Aug 1, 2024
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How Do You Get A Salesforce 360° View Of Mobile (Cell) Phone Activities?

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In today’s business world who does not have a mobile/cell phone? Whether it be a company provided device or increasingly a BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) own users phone being used. Either way this poses a challenge for businesses relying increasingly on data insights and technologies such as CRM to power their business success.

Of course, Salesforce itself is mobile friendly and you have Salesforce1 and other mobile applications. These however require manual keying (at least for today) and are used mostly, in my long experience as a Sales Leader, on the road as a tool to lookup data and information and rarely for logging all key new information (after all the small touch keyboard does not facilitate this). If a user is mobile making and receiving customer calls, they often are on the move, in a position where using the keypad to make notes (even if willing and intending to) is not practical or legal. The intention to do it later is also applauded, but often not delivered upon as our fast-paced world blurs this intention into ‘I forgots’. 

Historically it has been hard enough to capture telephony activity data. Click to Dial we can all do, Wrap-up codes and taking notes into the backend system from the CRM is commonplace, although we argue some do it far better than others for the users. But these are based around web phones, soft phones and desk phones which are easier to access and control from such technologies.

Introducing the mobile phone, brings new challenges; How do you log calls made from the mobile phone, record those calls and the harder, one capture inbound calls to that mobile phone. With an increasingly mobile workforce how do you capture the activity levels of these employees? and how do you capture that data into the CRM to give insights and visibility of what is really going on?

As a Salesperson do you want to know all you can about your own business’s interactions with your client. If you are managing an important client relationship, do you want to know that this customer was speaking to finance yesterday for 45 mins before you go in for an on-site meeting today? surely so!

This is the easy part. For example, with Natterbox, even if your finance team is not on Salesforce, we can log the (non-mobile at this point) inbound or outbound conversation into Salesforce as a call made (60+ data points are captured automatically about the call with no user intervention or action, such as length of call, transfers, who called, who to, etc) with an optional call voice recording captured and logged into Salesforce against the customer record. Thus, by seeing this on the account or perhaps through having a customised alert in Salesforce on your accounts, you now know about that call having taken place and have the option to speak to your finance team before your client meeting to ask what the 45-minute call was about and hence go into the customer informed and avoiding any embarrassing surprise discussions!

So how do you achieve a similar level of logging and visibility when the calls are from or to your employee’s mobile phones? Well first it is important to understand the challenge. On a desk or web phone the inbound and outbound call is being routed through your company PBX (sort of your telecoms server), a traditional telephony approach to routing calls and thus allowing the capture of data on these calls in a consistent centralised approach. This gives the ability for this call data to be added to your Salesforce CRM records. (Do check however that this is what you are getting as more often the telephony provider whilst collecting this data, is NOT putting it in your CRM, but is storing it in their own separate proprietary database. This means a separate portal and reporting engine which makes it hard to correlate and report alongside ‘real; client data. Yes, you can try to merge the two data sets, but in our extensive experience this is cumbersome, error prone and very rarely happens. (and by the time it does it is out of date – so much for big data!).

Far more useful to have reports and dashboards alongside each other, allowing you visibility of which customers, customer types, by spend, etc have been calling your support the most; how many calls, how often, how much talk time has been spent on your key forecasted opportunities for the month or quarter. All of this captured and reported on automatically and agnostic of the user entering or not entering data to capture calls made, hence giving you a true and accurate view across each user, customer and the business; available at any time to any Salesforce user with permissions.

Back to the issue of mobile users on their cell phones. Capturing outbound calls your users make from their mobiles requires the user to utilise an app on their phone that directs the call traffic via the cloud telephony service, allowing that service to capture the call data, who made the call, who to and length of call etc, automatically logging this data in the CRM (and if opted, to also record the call using the same record policies as for the office users). This is because if not, the native dialler on the phone will route the call via the cell providers service and thus out of the control of any 3rd party telephony/PBX or Salesforce integration provider, it’s simply how the cellular networks architecture operates.

