- Customer support
- Customer support software
- Live chat support
A 2024 guide to live chat support
Learn more about the benefits of live chat and how to use chat support services in your business.
By Tara Ramroop, Senior manager, content marketing
Last updated January 17, 2024
Customers want personalized service, but they don’t necessarily want to pick up the phone or wait for an email response.
An easy work-around? Live chat support.
This tool allows support reps to instantly respond to customers and add a human touch to issue resolutions. Support teams can also use conversation data to strengthen their service even further.
What is live chat support?
Live chat support is a way for customers to get help through instant messaging platforms. It happens on a 1:1 level, often via a company’s website.
Live chat can take a few forms. For example, it can be a proactive chat pop-up— think of a chat box appearing on your screen and asking if you need help. Clicking on it would connect you to a live agent.
Customers can also start a live chat when they’re in need. Many company sites include a button (usually on the bottom right of the web page) where customers can click to connect with an agent.
Live chat vs. messaging apps
Many messaging apps— such as WhatsApp or social-media DM—have gained ground as a support channels. It’s important to understand the difference between chat and messaging.
The primary difference is that live chat is session-based— once the conversation is over or you solve an issue, the conversational history disappears from the customer’s end.
On the other hand, messaging allows customers to view conversations at any time. This is because these exchanges happen in third-party channels, like Facebook chat or WhatsApp. Messaging enables customers to pick up the conversation at their convenience.
Benefits of live chat support
Live chat support has a lot going for it from both the customer’s and the business’s perspectives.
Live chat support strengthens the customer experience
Consumers expect support as quickly as possible. According to our 2020 Customer Experience Trends Report, twenty-eight percent of people expect a reply on chat in under five minutes. And our new Zendesk 2022 Customer Experience Trends Report shows that chat-based support requests increased by about 80% in 2020. This means expectations for quick service are at an all-time high.
“It’s instantaneous communication that doesn’t involve phone support tag,” says Jon Daniels, a technical support engineer at Zendesk.
Daniels says that live chat is one of the most thorough channels when it comes to context and data—next to email support. With live chat, you can really dig into the steps involved in an issue to get it resolved right then and there. Live chat enables companies to give customers what they want and boost brand experience.
Without live chat, customers who want to submit a support request often need to open a new window and find the contact page. This means they navigate away from their issue to contact support and wait on a response. Live chat pop-ups should be strategically placed throughout a website, so customers can access support without opening more windows.
Live chat support is better for business
Offering live chat aligns with many of the business goals managers and agents cited in the Zendesk 2021 CX trends report:
- Scaling customer support operations. Adding live chat support enables agents to help more people, without tons of new software.
- Better meet service level agreements. Live chat enables lower wait times because an agent can talk to multiple people right away via live chat. By contrast, reps can speak to only one customer at a time by phone, and email creates delays.
- Solve customer issues before they become bigger. Engage website visitors or app users via chat whenever a problem has occurred rather than waiting until they email or call.
Regardless of the goals your business hopes to achieve, live chat can boost your overall customer experience by addressing issues swiftly and smoothly.
Live chat support best practices
We know that live chat support is helpful for both businesses and customers. But how do you successfully offer this experience? Consider these live chat best practices— tips that will help your agents handle multiple chat requests without sacrificing quality.
Place your chat window in a subtle location
When setting up live chat, a company should strike a balance between staying unobtrusive and being proactive with users who might need help. Chat pop-ups shouldn’t hurt your customer experience — they should enhance it.
To make your chat experience a seamless part of your site, consider where your chat window pops up and how site visitors might access it. For example, you might set up a clickable icon to appear on the bottom right of any page so that customers can ask for help when they need it.
Train support agents
Before you launch a live chat support channel, consider how you will train your staff— what do they need to know to successfully use this tool?
Will agents be supporting other customer service channels while they track incoming chats? If so, consider teaching them how to navigate between tools on your CRM. Daniels says that agents who are able to chat with a couple of customers at once can help you solve more issues in less time.
You might also teach reps how to leave a chat window open to do some research— they can use internal and publicly available help content resources. Your agents will return armed and ready with the tools they need to solve issues completely. Reps who can collect knowledge on the fly as they chat are likely to resolve issues in a single conversation.
Dive into live chat software data
While their features vary, live chat software and tools deliver valuable data points about the customer’s journey, including:
- The URL the customer was on immediately before the chat started
- The customer’s operating system and device
- The time they’ve spent on the site
- The number of visits and the number of chats they’ve had with the company in the past
Reps can use this information to tailor their chat interactions. If they see that a customer is on a mobile device, they’ll know to keep their responses short and sweet (no one wants to type on a smartphone keyboard all day). For customers who are new to the company site, reps can share basic information about the brand and its products.
