score (NPS)

NPS

Net Promoter Score (NPS) is a commonly tracked metric that lets you learn how likely your customers are to recommend your brand to their friends and family. 

This metric likely correlates closely with your CES. A customer who has had a great experience is likely to want to hype you up to their networks, versus a customer who had to put in a ton of effort to resolve an issue. 

If you optimize your NPS, there’s a good chance your CES will also improve — which can lead to more repeat customers and a boost in customer loyalty. 

Ecommerce Churn Rate 

Ecommerce churn rate

Ecommerce churn rate is the percentage of lost customers your business sees over a given period of time. 

This metric is similar to Customer Churn Rate (CCR), which is typically measured by SaaS or subscription-based B2B companies. These companies can easily see when a customer cancels their subscription, making this data easy to monitor. 

Ecommerce, or online stores, can measure churn rate by looking at negative customer feedback, like a high CES, in order to identify customers at risk for churn. 

Gorgias: Your ecommerce helpdesk to lower Customer Effort Score

A helpdesk like Gorgias has the power to immediately optimize your customer service team — which, as we’ve learned, directly impacts the effort a customer has to exert with your brand. 

Because Gorgias has purpose-built automation features like Chat, Macros, and ticket prioritization, it can empower your customers to find a resolution to their problems as fast as possible. 

Sign up for Gorgias or book a demo to start tracking and improving your customer effort score today!

{{lead-magnet-2}}

No items found.
Customer Service Management

Customer Service Management: A Complete Guide for Managers

By Evgeni Yordanov
14 min read.
0 min read . By Evgeni Yordanov

Your first priority as a customer service manager should ensure fast, consistent, high-quality support. 

However, good customer service management can be very complex, requiring technical skills and an understanding of many interconnected operational tasks. Strong people and team management skills are the foundation for success. 

In this guide, you’ll learn customer service management and how to improve as a leader. Here’s everything we cover below:

{{lead-magnet-1}}

What is customer service management?

Customer service management is the role of running a customer service team in a way that ensures customer satisfaction, loyalty, and long-term retention. 

This involves various tasks, from hiring agents to ensuring everyone on the team has the necessary tools and resources to do their job. 

We can organize these tasks into two broad categories:

  • People and team management, which we’ll discuss in the next section.
  • Operational management and optimization, which we’ll discuss later in this guide.

What is customer service team management? 

Customer service team management is the collection of actions the customer service manager takes to consistently enable agents to perform their job well. This can include a whole range of activities, including:

  • Hiring agents with the right customer service skills and attitude
  • Training them on how to deal with different customer inquiries
  • Setting standards for individual agents and the team as a whole
  • Providing regular feedback and constructive criticism when necessary
  • Establishing targets, metrics, and KPIs for the customer service team and analyzing agents’ performance based on them

What a smoothly functioning customer service team looks like

As a customer service manager, most of the success of the customer service team rests on you. It’s your job to build the team and the rules, systems, and guidelines agents will use daily. 

A helpful starting point is to learn what a smoothly functioning customer support team should look like. This will help you lay the foundation for effective customer service management.

Easy interdepartmental communication

As with all other team activities, internal communication is the key to success. In a good customer service operation, agents are ready to communicate and have the tools to do so.

For example, Slack, Microsoft Teams, and other chat and video conferencing software should always be available for real-time communication in urgent situations. Asynchronous communication methods like email should be encouraged in other cases. 

As a manager, it’s your job to set clear rules around communication methods in different situations (e.g., no real-time calls where an asynchronous email or Slack message will do). Good communication rules can guarantee that everyone values their colleagues' time and attention.

Clearly defined workflows

A good customer service manager ensures each agent knows:

  • How to handle common inquiries, e.g., where to look for information, when to escalate the issue, etc.
  • What to do in abnormal situations.
  • What’s expected of them in terms of response and resolution times.

The key here is that agents should have this information before they need it. 

💡 Tip: Build a detailed hub of all the essential documents and information your agents need. This can include your customer service policy, refund and return policies, escalation rules, video walkthroughs of challenging situations, and much more.

“Remember, you can't pour from an empty cup –– taking care of yourself is beneficial for you and crucial for your ability to support your customers effectively.” - Eli Weiss, CX Unlocked

Low stress and less risk of burnout

High-stress environments and burnout are all too familiar in customer service. This often stems from understaffing, poor training, or confusing workflows. 

Eli Weiss provides a few great tips for avoiding burnout in his CX Unlocked Guidebook:

  1. Practice mindfulness. Train your team to recognize when they’re starting to feel frustrated. That might look like realizing when a customer’s harsh tone is beginning to bother them, taking a moment, and responding calmly (rather than acting on impulse). 
  2. Create and respect boundaries. Designate “work-free” zones in your life. These could be certain hours of the day, specific locations, or even mental spaces.
  3. Celebrate every win, no matter how small. Boost morale and motivation by reminding your team how amazing they're doing.

Performance tied to specific KPIs

A big part of customer service management is evaluating your team’s performance. The only way to do that fairly is to use specific, measurable key performance metrics (KPIs). This ensures you’re evaluating agents objectively, giving them clarity and goals to aim for. 

For example, response and resolution times are two of the most critical metrics for any support team. Keeping them consistently low shows a well-managed, prepared, appropriately trained team. It also shows that there are enough agents to handle the incoming inquiries.

The better your agents’ time management skills, the faster their response and resolution times will be. As a manager, you can help your team prioritize tickets and reduce the time spent on repetitive tasks with automation (like Rules) and pre-made template resources (like Macros).

Also, remember that while industry-standard KPIs are helpful, you shouldn’t use them just because other organizations do so. All KPIs should be tailored to your customer service and business goals — whether that’s higher customer satisfaction, better customer engagement, more revenue, higher on-site conversion rates, or anything else.

Five most important tips for first-time customer service managers

First-time managers can easily find themselves overloaded with information about customer service management. So, we’ve gathered five essential tips to help you get started.

1) Put your team first

This doesn’t just mean monitoring agents’ performance. It means being there for them when they need you, whether it’s about work or their personal lives. Team members must know they can count on you when it matters.

That’s also why regular 1:1s are essential. They allow you to check in on everyone and detect potential problems early on. 

2) Don’t neglect customer self-service 

Customer self-service combines technology and resources, allowing current and new customers to resolve issues independently. For example, FAQ pages, articles, videos, self-service chatbot flows, and other resources can help massively reduce repetitive support tickets.

Besides being beneficial for your agents, offering self-service is a must for customers. According to Statista, 88% of customers in the US expect companies to provide a self-service support portal. 

3) Fill the valleys before creating the peaks 

Eli quotes this tip from The Power of Moments by Dan and Chip Heath in his guidebook. 

The premise? Focus on finding and fixing the problems your customers face before trying to wow them with exceptional customer service experiences. That way, you’re laying a good foundation for your customer service strategy.

Any customer journey has its low points (i.e., valleys). You can identify these with data analytics or customer feedback. Once you’ve addressed the problems, you can move on to creating the “peaks” that form a truly memorable experience and build customer loyalty.

4) Give agents the techniques, tools, and guidance they need for success

Agents can’t be expected to do their job well without the necessary resources. As their manager, it’s your job to give them:

  • Impactful customer support tools, like a powerful and versatile helpdesk (like Gorgias).  
  • Clear and specific standards and goals, like each customer service channel's expected response and resolution times (if you take an omnichannel approach).
  • Extensive training materials during their onboarding, like articles, videos, workshops, webinars, and more. These should be tailored to each team since call center agents will need different institutions for handling customer requests than ones providing support via written communication channels like email or SMS.
  • Regular feedback, like how well they’re performing, their strengths, and where they can improve.

5) Analyze results and base decisions on reliable data

Customer service is ultimately about people, which makes it easy to let subjective opinions affect your judgment. However, accurate data is a much more reliable gauge of how your team is performing.

It allows you to avoid biases and enables key outcomes like customer satisfaction, loyalty, and retention to guide your decisions. We’ll explore some key metrics that can help you in this regard below.

How to measure your customer service team’s performance

Evaluating the impact of a customer service team can be a complex and nuanced task. There are many factors and metrics to consider, which can easily overwhelm first-time managers.

Below, we’re keeping things simple by focusing on three key ways to gauge your team’s performance.

Tie support tickets to revenue

The best way to get buy-in from stakeholders for your customer service program is to prove its impact on business outcomes. That’s why it’s a good idea to track metrics related to revenue, including: 

This will help you prove customer service ROI and get buy-in for future new hires, software, or training.

Get direct customer feedback

Support interactions can massively impact customers’ overall experience with your brand. It’s crucial to keep a pulse on your customers’ opinions of them, especially since people who rate their experience with a company as very good are 94% more likely to buy again, according to Qualtrics.

You can do this by running regular customer satisfaction surveys. For example, you can run a quick, low-friction survey by asking customers, “On a scale from 1 to 5, how satisfied are you with your experience today?”.

Taking the total number of 4- or 5-star responses, dividing it by the total number of responses, and multiplying the result by 100 will give you a customer satisfaction (CSAT) score — a key metric for measuring support performance.

Customer satisfaction score CSAT calculation formula
Source: Gorgias

Track key customer service performance metrics

You can use many quantifiable metrics to gauge your team’s performance. Here are some of the most widely used ones:

  • First response time (FRT) is the time that elapses between a customer's question and your team’s initial response. Aim to keep FRT as short as possible, especially on real-time channels like live chat and SMS. 
  • Resolution time is the amount of time a customer spends interacting with a business’s customer support, helpdesk, or customer service team before their issue is solved. Like with FRT, the lower your resolution times, the better.
  • Support performance score, which represents the overall performance of your team (or an individual agent). This unique metric we developed for our in-house team at Gorgias combines average first response time, average resolution time, and CSAT. The result is a score between 1 and 5, representing the team’s (or an individual agent’s) performance.

Support performance score Gorgias customer service metric
Source: Gorgias

Like with CSAT scores, Gorgias can track these metrics for you and give you a more nuanced view of them. For example, you can use our software to analyze average resolution time by channels, agents, time frames, and more.

Performance overview on Gorgias
Source: Gorgias

Four essential tools and resources for customer service managers

1) Helpdesk

Helpdesks are platforms that help manage all of your customer service interactions. Collaborate on managing, organizing, responding to, and reporting on customer tickets. Or, set up automation for key processes like ticket prioritization. 

