Monday, June 9, 2014

SPi CLASS: Order for my Chaos? (Part I)

Recently my supervisor asked me to attend something with the innocuous name of SPi CLASS few years ago I would have been filled with apprehension: This has to be some kind of remedial class. Are they dissatisfied with my work?

But today I know that isn’t the case. My boss had put me in charge of the team for when he isn’t around, so it wasn’t a question of my abilities. The class, he assured, was preparation for when I and my teammates would be leading our own teams. To be honest, I would have been delighted to attend whether the class was remedial or not.

The reason for this is because our account was formed only two years ago. Thus, operations within the team tended to be a bit informal, to say the least. In the first few months we pretty much made stuff up as we went along. But as long as we fulfilled the client’s requests, then we were all right.

But even with our client expressing satisfaction with our work, something was definitely missing. It’s not enough to be doing the right thing when you don’t even know what it is you’re doing right. The reason was obvious: After all this time of flying by the seat of my pants, albeit successfully, I needed structure. To have a firm and definite direction would do wonders not only for my performance but for my self-confidence Therefore a formal class in developing one’s work performance looked attractive.

I did some digging around for information about this SPi CLASS. Scout out the terrain and all that. The idea of SPi CLASS began when the Training Solutions Group of SPi Global (Solutions, People, Innovation) was approached by PLDT’s Business Offices customer service in October of 2011. The aim was for the group (the name ‘SPi CLASS’ had not yet been born) to train the customer service department of PLDT to the point where its subscribers and clients would notice the improvement upon first contact with customer service representatives.

Recall how one business tattoos itself in customers’ consciousness the way they clap and cry out: Ready to serve! (See? You knew right away who it was.) Well, the signature gesture introduced to PLDT customer service was . . . the handshake! CS reps are trained to welcome people with a hearty handshake.

This made me pause. Really now? A handshake?  Cynic that I am, I wondered if this was one of those voodoo rituals that seminars like to spout, like mindlessly repeating some mantra before a mirror. But the trainers go on to explain that physical touch syncs the customer service rep’s mood with that of the customer’s and builds empathy, declaring: I’m ready for you!

Reinforcing this empathy is another innovation: The mirroring technique, where the rep subtly follows the customer’s actions. Sits when she sits, smile when she smiles, and so on. I must admit out of all the seminars I’ve attended, these were unheard-of techniques for me. Usually, a competency like ‘empathy’ was inculcated into trainees merely on the strength of the trainers’ persuasive powers in showing the importance of the concept, leaving the trainees to develop their own approach. But SPi CLASS’ practical techniques actually led the trainees to discover the importance of empathy on their own, that ‘Well, whaddaya you know’ moment, as it were (More impressive than an ‘aha’ moment.)

Long story short, PLDT was delighted. From an initial contract with the Training Solutions Group sessions for 200 Metro Manila employees, the arrangement grew to include several regional PLDT business offices.

As for SPi CLASS itself, it has its origin in the Leadership Seminar in 2011 led  by SPi Global’s President and CEO Maulik Parekh. Mindful of SPi’s vision to InSPire Success in the field of customer service, SPi’s Training and Development Team broke from its traditional role of keeping its expertise as an inhouse asset, instead sharing their success formula with other industries.

After the success of the PLDT project the program now called itself SPi CLASS and was formally launched in June of 2012. The commitment and dedication of the people behind SPi CLASS was proven by the manner in which they addressed the teething pains inevitable in any new project. The AVP of Training and Development had to fork over his own money to make an advance payment for venue rental.

SPi CLASS next conquest was a group of 22 customer service reps from NTT DOCOMO, Japan’s biggest mobile service provider.

Wait: 22 trainees?

But the more I thought of it, the more impressed I was. That SPi CLASS would endeavour to train such a small number speaks well both of the trainers’ dedication and the elite status of the chosen few trainees. I once trained small classes myself and learned that such groups cry out for individualized instruction. This was only apropos because the main thrust of this four-day SPi CLASS was establishing personal rapport with customers.

For sure, rapport is taught in just about every call center. Despite this, I am witness to many gaffes that make my ears curl. An agent may be facile in the language but  unaware of nuances like cultural sensitivity. For instance, once I encountered an agent preceding her repeated instructions to the customer with ‘I told you…’ which may come across as snippy to customers.

This is not unexpected when one considers that a regular call center training class covers a broad scope like technical, billing and so on, glossing over some other topics like rapport. But a specialized class would make trainees aware of competencies they had heretofore taken for granted.

After the NTT program, SPi CLASS took on a different direction. Rather than serving one company, they held an open workshop for 16 participants from eight different and diverse companies at a Makati hotel. Moreover, in addition to customer service the scope now included leadership and training.

This workshop must have been daunting, to say the least: eight different major business establishments with diverse needs. Instruction had to be all-encompassing, yet remain individualized, the strength of SPi CLASS.

The trainers thus had to think on their feet, tailoring the modules they used to the needs of not just each company but each individual.

Was it successful? Well, some of their clients, a major insurance company and one of the country’s largest telcos, want SPi CLASS to conduct sessions with their own employees.

After having done my research for this article, I wonder if I now possess the foreknowledge that the other participants do not, and how it would affect my attendance. Would that make me more demanding of SPi CLASS, testing the limits of their abilities? Regardless, I knew that I could only benefit from this.

My next section will deal with my personal experience in SPi CLASS.