Messaging best practices for better customer service
Get your free guide on eight ways to transform your support strategy with messaging–from WhatsApp to live chat and everything in between.
Determine your live chat staffing requirements
It’s critical for companies to plan for how agents will manage the live chat feature before rolling it out. Successful deployments consider agent experience, chat routing, and whether or not agents will be supporting other customer service channels at the same time.
Jon Daniels, a support engineer at Zendesk who spends much of his day in the live chat channel, says that only chatting with a couple of customers at a time is conducive to in-depth problem-solving. When agents are more free to leave the chat window to conduct research, which includes digging into the customer’s call history or consulting an internal knowledge base, they can come back with the necessary context to solve an issue more completely and holistically.
staffing calculator
Ensuring appropriate levels of live chat staffing can be a challenge. That’s why it’s critical to plan ahead before rolling it out for customers. Use this staffing calculator to help you get started.
Remember that there are many factors that impact live chat staffing needs, so this tool should only be used as a planning guide.
Estimating chat volume
Estimating number of chats per hour
Estimating number of agents
(in hours)
Disclaimer:
Keep in mind that the above formula is merely a guide and ignores things like breaks for your agents, multiple shifts, and vastly different customer requirements. It shouldn’t replace a typical workforce management staffing calculator.
Once you’ve settled on your staffing needs, keep monitoring your wait times and CSAT to ensure it’s the optimal number. There’s a tendency for live chat CSAT to fall as the number of chats per agent rises and wait times increase.
Many factors need to be considered when determining how to staff your chat support channel. Ultimately, the final number will depend on your organization and business objectives. Here are some other considerations to keep in mind when deciding on the number of agents:
What is your chat goal? If your goal is to reduce your overall support costs, you would naturally want less agents. But if your goal is to increase CSAT, then having a lower agent-to-customer ratio is advisable.
How complex is your product and the expected queries? Complex products will require more support for the customer. So, agents might need to spend more time with customers, thus driving up the average chat duration. To ensure customers don’t have to wait too long to be served, you should consider adding more agents.
When do you get the most chats? To get a better idea on the number of chat agents needed during the peak and low volume periods, break down traffic by hour for the busiest day, and estimate the number of chats that will come in across the day. The calculator below can help determine this number.
How experienced are your agents? An agent without prior chat experience can take only 1-2 active chats simultaneously, while an experienced agent can easily take 4-6 chats. If all your agents are new to chat, you may need to lower the number of simultaneous chats they are expected to take.
Use AI to strengthen your live chat experience
Integrate AI and chatbots in the live chat experience to empower customers to solve queries without needing to contact a rep. A chatbot can use AI to suggest links from the help center to help customers quickly resolve issues. If the chatbot doesn’t answer the question, no problem. The bot can escalate the request to a live agent.
The meal-delivery subscription service Freshly successfully brought AI, live chat, and self-service together to create a better experience for customers.
The team noticed that a lot of one-touch tickets were coming in via chat, one of its most popular support channels. Freshly used Zendesk to set up a chat solution that suggested help content to customers based on the questions they asked. Our platform analyzed patterns in customer questions—like, “My delivery hasn’t arrived” and “Where is my box?”— to determine which queries were the best match for Freshly’s different help articles.
An AI solution isn’t the only way to encourage self-service. Daniels shares that live chat reps often direct customers to knowledge-base content. Why list all the steps to solving an issue when they’re already encapsulated in an article? He recommends staying on the chat to offer extra help if needed.
Stay conversational
Daniels recommends being open to the fact that live chat is a more conversational platform. Stock responses may still work but will feel out of place on a platform where slang, emojis, and GIFs are the norm. Agents should talk to customers like they would to a coworker or a friend. Following chat etiquette tips can help give visitors to your website a positive support experience.
Creating a casual atmosphere often makes customers feel more comfortable. Reps may find that customers ask multiple questions when they take a conversational approach or may even want to upgrade their plan.
Exceed customer expectations with a live chat solution
Live chat support enables quick and personalized interactions with your customers. From a brand’s perspective, live chat isn’t useful just for one-time interactions. Conversation history and data provides tons of insights for companies to improve their customer experience in the future.
Ready to start chatting? Use Zendesk to merge your communications and add live chat support to your team.
Messaging best practices for better customer service
Get your free guide on eight ways to transform your support strategy with messaging–from WhatsApp to live chat and everything in between.
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