For example, Gorgias can enable your team to:

  • Manage tickets. This can include simple actions like closing, assigning, and resolving tickets. It can also involve more complex automation around ticket tagging, categorizing, and more.
  • Centralize customer communications from multiple channels — like email, SMS, social media, WhatsApp, and live chat. This can drastically simplify agents’ workflows by giving them a unified view of all customer interactions and relevant customer data in one place, so they don’t have to constantly switch between tabs.
  • Implement proactive customer service. For example, your agents can proactively contact customers via a live chat widget to walk them through the purchase process. They can even automate this process and trigger a live chat only in certain situations, e.g., when customers reach specific cart values or linger on a purchase page.

Reactive and proactive customer service
Source: Gorgias
  • Track key metrics and measure support performance. Gorgias can help you monitor response and resolution times, open and closed tickets, CSAT scores, and more.

Statistics Overview on Gorgias
Source: Gorgias

2) Self-service tools 

Customer self-service combines technology and resources that let customers resolve issues independently. 

Self-service is great for your support team and your customers because:

  • Agents don’t have to deal with as many repetitive tickets, which reduces their stress and ensures their focus is on high-value activities. 
  • Customers don’t have to wait for a response from a live agent.

Common self-service resources include:

  • Frequently asked questions (FAQ) pages. One of the simplest resources to create, FAQ pages provide straightforward answers to customer questions. These pages are often grouped together so customers can find what they need by browsing categories or using a search function, as shown in the example below. 

Steve Madden Help Center
Source: Steve Madden
  • Knowledge bases. These interactive portals make it easy for customers to find answers before making a purchase and help them troubleshoot any possible issues afterward. Process Polly’s knowledge base is a good example here — it’s well-organized, helpful, and consistent with the overall brand.

Princess Polly Help Center
Source: Princess Polly
  • Self-service flows. Good self-service flows can help you deflect up to a third of all tickets. They’re projected to save companies $11 billion this year. For example, Gorgias’ self-service flows let you create multistep automated responses to customer questions without engaging an agent.

Chatbot
Source: Gorgias

3) Customer service policies and SLAs

Customer service policies and service level agreements (SLAs) are among the first documents new agents should learn.

  • A customer service policy is an internal document containing your customer service team's fundamental guidelines, rules, and standards. It includes steps for handling common workflows (e.g., refund or return requests), ticket prioritization rules, and standards for response and resolution times.
  • An SLA is an external document that defines the expected service level between your business and your customers. SLAs contain information about your support team’s working hours and their expected response and resolution times on different channels.

Without these documents, customer service agents can’t be expected to do their job well. That’s why ensuring they’re detailed, well-written, and included in each agent’s mandatory training is essential.

4) Practical courses and other training materials

All agents need a solid foundation of knowledge before they can start resolving problems quickly and consistently. 

The specific training topics will differ depending on your business. However, most support courses and training should cover:

  • In-depth product knowledge. All agents should be experts in what your business is selling.
  • Policy and process knowledge, like how to handle return requests, when to grant refunds, and what to do when customers ask for an exchange.
  • Customer service tools used in your company, like your helpdesk software, live chat, customer relationship management (CRM) system, and so on.
  • Tone of voice, phrases to avoid, and other brand-related considerations.
  • Technical skills, like following internal escalation rules.

Customer service training program checklist
Source: Gorgias

Become a better customer service manager with specialized training (and Gorgias) 

As you can see, a lot goes into being a good customer service manager. This guide will give you a good foundation for success in your journey, and you can get even more valuable tips in:

  • The CX Unlocked Guidebook by Eli Weiss. Eli is known for his work around customer experience and retention at DTC brands like OLIPOP and Jones Road Beauty. This book will give you his first-hand experience and help you become a better customer service manager.
  • These 19 best customer service certifications. In this article, you’ll find 19 customer service certifications for different use cases, including certifications for helpdesks, leadership, call center service, and more.
  • The support leader’s guide to customer service training. This guide will walk you through the basics of customer service training and show you 15 practical training activities to try with your team.

Finally, Gorgias can be your centralized customer service software that lays the foundation for a successful customer service management strategy. Our software can help your agents prioritize tickets, save time with automation, drive revenue with proactive customer service, and much more. 

{{lead-magnet-2}}

No items found.
Ecommerce Customer Service

Ecommerce Customer Service is Changing – Here’s How to Stay Ahead

By Eli Weiss
12 min read.
0 min read . By Eli Weiss

Customer service dictates your customers’ entire experience with your brand. When you pair a memorable experience with a product that resonates with people, you've got the recipe for attracting repeat customers.

I’m Eli Weiss, the Senior Director of Customer Experience & Retention at Jones Road Beauty and a proud Gorgias Ambassador. After working in customer experience roles for almost a decade, I’ve learned the best ways to build strong customer relationships and teach teams to do the same.

This is the first article in Gorgias’s Intro to Ecommerce Customer Service series. We’ll go over the basics of ecommerce customer service, setting up a successful customer service program, the challenges, and the best tools for customer service teams.

What is ecommerce customer service? 

Ecommerce customer service combines the power of support agents with self-service resources to assist online shoppers throughout their experience with a brand. It includes everything from pre-sales and purchase questions to returns and exchanges.

The traditional view

The old-fashioned approach to ecommerce customer service is like a game of whack-a-mole ––– it’s reactive. The goal of customer service representatives under this traditional view is simply to resolve issues.

This may have worked back when call centers were the primary customer service channel, but today, brands and marketing are so entrenched in our lives that customers want authentic experiences with whoever they do business with. 

The cutting-edge view

Today, ecommerce customer service is about giving customers the full VIP treatment. Customers don’t only matter once they send in a complaint. The goal is to provide them everything they need from the get-go so they don’t ever have to complain.

What a successful ecommerce customer service program looks like

Picture a well-oiled assembly line of seamless interactions, happy customers, and glowing reviews. It's like having your own customer service dream team who know the best techniques to keep your customers satisfied. But to get to that point, you'll need some key ingredients. 

Below are the top six elements an ecommerce customer service program should have to succeed.

1. Builds customer loyalty

Customers rave about brands that not only align with their values, but give them zero friction throughout the buying journey. When you create thoughtful customer experiences at every point, it will be a no-brainer for customers to stick with your brand, instead of moving over to a competitor.

Here are the building blocks to gaining customer loyalty:

  • Maximize pre-sales moments. What does customer experience look like when customers aren’t contacting you? Take this opportunity to reach out to customers with an email, text, or chat message to grab their interest.
  • Elevate the voice of the customer. When you make changes, how will your customers feel? Are you updating your pricing or return policies? Represent your customers in all internal meetings and discussions because the decisions you make will affect them.
  • Create honest, customer-centric policies. Update your customer service policies to answer all of a customer’s potential questions. Leaving anything out is likely to decrease brand loyalty and bring you a barrage of complaints.

2. Offers proactive support 

Make the first move and don’t wait for your customers to contact you. Taking a proactive approach involves not only initiative and common sense but research.

Proactive customer service done through an Instagram direct message.
Catch the attention of new Instagram followers by sending them a discount code through a direct message.

Here are a few ways you can deliver proactive customer service:

  • Ask for customer feedback at every opportunity. Feedback is the basis of delivering effective support. Ask for feedback at every point of the customer journey, from on-site pop-up surveys to customer reviews.
  • Track live statistics. Taking note of metrics like the total number of tickets being opened and resolved within a time period can help you identify trends or issues so that your services can be more efficient.
  • Celebrate customer moments. It’s easier to keep customers than find new ones. Make sure to recognize your customers on their birthdays or anniversaries by giving them discounts or gifts.

3. Offers omnichannel support

Online businesses can make the most out of their digital presence by offering omnichannel customer service. This is a multi-channel approach to support and includes assistance given on email, live chat, chatbots, voice, and social media.

Gorgias view of customer conversations from different support channels like live chat, Twitter, voice, and WhatsApp.
On Gorgias, you can view all customer requests in one view, no matter which platform they’re sent from.

When you use a helpdesk that leverages omnichannel communication like Gorgias, you benefit from:

  • More customer engagement. Offering multiple support channels allows you to reach customers of all demographics.
  • A streamlined workflow for your agents. With all conversations in one place, agents don’t need to split their attention between multiple tabs.
  • An easier time scaling. A helpdesk makes it easier for growing ecommerce platforms to take care of their customers in an organized fashion.

📚 Related reading: A guide to all the different types of customer service companies need to know

4. Delivers rapid response times

Customers just want answers. Meet their expectations by providing solutions as quickly as possible. Ultimately, this means getting your internal customer service operations right before the questions even roll in.

Here are some ways to hike up your first response times:

  • Train your support team thoroughly. Training your agents on customer service skills, brand voice, and exposing them to potential customer questions will ensure they have the foundation to handle both familiar and new inquiries.
  • Auto-assign your tickets with Rules. Automating ticket management makes sure your inbox is organized and easy for your agents to navigate. Rules allows you to sort your tickets when certain conditions are met.
  • Use Macros and scripts. Simplify responses by using customer service scripts (called Macros on Gorgias), so your agents can stop doing repetitive, manual work and get straight to delivering good customer service.

5. Includes useful & easily accessible self-service

Customers shouldn’t always need to go to your support team for answers. Empower them to find their own answers with self-service options like a Help Center, knowledge base, or FAQ section. It’s a win-win: your customer support team dodges a pile of tickets and your customers have an answer in seconds.

ALOHAS help center
ALOHAS uses Gorgias to create a user-friendly help center combined with an order management portal.

Don’t forget that self-service options should be easy to access, too. Put them front and center, like on your website’s menu or as a fixed element at the bottom right corner of all webpages. Customers should be able to find what they need with just a few clicks.

6. Always measuring & improving

You'll want to dig into your customer service metrics, like response times, customer effort score, customer satisfaction scores, and feedback from your customers. Measure it, analyze it, and figure out where you can refine customer service even more.

View revenue statistics on Gorgias
Find out if excellent customer service is paying off with Gorgias’s Revenue Statistics which shows you stats in real time.

Maybe your response times are extremely slow, and you need to start using automation. Maybe customers are complaining about a confusing checkout process. Whatever it is, your customers are your cheat sheet. Use the feedback to make improvements, and implement those changes. 

💡 Note: Contrary to what online customers think, customer service agents, and even leads, don’t know everything. Their goal is to continuously learn about how to improve the customer service experience with the help of customer feedback.

5 common challenges of ecommerce customer service 

Challenging customers and questions are part of the job. But if you’re struggling to handle what you feel should be an easy fix, you may not have the resources you need.

