My first article on this topic seemed to bring about a good number of discussions in various LinkedIn groups. So, I aggregated all of the comments across multiple LinkedIn group discussions, our web site and a few other sites where we post. There were 41 total responses and here’s what I found:
- The Customer Experience Management group comments clearly sided on there being a preference toward Americans: 67%,
- In the Customer Service Professionals group, the split was 50/50,
- And finally, in the Worldwide Contact Center Professionals group, 75% disagreed that American’s prefer American agents.
- Better overall employment screening.
- More training to the agent on products, processes, language and culture.
- Hiring individuals without an accent, or at least one that matches the locality of the customer.
So, in conclusion, I’m not alone in my past experiences and opinion of the matter. I do want to make it clear that an outstanding customer experience can be achieved regardless of where the agent is located or what language they speak. However, it is a growing debate that is gaining press in all forms (fall TV series), attention by the masses, and a move back to the U.S. by major organizations looking to increase their overall customer experience.