To mitigate those problems, I’ll show you the solutions to the five most common challenges in ecommerce customer service.

1. Too many customer inquiries

❌ Problem: Your inbox is full of customer questions and you don’t know where to start.

✅ Solution: Prioritize tickets by urgency based on each customer’s message and whether the customer is a new or returning customer.

On Gorgias, you can create a Rule to automatically tag tickets into their appropriate categories. For instance, tickets that contain complaints can be automatically identified and tagged as “high priority,” while “where is my order?” tickets are tagged as “low priority.”

Rule creation on Gorgias
Create Rules to automatically sort incoming tickets with the right tags, replies, and agents.

The benefits of automating ticket management leads to better managing customer expectations, response times, and makes it easier for you to keep loyal customers.

2. Not enough agents to handle customers

❌ Problem: You have a small team of agents and too many customer inquiries to resolve in a timely manner.

✅ Solution: Automate your recurring tasks so your agents can handle more important interactions.

With Macros, app integrations, and Automate, routine tasks like organizing your tickets, sending scripted responses, and checking up on customers can take seconds. When agents don’t need to handle repetitive work, they can focus on delivering more thoughtful support.

📚 Related reading: 14 best customer service software for every kind of business

3. Too many support channels

❌ Problem: You have too many tabs open and customer conversations to track.

✅ Solution: Integrate all your communication channels under one platform.

An omnichannel strategy is the easiest fix, which Gorgias specializes in. By combining your email, social media, SMS, and phone support in one platform, your attention won’t be split across multiple tabs, allowing you to provide personalized customer service no matter which channel a customer chooses. 

4. No customer feedback loop

❌ Problem: You routinely send customer surveys but don’t know how to effectively apply the feedback.

✅ Solution: Determine the most important issues to resolve, create an actionable plan, and share your findings with the appropriate teams.

Collecting customer feedback is pointless if you don’t know what to do with it. The main purpose of feedback is to gain insights that can resolve issues or bring forth new questions.

Most CX teams have one of two problems:

  1. Not collecting enough data and therefore not having the answers to customer questions
  2. Collecting a lot of data but not synthesizing it effectively and sharing it with the right people

Bridge the gap between data collection and insights by sharing your learnings with the appropriate team members to inspire them to take action. In essence, it’s about translating critique into innovative support methods.

5. Tough customers

❌ Problem: A customer is wrong but insists they’re right, and you don’t know how to reply properly. 

✅ Solution: Acknowledge their frustration and provide them with the correct information by using positive language.

Surprise, surprise — customers are not always right but it’s important stay respectful even during tense conversations. You shouldn’t outright tell them they’re wrong, instead do the following:

  1. Thank them for writing. Let them know your brand values all customer feedback to ensure your interaction starts off on a positive note.
  2. Acknowledge their frustration and issue. Give them the peace of mind that the agent they’re talking to understands them and can lead them to a resolution.
  3. Provide multiple solutions. Chances are, your customer has already browsed your website for answers, so be sure to offer alternate solutions and resources in addition to the most obvious ones.
  4. Escalate the ticket to a customer service lead. If the customer is still not satisfied, direct them to a specific agent that could provide them with more information.
  5. If necessary, make an exception. Some issues simply can’t follow your policy and may be better solved with a refund, discount, or novel solution. Allowing exceptions for returning customers can be the means of retaining them.

📚 Related reading: How to respond to angry customer emails

How to improve ecommerce customer service with a helpdesk

If you could invest in just one tool, make it an ecommerce helpdesk. Having a single hub to manage customer conversations and order management streamlines the customer experience.

I've tried almost every helpdesk out there, and Gorgias is by far the most intuitive helpdesk I've used. Gorgias goes beyond the basics of a customer service tool by giving you the ability to talk to customers across multiple support channels, manage tickets efficiently, and handle customer queries all within Gorgias's easy-to-use interface.

Try it out for yourself with their interactive tour:

{{lead-magnet-1}}

3 ways top-notch customer service can boost your bottom-line

Delivering exceptional customer service isn't just about addressing inquiries. It's a reimagining of your brand’s overall experience that directly impacts your financial success. When customer service is your priority, it leads to repeat purchases, a boost in your repeat customer rate, and the creation of customer ambassadors.

1. Drive repeat purchases

Your CX team has the 411 on what your loyal customers love about your product and what they'd like to change. 

This data is invaluable for your retention team when crafting engaging campaigns and creating educational content post-purchase to ensure they know how to use the products they ordered.

2. Create customer ambassadors

Customers are more likely to remember your brand if you initiate moments that cause happiness after they use your products. 

How exactly do you do it? You introduce a bit of surprise and delight to the online shopping journey instead of sticking to the script. You want to delight customers with memorable moments — without overdoing it to the point of being predictable.

OLIPOP products
OLIPOP

When I worked at OLIPOP, one of my favorite moments was when a customer ordered 20 cases of OLIPOP for her wedding. However, our shipment was cutting it close to their wedding date. To compensate for the panic our newlyweds might’ve been feeling, we asked them for their wedding registry and got them a shiny new waffle iron.

3. Boost onsite conversions

When potential customers are given speedy support, it’s easier to turn window shoppers into brand new customers. A well-integrated customer service strategy can remove obstacles and can push browsing customers into making their purchase.

How Gorgias has helped top ecommerce brands grow revenue

Delivering great customer service might involve some experimenting. With the right tools, you can help your customers feel more connected to your brand overall. 

If you're in search of ecommerce customer service software, give Gorgias a try. Gorgias is designed specifically for ecommerce businesses and their customer support needs.

At OLIPOP, we were able to decrease our first response time by 88% in the first two months of using Gorgias — even when our ticket volume doubled. And our revenue? It grew over 1200%. 

If you want to learn about how we accomplished this, read the OLIPOP case study.

{{lead-magnet-2}}

Customer Service Strategies

Customer Service Strategies: The Practical Guide for High-Growth CX Teams

By Gorgias Team
15 min read.
0 min read . By Gorgias Team

TL;DR:

  • Customer service strategies are comprehensive plans that align people, processes, and technology to deliver consistent, high-quality support
  • Modern strategies balance human expertise with AI automation to scale efficiently
  • Key focus areas include agent training, omnichannel support, personalization, and continuous improvement
  • Success requires measuring the right KPIs and acting on customer feedback
  • Ecommerce brands need strategies tailored to high-volume, digital-first customer interactions

Customer service strategies are comprehensive plans that guide how your team interacts with customers across every touchpoint. In ecommerce, where customer expectations are higher than ever, a clear strategy is what separates brands that scale from brands that struggle. This guide covers the core elements of an effective customer service strategy. We'll explore the people that power your team, the tools that enable great service, and the metrics that help you improve. For ecommerce brands, that means strategies built around high-volume support, AI-enabled automation, and deep integration with your commerce stack.

{{lead-magnet-1}}

Why customer service strategies matter

Customer expectations in ecommerce have shifted. Shoppers expect fast, personalized, and seamless support across every channel.

When you deliver that experience, you build loyalty and drive repeat purchases. When you don't, customers leave.

A clear customer service strategy connects your support operations to business outcomes. It ensures every interaction moves the needle on metrics that matter, from customer satisfaction to retention to revenue.

For ecommerce brands, the stakes are even higher. Your customers have endless options, and switching costs are low. Great service is often the only thing that keeps them coming back.

Business impact: CSAT, NPS, retention, and CLV

CSAT (customer satisfaction score) measures how satisfied customers are with a specific interaction. It's typically measured via post-interaction survey and gives you immediate feedback on service quality.

NPS (net promoter score) measures customer loyalty and likelihood to recommend. It's a leading indicator of growth — customers who are promoters stick around and bring others with them.

Retention rate and CLV (customer lifetime value) show the long-term impact of service quality. Customers who have great support experiences are more likely to stay and spend more over time. In Gorgias's data from 12,000+ merchants, repeat customers make up 21% of buyers but contribute 44% of revenue and 46% of orders.

People and process

Your technology stack matters, but your people matter more. The best customer service strategies invest in training, coaching, and creating a culture where agents feel empowered to solve problems and delight customers.

Agent training and coaching

Ongoing training ensures agents stay sharp on product knowledge, policies, and tools. It's not a one-time onboarding task — it's a continuous investment.

Coaching is where training meets performance. Use QA reviews and call monitoring to identify coaching opportunities, then work with agents to close gaps in knowledge or skills.

Great training programs cover both hard and soft skills. Agents need to know your products and systems, but they also need to know how to communicate clearly, de-escalate tense situations, and solve problems creatively.

Training topics:

  • Product and policy knowledge
  • System and tool proficiency
  • Communication and de-escalation techniques
  • Upselling and cross-selling fundamentals

Soft skills and empathy

Technical skills get agents in the door, but soft skills keep customers happy. Empathy, active listening, and clear communication are what turn a transactional support interaction into a relationship-building moment.

Empathy doesn't mean agreeing with every customer complaint. It means understanding where they're coming from and showing that you care about solving their problem.

Invest in soft skills training just as much as product training. Role-play tough conversations, practice active listening, and create space for agents to reflect on what's working and what's not.

Key soft skills:

  • Active listening
  • Empathy and emotional intelligence
  • Clear communication
  • Problem-solving and critical thinking
  • Patience and composure

Tools and tech stack

The right tools amplify your team's impact. A modern customer service tech stack centralizes customer data, automates repetitive tasks, and gives agents the context they need to deliver fast, personalized support.

AI and automation for efficiency

AI and automation handle the repetitive work that bogs down your team. Chatbots answer common questions, intent detection routes tickets to the right agent, and agent assist tools suggest replies based on past interactions.

The goal isn't to replace human agents — it's to free them up for the work that requires judgment, creativity, and empathy. AI handles the routine, humans handle the complex.

For ecommerce brands, AI can also drive revenue. Chatbots can recommend products, upsell based on purchase history, and even process orders directly in chat. Gorgias AI Agent, for example, automates up to 60% of support interactions while maintaining the brand voice and accuracy that customers expect.

AI use cases:

  • Automated responses to common questions
  • Intent detection and ticket routing
  • Agent assist and suggested replies
  • Self-service through chatbots
  • Sentiment analysis and escalation

CRM integration and personalization

Personalization starts with data. When your helpdesk integrates with your CRM and ecommerce platform, agents see a complete view of each customer: past purchases, support history, preferences, and more.

That context lets agents tailor their responses. Instead of generic replies, they can reference specific orders, recommend products based on past purchases, and adjust their tone based on customer segment.

CRM integration also connects support to revenue. Agents can upsell and cross-sell based on purchase history, offer personalized discounts, and even create orders directly from the helpdesk.

Personalization tactics:

  • Reference past purchases in conversations
  • Tailor product recommendations
  • Adjust tone based on customer segment
  • Proactive outreach for high-value customers
  • Upsell and cross-sell based on history

Channels and self-service

Customers expect to reach you on their terms—whether that's email, chat, social media, or SMS. A strong channel strategy meets them where they are and maintains context across every interaction.

Omnichannel support

Omnichannel support means providing consistent service across every channel your customers use. It's not just about being present on multiple channels — it's about preserving context when customers switch between them.

For ecommerce brands, that typically means email, live chat, social media, SMS, and voice. Each channel has its own expectations: customers expect fast responses on chat, detailed answers on email, and public-facing replies on social.

The key is routing and context. Use automation to route tickets to the right team based on channel, topic, and priority. Make sure agents can see the full conversation history, no matter where it started.

Key channels:

  • Email
  • Live Chat
  • Social media (Instagram, Facebook, Twitter)
  • SMS and messaging apps (WhatsApp)
  • Voice

Ohh Deer specializes in creating quirky, eye-catching stationery, gifts, and homeware. To provide a seamless customer experience, they integrated Gorgias Chat to centralize support channels like Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, email, phone, and Live Chat, increasing efficiency and revenue. This omnichannel approach contributed to a high average CSAT score of 4.95 and an additional $12,500 USD quarterly revenue.

Gorgias helpdesk with a view of Shopify customer sidebar

Knowledge base and community

Self-service empowers customers to find answers on their own, without waiting for an agent. A well-organized Help Center, searchable FAQs, and community forums let customers solve simple problems instantly.

Self-service also reduces ticket volume, which frees up your team to focus on complex issues. The goal is ticket deflection — answering questions before they become tickets.

Keep your knowledge base up to date. Use support ticket data to identify gaps, then create articles that address those topics. Consider adding video tutorials, community forums, and chatbots that recommend relevant articles.

Self-service components:

  • Searchable Help Center
  • FAQ pages
  • Community forums
  • Video tutorials
  • Chatbot with article recommendations

Loop Earplugs leverages Gorgias to improve their customer self-service experience. This automation has decreased WISMO ("where is my order") inquiries from 17% to 5%, allowing customers to independently check shipping statuses, freeing up customer service agents for more complex issues and revenue-generating activities.

Loop Earplugs uses Gorgias's chat widget

Loop Earplugs automatically answers customer questions with Gorgias's chat widget and Flows feature.

Measure and improve

You can't improve what you don't measure. Track the right KPIs, run regular QA reviews, and build feedback loops that turn customer insights into action.

KPIs and quality assurance

Start with the metrics that matter most to your business. Common KPIs include CSAT, NPS, first contact resolution, average handle time, and customer effort score. Each one measures a different aspect of service quality.

Use QA to ensure consistency. Review a sample of tickets each week, score them against your quality standards, and share feedback with agents. QA also helps you identify coaching opportunities and process gaps.

Don't just track metrics — act on them. If CSAT drops, dig into the root cause. If AHT spikes, look for process inefficiencies or knowledge gaps.

KPI

Definition

CSAT

Measures customer satisfaction with a specific interaction

NPS

Measures customer loyalty and likelihood to recommend

FCR

Percentage of tickets resolved on first contact

AHT

Average time spent on each ticket or call

CES

Measures how easy it was for customers to get help

Time-to-resolution

Average time from ticket creation to closure

SMART goals and VoC loop

Set specific, measurable goals using the SMART framework: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Time-bound. Instead of "improve CSAT," aim for "increase CSAT from 85% to 90% by end of quarter."

VoC (voice of customer) programs capture feedback from multiple sources: post-interaction surveys, social media, review sites, and support ticket analysis. The goal is to understand what customers really think and feel.

Close the loop by acting on feedback. If customers complain about slow response times, prioritize speed. If they mention confusing policies, update your Help Center. VoC is only valuable if you use it to drive change.

VoC feedback sources:

  • Post-interaction surveys
  • Social media monitoring
  • Review sites
  • Support ticket analysis
  • Customer interviews

See how Gorgias helps ecommerce brands implement these strategies at scale. Our platform centralizes customer interactions, automates repetitive work, and gives your team the context they need to deliver personalized support.

Book a demo to learn more.

{{lead-magnet-2}}

Repeat Customer Rate

Repeat Customer Rate: Your Guide to Track & Improve the Metric

By Megan Wenzl
8 min read.
0 min read . By Megan Wenzl

Written in partnership with Okendo

Repeat customers are a revenue-boosting engine in the world of ecommerce. 

According to data from Gorgias’s merchants, repeat customers generate 300% more revenue than first-time customers. The small act of winning back a customer has a huge impact on your brand.

That’s why it's important for brands to understand repeat customer rate (RCR), or the percentage of customers who shop with your brand beyond a one-time transaction. 

In this article, you’ll learn how to track and measure repeat customer rate for your brand, along with tips to boost purchase frequency and improve RCR among your shoppers. 

Repeat customers generate 300% more revenue than first-time customers

What is repeat customer rate?

Repeat customer rate (RCR) is a key metric used by retailers to measure the percentage of shoppers who make multiple transactions over their customer lifetime. 

In ecommerce marketing, you may see this metric go by a few other names, including returning customer rate, customer retention rate, or repeat purchase rate. 

Why winning repeat customers is so critical in ecommerce

If you want a major revenue win for your brand, look no further than your own customer base. 

The benchmarks for a typical RCR vary by market, but data collected from Gorgias's 12,000+ merchants shows that repeat customers account for only 21% of customers but generate 44% of revenue and 46% of orders. 

Repeat customers can give you more revenue than new customers.

If that wasn’t compelling enough, retaining an existing customer is five times less expensive for a brand than finding a new customer. 

📚 Recommended reading: 25 customer support metrics to measure your team’s impact & how to calculate

First-time shoppers have a higher acquisition cost than retaining loyal customers

{{lead-magnet-1}}

What drives repeat customer rate?

To entice customers to come back, brands work to provide incredible experiences throughout a customer’s entire journey.


“My biggest piece of advice is to really understand the customer journey for your business,” says Bri Christiano, Director of Customer Support at Gorgias. “Which touchpoints are going to drive the most revenue?”

For online stores, customer support acts as a vital touchpoint. Build an iron-clad retention strategy, and you’ll see customer satisfaction soar, including boosted conversion rates and repeat business. 

How to calculate repeat customer rate

Repeat customer rate is very simple to calculate, but getting started takes a little pre-work. 

To calculate RCR, you first need to track the number of repeat customers you have over a specific time period. 

Of course, this can be done manually by combing through transactional data, but it would mean days of looking through customer information with a fine-tooth comb. Plus, since customer data is always coming in, you might never see the full picture.

A helpdesk like Gorgias can automatically find repeat customer data for you so you can focus your energy on ways to improve your RCR. 

Once you’ve collected your returning customers, divide the number of repeat customers by your total number of customers. Then, multiply that number by 100. 

The formula for RCR looks like:

(Total repeat customers / total paying customers) x 100 = RCR

Here’s what calculating RCR looks like using real numbers:

(80 repeat customers / 230 paying customers) x 100 = 34.78%

What is a “good” repeat customer rate in ecommerce? 

Like many customer support metrics, there’s no specific benchmark for a “good” repeat customer rate. Ultimately, it all comes down to your brand’s goals, along with factors like industry, audience needs, and the size of your ecommerce business.

The key to returning customer rate is to strike a balance between customer acquisition of new shoppers and re-engaging with existing customers. 

Based on Gorgias’s own first-party data with our merchants, we estimate that a 20% increase in customer base can boost your brand’s revenue by 6%. 

RCR works well in tandem with a few other metrics to determine the actual value of your marketing efforts: 

  • Customer Lifetime Value (CLV): How much money a customer will likely spend on your products over a specific timeframe. 
  • Customer Acquisition Costs (CAC): How much it costs your brand to obtain a new customer versus retaining existing ones. 
  • Average Order Value (AOV): The amount of money your customers spend per transaction. 
  • Churn Rate: The percentage of customers your brand loses over time.  

6 steps to improve your repeat customer rate

In a recent study, HubSpot found that 93% of customers were more likely to become repeat customers with brands they believe have excellent customer service.

What characterizes excellent customer service? These days, it’s personalization that incentivizes customers to keep coming back. 

Let’s look at six tried-and-true steps to create a positive, personalized shopping experience that will encourage your customers to return for more. 

1) Build a strong post-sales experience

A customer’s journey doesn’t end when they click checkout. 

The post-sales, or post-purchase, experience is a prime moment to keep a customer thinking about your brand or products long-term. 

Post-sales can also lead to better brand trust, a critical factor in gaining loyal customers. Bri says, “You're catching that person at a point where they're feeling really energized about the brand.”

The customer service team at TUSHY realized a post-sales strategy was exactly what they needed to close a knowledge gap around their bidets. They found customers who bought a bidet needed help understanding how to install them.

TUSHY post-purchase email

Reps were able to communicate with customers that installing a TUSHY bidet wasn’t a major plumbing project by creating an omnichannel support strategy with email, social media, SMS, live chat, FAQs, and a robust Help Center.  

2) Reduce response times

We noticed an interesting customer service trend: 90% of US customers say an immediate customer service response is “important” or “very important.” 

To give your customers a near-instant response, consider these ideas that not only boost customer satisfaction but can reduce the load on your support team. 

Automate repetitive questions

According to McKinsey, 71% of shoppers want personalized interactions with support teams, and 76% are frustrated when they don’t receive one.  

But a team stuck repeating return policies or tracking down orders doesn’t have much time to personalize a well-thought-out response.  

Gorgias Automate can help deflect up to 60% of your chat ticket volume by automating responses to repetitive questions. It works by sending personalized answers to customers based on their unique Shopify data.

Use a helpdesk to prioritize tickets 

You never want to leave a frustrated customer waiting. A helpdesk like Gorgias can automatically assign priority levels to your incoming tickets so agents know exactly which tickets to respond to first. 

Quickly resolving a frustrated customer’s problem could be just the thing to turn the negative interaction into a positive one that makes the customer want to come back again. 

Low, medium, and high-priority support tickets

Drive support traffic to your preferred channels

Customers prefer to have multiple ways to get in touch with your support team. However, some channels have longer response times than others. 

Customers who send a support request via email might fear their problem is lost in the void. Use slower channels as a springboard to push customers to faster channels, like SMS or Live Chat.

Example of an email directing customers to faster channels.

📚 Recommended reading: First response time: your guide to understand + lower the metric

3) Collect customer feedback 

Customer feedback is your golden ticket to creating great experiences that encourage repeat shopping. 

Customers have high expectations for brands these days — and without customer feedback, you’re stuck in the dark about how to meet those expectations. 

Here are a few ideas for your team to collect customer feedback and improve your brand experience: 

  • Monitor customer reviews to find out what actual customers are saying about you. Gorgias customers can manage reviews by integrating with Yotopo, which allows users to track and respond to reviews in a central space. If the feedback you see is positive, that’s a sign your team is in the right direction. If it’s negative, use the feedback to look for areas of improvement.

  • Send out surveys to shoppers using a customer marketing platform like Okendo. CSAT helps gather general customer satisfaction. Likewise, you can offer an NPS survey to determine how likely customers would recommend your brand to their friends.

  • Build questions into your customer support scripts so agents can talk directly to customers about their experience. Your agents can find out if there are any gaps in the customer journey or reasons why the customer had a negative experience.

  • Implement a customer feedback loop to tie your tactics into a cohesive strategy. 

4) Create loyalty programs

Customer loyalty programs encourage customers to stay engaged with your brand after their initial purchase — which can dramatically boost your repeat customer rate. 

A loyalty program works by rewarding customers for shopping with your brand and incentivizing them to want to come back. It also shows your customers that you value the relationship. 

Consider also offering incentive-based referral programs to reward customers for sharing your brand and products with their friends. 

Software solutions such as Smile.io and LoyaltyLion make it incredibly easy to build a customer loyalty program from the ground up. Best of all, these options both integrate with Gorgias to pull loyalty customer data into your helpdesk. 

5) Offer discounts

So many people hear the word “discount” and get scared for their bottom line. In reality, a sale or deal is just the thing to sweeten the pot and entice a customer to return for more. 

That’s because a discount creates the perception of value in the hearts and minds of your customers. Remember how often you offer a deal since many customers will only buy with a discount.

A helpdesk, like Gorgias, can help you automate the process of giving a discount once you pinpoint great moments to offer them to customers. 

  • Add a discount to your confirmation email to send to customers who recently completed a transaction. 
  • Leverage SMS messaging to send a small discount to customers who purchased in the last month. 
  • Use live chat to message a customer who added an item to their carts but moved it to “saved for later” or outright deleted it. 

Find out what went wrong, offer a new product recommendation, and a small discount to entice the customer to return to their cart and complete a new transaction. 

6) Upsell and cross-sell relevant products

For ecommerce brands, upselling is a tactic to encourage customers to purchase a higher-priced item instead of the one they initially selected. 

At its simplest, it’s a way to convince a customer to spend more money on an item.

An example of upselling starting with a basic camera and a higher-end model.

Cross-selling is a similar sales tactic where you can strategically recommend add-ons related to whatever the customer has put in their cart. 

An example of cross-selling starting with a camera which can lead to film and battery sales.

With upselling and cross-selling, the goal is the same: create higher ticket value, encourage greater sales, and improve customer satisfaction.  

Okendo recently launched a feature called Quizzes to provide personalized shopping experiences. 

With Quizzes, brands can ask their shoppers questions to make product recommendations and help customers make fast purchasing decisions.

Invest in a helpdesk to win more repeat customers

You could spend hours scrolling through transaction lines, physically track repeat customers, and manually build marketing campaigns to follow up with customers. 

Or, invest in a helpdesk to automate these processes for you. That way, you can focus on building a customer experience that incentivizes customers to shop beyond their first purchase. 

Ready to learn how to optimize your returning customer rate and maximize your company’s bottom line? Check out our CX growth playbook, a free resource that dives into:

  • 18 tactics to boost profitability by 44%
  • 25+ interviews with top ecommerce stores
  • Analysis of +12,000 Gorgias customers.

{{lead-magnet-2}}

Black Friday–Cyber Monday: Automation

How to Prep for Peak Season: BFCM Automation Checklist

By Christelle Agustin
19 min read.
0 min read . By Christelle Agustin

TL;DR:

  • Start by cleaning up your Help Center. Update your articles based on last year’s data, using plain language and clear policy details to boost self-service.
  • Use automations to streamline ticket routing and support efficiency. Set rules for tagging, escalation, and inbox views, so your team can respond faster.
  • Prep your macros, AI, and staffing plan in advance. Build responses for top FAQs, train AI on the right sources, and forecast agent needs to avoid burnout.
  • Automate logistics, upselling, and QA to stay ahead. From showing shipping timelines to flagging low-quality responses, automation ensures smooth operations and more revenue during peak season.

Getting ready for that yearly ticket surge isn’t only about activating every automation feature on your helpdesk, it’s about increasing efficiency across your entire support operations.

This year, we’re giving you one less thing to worry about with our 2025 BFCM automation guide. Whether your team needs a tidier Help Center or better ticket routing rules, we’ve got a checklist for every area of the customer experience brought to you by top industry players, including ShipBob, Loop Returns, TalentPop, and more. 

{{lead-magnet-1}}

2025 BFCM automation checklist

  • Tidy up your Help Center
    • Audit your docs
    • Review last year’s BFCM data to find your must-have articles
    • Update your policy details
    • Edit content using easy-to-understand language
  • Expedite your ticket routing automations
    • Set up automated ticket tags
    • Create an inbox view for each category
    • Set escalation rules for urgent tickets
    • Set up mandatory Ticket Fields
  • Prep your macros and AI agent
    • Write macros for your top FAQs
    • Train your AI on the right sources
    • Define the limits of what AI should handle
  • Forecast your BFCM staffing needs
    • Use ticket volume to estimate the number of agents
    • Plan extra coverage with automation or outsourcing
    • Run agent training sessions on BFCM protocols
  • Map out your logistics processes
    • Negotiate better rates and processing efficiencies
    • Automate inventory reorder points
    • Build contingency plans for disruptions
    • Show shipping timelines on product pages
  • Maximize profits with upselling automations
    • Guide shoppers with smart recommendations
    • Suggest alternatives when items are out of stock
    • Engage hesitant shoppers with winback discounts
  • Keep support quality high with QA automations
    • Automate ticket reviews with AI-powered QA
    • Track both agent and AI responses
    • Turn QA insights into coaching opportunities

Tidy up your Help Center

Your customer knowledge base, FAQs, or Help Center is a valuable hub of answers for customers’ most asked questions. For those who prefer to self-serve, it’s one of the first resources they visit. To ensure customers get accurate answers, do the following:

  • Audit your docs
  • Review last year’s BFCM data to find your must-have articles
  • Update your policy details
  • Edit content using easy-to-understand language

1. Audit your docs

Take stock of what’s currently in your database. Are you still displaying low-engagement or unhelpful articles? Are articles about discontinued products still up? Start by removing outdated content first, and then decide which articles to keep from there.

Related: How to refresh your Help Center: A step-by-step guide

2. Review last year’s BFCM data to find your must-have articles

Are you missing key topics, or don’t have a database yet? Look at last year’s tickets. What were customers’ top concerns? Were customers always asking about returns? Was there an uptick in free shipping questions? If an inquiry repeats itself, it’s a sign to add it to your Help Center.

3. Update your policy details 

An influx of customers means more people using your shipping, returns, exchanges, and discount policies. Make sure these have accurate information about eligibility, conditions, and grace periods, so your customers have one reliable source of truth.

Personalization tip: Loop Returns advises adjusting your return policy for different return reasons. With Loop’s Workflows, you can automatically determine which customers and which return reasons should get which return policies. 

Read more: Store policies by industry, explained: What to include for every vertical

4. Edit content using easy-to-understand language

Customers want fast answers, so ensure your docs are easy to read and understand. Titles and answers should be clear. Avoid technical jargon and stick to simple sentences that express one idea. To accelerate the process, use AI tools like Grammarly and ChatGPT. 

No time to set up a Help Center? Gorgias automatically generates Help Center articles for you based on what people are asking in your inbox.

Princess Polly Help Center
Princess Polly’s Help Center is powered by Gorgias.

Expedite your ticket routing automations

Think of ticket routing like running a city. Cars are your tickets (and customers), roads are your inboxes, and traffic lights are your automations and rules. The better you maintain these structures, the better they can run on their own without needing constant repairs from your CX team. 

Here’s your ticket routing automation checklist:

  • Tag every ticket
  • Create views for each category you need (VIP, Returns, Troubleshooting, etc.)
  • Set escalation rules for urgent tickets
  • Set up mandatory Ticket Fields 

1. Set up automated ticket tags

Instead of asking agents to tag every ticket, set rules that apply tags based on keywords, order details, or message type. A good starting point is to tag tickets by order status, returns, refunds, VIP customers, and urgent issues so your team can prioritize quickly.

Luckily, many helpdesks offer AI-powered tags or contact reasons to reduce manual work. For example, Gorgias automatically detects a ticket’s Contact Reason. The system learns from past interactions, tagging your tickets with more accuracy each time.

Rule that auto tags tickets with "VIP" when customers have spent $1,000+ and ordered 3+ times
This rule auto-tags tickets with “VIP” when customers have spent $1,000 and have ordered more than three times.

2. Create an inbox view for each category

Custom or filtered inbox views give your agents a filtered and focused workspace. Start with essential views like VIP customers, returns, and damages, then add specialized views that match how your team works.

If you’re using conversational AI to answer tickets, views become even more powerful. For example, you might track low CSAT tickets to catch where AI responses fall short or high handover rates to identify AI knowledge gaps. The goal is to reduce clutter so agents can focus on delivering support.

3. Set escalation rules for urgent tickets

Don’t get bogged down in minor issues while urgent tickets sit unanswered. Escalation rules make sure urgent cases are pushed to the top of your inbox, so they don’t risk revenue or lead to unhappy customers. 

Tickets to escalate to agents or specialized queues: 

  • Lost packages
  • Damaged items
  • Defective items
  • Failed payments
  • Open tickets without a follow-up

4. Set up mandatory Ticket Fields to get data right off the bat

Ticket Fields add structure by requiring your team to capture key data before closing a ticket. For BFCM, make fields like Contact Reason, Resolution, and Return Reason mandatory so you always know why customers reached out and how the issue was resolved.

For CX leads, Ticket Fields removes guesswork. Instead of sifting through tickets one by one, you’ll have clean data to spot trends, report on sales drivers, and train your team.

Pro Tip: Use conditional fields to dig deeper without overwhelming agents. For example, if the contact reason is “Return,” automatically prompt the agent to log the return reason or product defect.

Prep your macros and AI agent

Macros and AI Agent are your frontline during BFCM. When prepped properly, they can clear hundreds of repetitive tickets. The key is to ensure that answers are accurate, up-to-date, and aligned with what you want AI to handle.

  • Write macros for your most common FAQs
  • Train your AI on the right sources
  • Define the limits of what AI should handle

1. Write macros for your top FAQs

Customers will flood your inbox with the same questions: “Where’s my order?” “When will my discount apply?” “What’s your return policy?” Write macros that give short, direct answers up front, include links for details, and use placeholders for personalization. 

Bad macro:

  • “You can track your order with the tracking link. It should update soon.”

Good macro:

  •  “Hi {{customer_firstname}}, you can track your order here: {{tracking_link}}. Tracking updates may take up to 24 hours to appear. Here’s our shipping policy: [Help Center link].”

Pro Tip: Customers expect deep discounts this time of year. BPO agency C(x)atalyze recommends automating responses to these inquiries with Gorgias Rules. Include words such as “discount” AND “BFCM”, “holiday”, “Thanksgiving”, “Black Friday”, “Christmas”, etc.

2. Train your AI on the right sources

AI is only as good as the information you feed it. Before BFCM, make sure it’s pulling from:

  • Your Help Center with updated FAQs and policies
  • Internal docs on return windows, promos, and shipping cutoffs
  • Product catalogs with the latest details and stock info
  • BFCM-specific resources like discount terms or extended support hours

Double-check a few responses in Test Mode to confirm the AI is pulling the right information.

How Gorgias AI Agent works: Guidance, knowledge, and Actions
Gorgias AI Agent uses Guidance (your instructions) and knowledge sources in order to perform actions and craft responses.

3. Define the limits of what AI should handle

Edge cases and urgent questions need a human touch, not an automated reply. Keep AI focused on quick requests like order status, shipping timelines, or promo eligibility. Complex issues, like defective products, VIP complaints, and returns, can directly go to your agents.

Pro Tip: In Gorgias AI Agent settings, you can customize how handovers happen on Chat during business hours and after hours. 

Forecast your BFCM staffing needs

Too few agents and you prolong wait times and miss sales. Too many and you’ll leave your team burned out. Capacity planning helps you find the balance to handle the BFCM surge.

1. Use ticket volume to estimate the number of agents

Use your ticket-to-order ratio from last year as a baseline, then apply it to this year’s forecast. Compare that number against what your team can realistically handle per shift to see if your current staffing plan holds up.

Read more: How to forecast customer service hiring needs ahead of BFCM

2. Plan extra coverage with automation or outsourcing

You still have options if you don’t have enough agents helping you out. Customer service agency TalentPop recommends starting by identifying where coverage will fall short, whether that’s evenings, weekends, or specific channels. Then decide whether to increase automation and AI use or bring in temporary assistance. 

3. Run agent training sessions on BFCM protocols

Before the holiday season, run refreshers on new products, promos, and policy changes so no one hesitates when the tickets roll in. Pair training with cheat sheets or an internal knowledge base, giving your team quick access to the answers they’ll need most often.

Map out your logistics processes

Expect late shipments, low inventory, and more returns than usual during peak season. With the proper logistics automations, you can stay ahead of these issues while reducing pressure on your team. 

ShipBob and Loop recommend the following steps:

  • Negotiate better rates and processing efficiencies
  • Automate your reverse logistics
  • Connect your store, 3PL, and WMS
  • Automate inventory reorder points
  • Show shipping timelines on product pages

1. Negotiate better rates and processing efficiencies

Shipping costs add up fast during peak season. Work with your 3PL or partners like Loop Returns to take advantage of negotiated carrier rates and rate shopping tools that automatically select the most cost-effective option for each order.

2. Automate inventory reorder points

To maintain a steady supply of products, set automatic reorder points at the SKU level so reorders are triggered once inventory dips below a threshold. More lead time means fewer ‘out of stock’ surprises for your customers.

3. Build contingency plans for disruptions

Bad weather, delays, or unexpected demand can disrupt shipping timelines. Create a playbook in advance so your team knows exactly how to respond when things go sideways. At minimum, your plan should cover:

  • Weather disruptions - Do you have a backup plan if carriers can’t pick up shipments due to storms or severe conditions?
  • Carrier overloads - Which alternative carriers or routes can you switch to if primary partners are at capacity?
  • Inventory shortages - How will you handle overselling, low stock alerts, or warehouse imbalances?
  • Demand drop-offs - How will you reallocate inventory if BFCM sales don’t match forecasts?

4. Show shipping timelines on product pages

Customers want to know when their order will arrive before they hit checkout. Add estimated delivery dates and 2-day shipping badges directly on product pages. These cues help shoppers make confident decisions and reduce pre-purchase questions about shipping times.

Pro Tip: To keep those timelines accurate, build carrier cutoff dates into your Black Friday logistics workflows with your 3PL or fulfillment team. This allows you to avoid promising delivery windows your carriers can’t meet during peak season.

Maximize profits with upselling automations

You’ve handled the basics, from ticket routing to staffing and logistics. Now it’s time to go beyond survival. Upselling automations create an end-to-end experience that enhances the customer journey, shows them products they’ll love, and makes it easy to buy more with confidence. To put them to work:

  • Guide shoppers with smart recommendations
  • Suggest alternatives when items are out of stock
  • Engage hesitant shoppers with winback discounts

1. Guide shoppers with smart recommendations

BFCM puts pressure on customers to find the right deal fast, but many don’t know what they’re looking for. Make it easier for them with macros that point shoppers to bestsellers or curated bundles. For a more advanced option, conversational AI like Gorgias Shopping Assistant can guide browsers on their own, even when your agents are offline.

2. Suggest alternatives when items are out of stock

No need to damage your conversion rate just because customers missed the items they wanted. Automations can recommend similar or complementary products, keeping customers engaged rather than leaving them empty-handed.

If an item is sold out, set up automations to:

  • Suggest similar items like another size, color, or variation of the same product.
  • Highlight premium upgrades such as a newer model or higher-value version that’s in stock.
  • Cross-sell and offer bundles to keep the order valuable even without the original item.
  • Notify customers about restocks by letting shoppers sign up for back-in-stock alerts.

3. Engage hesitant customers with winback discounts

Automations can detect hesitation through signals like abandoned carts, long checkout times, or even customer messages that mention keywords such as “too expensive” or “I’ll think about it.” In these cases, trigger a small discount to encourage the purchase.

You can take this a step further with conversational AI like Gorgias Shopping Assistant, which detects intent in real time. If a shopper seems uncertain, it can proactively offer a discount code based on the level of their buying intent.

Keep support quality high with QA automations

During BFCM, speed alone is not enough. Customers expect accurate, helpful, and on-brand responses, even when volume is at its highest. QA automations help you prioritize quality by reviewing every interaction automatically and flagging where standards are slipping. To make QA part of your automation prep:

  • Automate ticket reviews with AI-powered QA
  • Track both agent and AI responses
  • Turn QA insights into coaching opportunities

1. Automate ticket reviews with AI-powered QA

Manual QA can only spot-check a small sample of tickets, which means most interactions go unreviewed. AI QA reviews every ticket automatically and delivers feedback instantly. This ensures consistent quality, even when your team is flooded with requests.

Compared to manual QA, AI QA offers:

  • Full coverage: Every ticket is reviewed, not just a sample.
  • Instant feedback: Agents get insights right after closing tickets.
  • Consistency: Reviews are unbiased and use the same criteria across all interactions.
  • Scalability: Works at any ticket volume without slowing down your team.
Manual QA vs. AI-powered QA
AI-powered QA helps you review more tickets at a higher quality in comparison to manual QA. 

2. Track both agent and AI responses

Customers should get the same level of quality no matter who replies. AI QA evaluates both human and AI conversations using the same criteria. This creates a fair standard and gives you confidence that every interaction meets your brand’s bar for quality.

3. Turn QA insights into coaching opportunities

QA automation is not just about grading tickets. It highlights recurring issues, unclear workflows, or policy confusion. Use these insights to guide targeted coaching sessions and refine AI guidance so both humans and AI deliver better results.

Pro Tip: Pilot your AI QA tool with a small group of agents before peak season. This lets you validate feedback quality and scale with confidence when BFCM volume hits.

Give your ecommerce strategy a boost this holiday shopping season

The name of the game this Black Friday-Cyber Monday isn’t just to get a ton of online sales, it’s to set up your site for a successful holiday shopping season. 

If you want to move the meter, focus on setting up strong BFCM automation flows now. 

Gorgias is designed with ecommerce merchants in mind. Find out how Gorgias’s time-saving CX platform can help you create BFCM success. Book a demo today.

{{lead-magnet-2}}

Customer Service vs Customer Experience Vs Customer Support

How TUSHY Approaches Customer Service vs. Customer Experience

By Ren Fuller-Wasserman
11 min read.
0 min read . By Ren Fuller-Wasserman

Every business has to have customer service. But what makes an experience memorable versus just functional means imbuing every customer interaction with magic. 

I’m Ren Fuller-Wasserman, the Director of Experience at TUSHY. At TUSHY, our end goal is to have everyone using bidets — and that means it’s crucial for our team of Poo-Rus (our customer service reps who are poop gurus!) to make people feel comfortable enough to talk about what they would never dare — bathroom hygiene.

On paper, customer service and customer experience may have different definitions, but ecommerce founders need to know that they’re inseparable when crafting long-lasting relationships with customers.   

How customer service and customer experience intersect

When you build customers a world that intertwines both customer service and customer experience, you have a higher chance of aligning them with your brand mission and converting them into loyal amb-ass-adors.

What is customer service?

Customer service is the functional side of interacting with customers and addressing customer needs. It is assistance that can be managed by service agents or automation, like a one-on-one conversation on email or an automated conversation through an AI chatbot or self-service options on your website.

There are several ways to evaluate your customer support program, like response time or keeping track of how many customer service interactions it takes to resolve an issue, or what’s called a Customer Effort Score (CES).

Where does customer experience come in? 

If you think of customer service as the reception of an establishment, it’s necessary, essential, and expected. Customer experience is all the welcoming perks, extra treats, your favorite corner table with your name on it, and fancy decorations that take the rating of an establishment from three stars to five.

In short, customer experience comes down to how a customer feels after interacting with your brand — and what will bring them back again and again. It includes every interaction a customer has with you, from seeing an ad and liking a post on your social media, to browsing your website and receiving the product on their doorstep. 

You want each experience to mimic your brand’s core values. At TUSHY, we want our customers to experience magic and delight at all touchpoints. 

Customer experience is usually quantified by customer perception of your brand, using metrics such as a Net Promoter Score (NPS) or Customer Satisfaction Score (CSAT).

{{lead-magnet-1}}

5 ways to blend customer service with customer experience

Below are five ways our CX team wraps customer service in a nicely packaged experience with the help of Gorgias. We’ll look at how we build an exceptional experience with a chat widget, the right tone, omnichannel support, a proactive attitude, and a consistent experience across all platforms.

➡️ See our posts on why customer service is important and how to improve customer service

1. Anticipate customer needs with automated chat conversations

Customer and agent conversations are where we see the most friction, which is why it's crucial to pad it with a customer experience that can make customers feel taken care of right off the bat.

Often, the first tickets we get from new TUSHY customers are about bidet installation and usage. To prepare for these inquiries, we use Flows, or pre-configured conversations, to customize our chat widget to include an “I need help with installation!” button. In a couple of clicks, customers can watch our video tutorials to install their TUSHY product on their own.

TUSHY
TUSHY’s Gorgias-powered chat widget checks off customer care by allowing customers to talk to a live agent or get quick answers to commonly asked questions.

Customer service isn’t only about getting an agent in front of a customer. It’s also about finding the most convenient ways to get an answer to your customer with the least amount of obstacles. Changing culture is hard, so we want to make it as easy as possible for customers to learn more about bidets.

🚽 Where customer service comes in: Agents identify and anticipate the customer issue.

🚽 Where customer experience comes in: An easily accessible chat widget on the homepage offers one-click answers to the appropriate issue. 

2. Find the right tone for customers

While TUSHY is known for its cheeky brand voice, we turn it down a notch when it comes to answering customer tickets. Customer interactions about a bidet can get pretty intimate and we want people to know we’re trustworthy and have their backs (and bottoms).

Gorgias Customer Sidebar view
You can view the Customer Sidebar within each ticket for a quick look at a customer’s information.

The Customer Sidebar on Gorgias is helpful in adjusting our tone for each customer since customers don’t always speak to the same Poo-Ru. When a different Poo-Ru gets assigned to an existing customer, they can find the customer’s order history, location, and personal notes from the sidebar and use the right tone to naturally continue the conversation.

We once even had a mother tell us how using TUSHY helped her daughter deal with threadworms! When we put effort into building relationships, customers feel comfortable enough to tell us even the most personal details, and we often learn new things about how our customers interact with our product that we might not have even considered.

🚽 Where customer service comes in: Agents adjust their voice and tone depending on the customer.

🚽 Where customer experience comes in: Conversations are continuous and don’t have to restart with every interaction, allowing customers to feel valued and heard.

3. Provide multiple avenues of support at post-purchase

We pay close attention to the post-purchase stage for two reasons: to make sure customers are educated and satisfied.

To ensure our customers are confident with their new bidets, we educate them through Gorgias omnichannel support or support through channels like email, SMS, live chat, FAQs, and our Help Center.

Through these channels, we manage customer expectations by letting them know that installing a bidet isn’t actually a major plumbing project. Our comprehensive TUSHY Support Center covers everything from order management and installation videos, to our rewards program and fun fact articles about our eco-conscious efforts.

TUSHY
The TUSHY Support Center is made with Gorgias and makes the online customer experience helpful without agent intervention.

🚽 Where customer service comes in: Provides your customer base with multiple support channels to reach them where they are.

🚽 Where customer experience comes in: Customer conversations are continuous and streamlined with Gorgias’s omnichannel support feature.

📚 Related reading: How omnichannel communication can drive revenue & boost customer loyalty

4. Foster a proactive team unafraid to talk to customers during slip-ups

Our TUSHY CX crew is a deeply empathetic bunch who truly care about being of service to people even when slip-ups happen. That means we don’t just fix pain points in the customer journey, we encourage our Poo-Rus to be proactive and reach out to the affected customers.

We’re fervent believers that even the worst customer experiences are actually opportunities ripe for the Poo-Rus to convert into meaningful customer interactions, experiences where we can show a customer that we’re truly listening and have heard their concerns. We can’t always solve every problem, but our customers knowing that they have a real live pooping human supporting them through their woes has been invaluable in building lifelong product and brand relationships.

If you can believe it, multiple customers have sent us photos after devastating house fires, showing the TUSHY still intact but needing a replacement part or two. We respond by sending them the full suite of TUSHY products, including our now famous “Ask me about my butthole.” shirts. This small gesture can mean so much in this time of need, and it’s the least we can do!

These are the great customer experiences, coupled with support, that define our brand.

By creating an environment that motivates agents to be creative and empathetic problem-solvers, maintaining customer retention becomes a breeze.

🚽 Where customer service comes in: Agents engage in proactive customer service to listen to customers.

🚽 Where customer experience comes in: Customers feel heard knowing their opinion will be directly applied to how customer service will run in the future.

💡 Pro Tip: Team-building is integral to keeping your customer service team aligned and thriving. At TUSHY, we have a monthly space called TUSHY Gang where we engage in group activities to build stronger bonds with each other, and for our remote team this has made our CX game even stronger. Investing in our team has been a valuable way to invest in our customers — we’ve seen how when they feel cared for they always want to pass this along! 

5. Continue the customer experience across all platforms and mediums

Some customers purchase TUSHY outside of our website, like Amazon or Walmart, which can make it challenging for us to provide a uniform customer experience.

The TUSHY Classic 3.0 Bidet on Amazon.
The TUSHY Classic 3.0 Bidet on Amazon. 

We realized that the common touchpoint for all customers regardless of their entry point is the unboxing experience. Thus, the easiest way we would bring them into the TUSHY-verse would be right at their fingertips.

Here’s what we print on our packaging to bring customers closer to TUSHY:

  • A scannable QR code: Customers can access product registration, warranty activation, and a list of other resources with a quick scan of their phone. 
  • Our website: hellotushy.com is printed on the front flap of the box in big, clear text.
  • Our social media handles: Our username and the icons for each of our social media platforms on the front flap of the box.

The goal is to give customers just enough information but also make them curious enough to check us out and engage with us. If they dig in, there’s a wealth of bidet knowledge!

🚽 Where customer service comes in: The essential contact points like website and social media handles are included on the packaging.

🚽 Where customer experience comes in: We provide an uncomplicated unboxing experience with only the essential information customers need, and they can find more as needed without feeling overwhelmed. 

How TUSHY provides poo-rific post-purchase support

As we mentioned before, new customers often have problems with installation. Right after purchase, we see a drop-off when customers aren’t comfortable installing TUSHY. We uncovered this gap via user focus groups, return reports via Loop, Stella Connect reviews, NPS score ratings, and Okendo product reviews.

Our customers tend to get very excited when they learn about a bidet, and might pull the trigger on a purchase only to later discover they aren't ready to take on a small DIY project. It's pretty common for TUSHYs to sit in their box for weeks, months, or years before getting installed. So we're aiming to close that gap with more in your face installation guidance and instructions, so that TUSHYs aren't sitting in closets, but rather under butts delighting the customer!

To recapture customers who may need help, we make use of post-purchase SMS and emails (we use Klaviyo). In our messages, we make sure to give customers exactly what they need with a link to our YouTube video tutorials and our website for additional educational resources.

TUSHY
Need to trouble-poot? TUSHY sends post-purchase SMS and emails to recapture customers who may need help setting up their new TUSHY.

Go beyond the numbers and learn from customer feedback

Metrics are important, but they need the context that comes from customer feedback. That’s where insights from your agents who talk to customers day in and day out will be extremely beneficial.

For example, we noticed that a percentage of customers were returning their bidets, but we didn’t know why. So, we had a chat with 10 customers and took note of the challenges they were facing with our product and the improvements they wished to see in our service. Turns out, they simply didn’t want to go through the hassle of installation. 

Without taking the time to reach out to our customers, we wouldn’t have had the knowledge to fix a critical metric like churn rate.

Build unforgettable customer experiences with Gorgias

When you weave CX and CS together, the most memorable customer moments can happen. At TUSHY, we can attest to that. With the help of a customer-centric helpdesk like Gorgias backing our Poo-Rus, we’ve managed to make over tens of thousands of bums happy with our best-selling, five-star-rated Classic bidet.

Gorgias puts brands in the driver’s seat by championing personalized customer service. They let you customize everything from scheduled messages with Macros, interactive messages with Flows, and an educational hub with a Help Center.

From the overall customer experience, to customer support, and everything in between, Gorgias makes it easy for TUSHY users to feel supported through the entire customer journey. As a result, every touchpoint builds the potential to gather a mass of loyal customers.

📚 Related reading: How TUSHY influences 25% of sales with Gorgias Convert

All we had to do was refine our customer service experience and we got brand ambassadors. How amazing is that? If you’re looking to do the same, book a demo today.

{{lead-magnet-2}}

Types Of Customer Service

A Guide to All the Different Types of Customer Service Companies Need to Know

By Colin Waters
10 min read.
0 min read . By Colin Waters

I’m Colin Waters and I’m the Director of Customer Experience at The Feed. You might know me from my experience at BrüMate, where I was the Associate Director of Customer Experience. In three years, I worked my way up from answering tickets and being on the front line with customers to overseeing the entire customer experience team. 

My different roles have shown me the various ways to adapt your customer service to fit your team’s and customer’s needs.

In this article, I’ll walk you through the different types of customer service, support channels, strategies, and philosophies you can offer based on what your company requires.

3 types of customer service + when and how to use each

Customer service is kind of like a sandwich. You’ve got your bread or the necessary foundational elements like a great customer service strategy and philosophy, and then you’ve got your support channels which can be more varied and customizable, like the sandwich fillings.

We’ll start with support channels, which you can take care of first, and move onto the strategies and philosophies of customer service. Let’s get into it!

Channels

There are many different support channels out there. But instead of offering them all — which can actually harm your support team in the long run — take a look at your customer service responsibilities, resources, and business needs to figure out which channels make the most sense for you.

Here’s a rundown of the different support channels you can offer and what they’re best used for.

Email

Email is flexible in terms of the type of customer inquiries they’re best for (most of them!) and turnaround time, unlike more instantaneous and short-form support channels like live chat and social media.

Provide email support if…

  • Customer inquiries are lengthy and detailed. Email is best suited for comprehensive responses that can handle file attachments and additional resources like images, videos, and links.
  • Your operating hours are flexible. Customers can reach out to your support team outside of regular business hours, no matter their time zone.
  • You deal with sensitive issues. Email provides a private platform for discussing sensitive matters that customers might not want to share publicly.
  • You provide technical support. You can easily share resources like documents, videos, and screenshots in a continuous conversation that would be harder to do through other support channels like voice or social media.

Social media

Social media customer service is fairly new. However, as 26% of people learn about a product through social media, it’s a good idea to follow the trend and use your social media platforms to not only assist new customers, but take note of feedback. 

Provide social media support if…

  • You want to reach a younger audience. With Gen Z on apps like TikTok and Instagram, offering your presence and assistance where they are in their free time can boost exposure and conversions.
  • Your marketing strategy is social media-focused. Take advantage of the brand recognition you’re getting by personally connecting with followers and getting them closer to your brand.
  • Many of your brand mentions are on social media. Mentions are a fantastic way to build a connection with your followers and turn them into customers, exhibit how your brand prioritizes customer service, and collect criticisms to pass along to your team.
  • You have a product or service that’s going viral. Get excited with your customers, or provide important information like restock timing or shipping delays. 
When Instagram followers ask questions on our posts, we make sure to reply and keep responses conversational.

Live chat, chatbots & automation

If your main source of traffic comes from your company’s website, using live chat or chatbots can easily capture your customer inquiries and lessen the load for your team. Sometimes, however, chatbots may provide inconsistent answers — that’s when using automation to create templated conversations will be your best option.

Provide live chat, chatbots, and automation if…

  • You receive a lot of customer inquiries. A chat widget with automatic responses or a chatbot is one of the easiest ways to decrease tickets that contain the same inquiries. 
  • You’re a small team. With fewer hands on board, routing tickets to AI and automatic responses can keep your customer service reps focused on more complex issues. 
  • It’s the holiday season or peak hours. Getting a barrage of tickets, especially on Black Friday-Cyber Monday when most people are hunting for sales, can be a nightmare for customer service teams. Let a chat widget be your first line of defense.
  • You sell personal or specialized products. Think of products like skincare and health supplements when most of your consumers will need to divulge personal information to get the answers they need. With live chat, customers can resolve their worries with an empathetic agent on their side.
BrüMate’s Gorgias chat widget is automated with a Fit My Drink quiz, so customers can choose the best product for their lifestyle.

Help center

A help center (also referred to as a knowledge base) is a collection of self-service resources that customers and employees can use to resolve questions and issues. They can contain FAQs, troubleshooting guides, instruction manuals, video tutorials, and more. 

Provide a help center or knowledge base if…

  • You update or change your products regularly. If you release new versions of your products or services every year, a one-stop hub to update documents will be extremely helpful. 
  • You sell specialized products. If your products need additional explanation before using them, a knowledge base can answer all customer questions and curiosities.
  • You want to optimize your website for SEO. On top of being a helpful resource hub, a knowledge base can point eyes to your website. In turn, it earns your brand more exposure and new customers.
The BrüMate Help Center was created with Gorgias.

On BrüMate, our Help Center is made with Gorgias. It’s organized in sections like FAQs, shipping, and returns and exchanges which can be modified when our product lineup expands.

Voice, messaging & SMS

Voice support can still be an extremely valuable channel when you want to resolve tricky situations. In fact, 42% of Americans still prefer to resolve customer service issues via phone conversations.  

Provide voice support if…

  • You deal with technical and complex issues. Having a support agent empathize and understand a customer’s problems is crucial not only to boost customer satisfaction but also to lay out solutions in a clear way.
  • You serve customers internationally. Language barriers can make written communication difficult. With voice support, it can be easier to resolve issues when you can talk through instructions in real-time.
  • Your customer issues are time-sensitive. Offering phone support can give customers an option to resolve urgent issues within minutes, instead of waiting for an email or social media reply back.

{{lead-magnet-1}}

Strategies

Depending on your goals as a customer service team, there are a few strategies you can choose from. In my experience, employing a mix of strategies allows you to adapt to more types of customers, resulting in higher customer satisfaction. 

Let’s look at the four customer service strategies, omnichannel, proactive, self-service, and personalized. I’ll go through what they are, their purpose, how to employ them, and my experience with each strategy at BrüMate.

Omnichannel support

What is it? Omnichannel customer service is offering support on multiple channels to create a seamless customer service experience. 

Purpose: To make your support as accessible as possible, so all customers can reach you from whichever channel they prefer.

How to implement it: Use a helpdesk that can combine support channels. 

At BrüMate, we use Gorgias to combine all customer conversations in one tool. Our main channels are email, social media, and live chat. 

Using Gorgias as a single source of truth for all of our channels helps to ensure that our customers get consistent responses. And, it means that all messages from a customer, regardless of channel, are visible in one place and can be handled by the same agent.

Proactive support

What is it? Proactive customer service is an approach to customer service that anticipates customer needs and meets customer expectations.

Purpose: To lessen the effort customers need to make to find answers to their questions.

How to implement it: Monitor your most common customer tickets and implement resources in advance to avert future inquiries.

We work closely with our marketing and digital teams to deflect issues as they come in and solve them at the root. For example, based on customer feedback, we might add more details to our product pages, update language at checkout, or highlight specific reviews. 

Self-service support

What is it? Self-service support is a customer service approach that empowers customers to independently find solutions to their problems using available resources and tools.

Purpose: To speed up resolution time by allowing customers to find answers on their own without waiting for an agent.

How to implement it: Provide self-service options (like a Help Center, automated responses in chat, or ways to easily track orders) at all customer touchpoints, from pre-sales and product inquiries to order status emails and returns. 

On the BrüMate website, we display helpful self-service resources in the Gorgias chat widget so that it’s easy for folks to get the help they’re looking for quickly. 

We strategically show links for customers to check order status, get warranty or return information, or learn more about the products that would best fit their lifestyles. 

We also leverage this area to highlight new products or call out any major issues at the moment (i.e. preorders, shipping delays, etc.) and drive those back to more detailed help center articles and resources.

BrüMate’s chat widget displays helpful self-service resources like warranty and return information, or new product info. 

Personalized support

What is it? Personalized customer service focuses on personalizing customer interactions. 

Purpose: To enhance customer satisfaction by customizing interactions to each customer’s preferences and needs.

How to implement it: When interacting with customers, adjust to their voice, acknowledge their history, and suggest solutions relevant to their preferences.

A majority of the BrüMate customer base is female and, fittingly, the majority of our Customer Experience agents are female as well.. This takes empathy to a new level since our team knows exactly what our customers are going through, whether they’re a mom of three or a college student. We’re also big brand ambassadors which helps make the connection more individualized.

Philosophies

What are your priorities when it comes to customer service? Do you prioritize speed? Or would you rather go slow and build out from there? 

The way you approach customer service will dictate the overall customer experience. Like customer service strategies, your team can follow more than one philosophy. But make sure to pick one philosophy as your north star to create a clear path towards your goals.

Below are four customer service philosophies that can help establish brand loyalty.

Long-term foundation

Since BrüMate’s CX team is still pretty small, our core philosophy is to build a strong foundation. Delivering good customer service starts with making sure you’ve got all your bases covered, so you can prevent headaches along the way. Make it easy for the customer to find you early in their experience and that CX is a valuable resource along any point in their journey.

When I’m onboarding new agents, I want them to take their time learning our process. For instance, our team is very particular with naming conventions for ticket tags and Macros. While some will find it tedious, the upside is anybody could come in — agent or not — and start answering tickets without too much guidance.

The customer is (not) always right

As a customer service representative, it’s easy to realize that the customer is not always right. Products wear down over time, delays happen, and unpredictable changes come up. The goal is to prepare your team to handle difficult situations that still align with your brand’s values.

For example, I’ve had to deal with a customer being irritated because we couldn’t cancel an order a few hours after it was placed. From their point of view, cancellations should be a given. They were unaware of the complex behind-the-scenes process and that our team will start fulfilling an order immediately after it is placed. 

We started educating customers on our order fulfillment process and giving them insight on the reason the cancellation was no longer available. Fortunately, the context allowed them to cool down and forgive the inconvenience. We also provided them with options once the item was delivered.

Balancing human support & automation

Automation is handy for handling smaller customer hiccups. It’s important to note, though, that the best customer service balances automation with human touch. 

When customers reach out to the BrüMate support team, we try our best to keep them with the same agent until their ticket is resolved. This way, their experience with BrüMate is tied to a personal connection. On occasion, I have a few customers who I prefer to work directly with to resolve their issue to ensure they are satisfied with their experience. They are even willing to wait until I’ve returned from vacation due to this level of personalized touch.

Surprise and delight

The concept of "surprise and delight" is a philosophy that makes the customer experience unexpected but delightful. This can come in the form of exceptional, personal customer service (like at BrüMate!) or through gifts and discounts.

Our customer support team at BrüMate plays a pivotal role in building strong relationships. We like to turn the perception of customer service upside down and give customers a pleasant experience. It's an amazing thing to hear when customers mention our agents by name because we've gone above and beyond to build a connection with them.

Customer support as a revenue center 

Many people think of customer service teams as a way to resolve problems. I see our team as a marketing and revenue driving machine that can take it a step further by taking a sales approach. This means support’s main goals are to divert unsatisfied customers by using methods of upselling and cross-selling.

Your team should be experts and help close orders. Incentive your team to be one part customer service and sales. I guarantee you’ll see results! 

With a help desk you can deliver support whenever, however, and wherever you need

Gorgias makes multitasking look like a breeze. Its simple user interface makes it easy for new and experienced agents to use. You can speak to multiple customers at one time across different channels and integrate with ecommerce tools like Shopify, Affirm, and Yotpo without leaving the window.

Take a look at what Gorgias has helped some of my other favorite CX brands do:

If you’re ready to join me and these other amazing companies using Gorgias, book a demo today.

{{lead-magnet-2}}

Building delightful customer interactions starts in your inbox

Registered! Get excited, some awesome content is on the way! 📨
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
A hand holds an envelope that has a webpage coming out of it next to stars and other webpages