This can typically be achieved by using an easily downloadable softphone onto the mobile phone and entering some configuration settings provided by the provider (such as Natterbox). You then need to instruct the user to make business calls using the softphone and not the native phone dialler on their phone. Some businesses advise their users to make personal calls using the native phone so they are not logged or recorded and business calls via the softphone. Others have gone as far as mandating that the company will not pay the phone bill for native calls, as softphone calls are treated as data package usage and not native cell calls (going over the 3/4G data network or WIFI). As softphone calls when the user is on WIFI are routed across that network they save not only call costs but also on the cellular data charges. Thus, it is feasible to achieve a strong commercial saving on calls across your users if a lot of your users are connected to WIFI when making a portion of their calls.

Capturing Outbound call data and recordings is the easy part of the puzzle. The hard part is how do you capture the inbound. If a customer for example has the employees’ mobile number, perhaps from their business card or is calling them back, this goes directly over the cellular network and to that user’s mobile device, thus bypassing any 3rd party services and logging capabilities. Increasingly businesses want to capture and gain insights from having the most complete picture of data possible. There are a couple of options to achieving this within the limitations imposed by the cellular network technologies. The ideal method would be for the cellular operator to allow configuration of call routing or to capture this data as it transits their network and to allow (through API’s) for a customer to route this data as a service to their chosen data service / CRM or such system. Unfortunately, this is not something on offer or seen in the market and would also require the operator you user to provide this, meaning all cellular providers would need to take part or you would need to move your provider to the one that did! Natterbox achieved this with one major operator by embedding our own technology into the cell providers data centre networks allowing call recoding to take place, but this is an impractical approach on wholesale as it would require this to be achieved in as many cell providers as possible across the globe, and for the provider to externalise the ability to move that data outside of their network. No mean feat and one that no one has shown any signs of getting any traction towards.

So, this being the case, how do you implement a solution that best encompasses cellular/mobile phones alongside your landline provisioning, to ensure logging and recording of business calls into your CRM alongside CTI/desktop calls and other activities. Getting the true 360-degree view of client interactions has always been the CRM panacea, but yet who truly achieves it? Every time there is a manual requirement of the user to make the data entry or for a synching or export/import of data, the chance diminishes!

So, what are the panacea needs requested;

  • you need a user to be able to make calls from their mobile and have the action of the call, time, length etc captured and ideally a recording of the call captured into the CRM with no user interaction
  • You want an inbound call to the user to be captured and recorded in the same manner
  • You ideally want the user’s personal calls to be excluded from this logging

And how might you achieve this;

1)     To ensure outbound calls from mobiles are logged automatically (who called by who, call time, length of call etc) and where required voice recoded into the relevant CRM record containing that number then;

  • A softphone/calling App needs to be installed on the user’s mobile device which the user uses and thus directs the outbound calls made via the telephony providers system and onto the recipient customer.
  • The user needs to be mandated to make outbound business calls from and via this softphone and to NOT use the native phone dialler application on the device.

In this way outbound mobile calls are data captured and recorded automatically.

2)     For inbound calls to cellular devices;

  • Firstly purchase a new pseudo mobile number for each user (in some regions this can be another actual mobile number that is not SIM related, in some this may not be possible and you would use a normal number (non cellular) to become the Pseudo mobile number for each user), this will become their new ‘public’ mobile number – This number is configured at the telephony provider (Natterbox) to direct the call onto the users ‘true’ mobile number. In this way anyone calling the users mobile on the new number is automatically directed via the telephony provider and on to the user’s mobile device, thus allowing logging and recording of the call as above into the company system (Natterbox).
  • Publish this new number on business cards and email signatures. Consider asking users to not answer calls direct to their mobile number for an introductory period to encourage existing clients to call this new number. Perhaps put on their voicemail ‘please call this new mobile number xxxx for me now’. Even if you start to capture 80% of calls this way you are 80% better off than a nothing to/from mobiles is being captured.
  • A bi-product of this process is that if this customers number is in the CRM rules can be applied automatically such as;
  1. When directing the call to the users mobile, before connecting the call machine whisper the customer name; ‘this is customer ABC calling’, so they can answer more informed, even if that client’s number is NOT stored in their mobile phone!
  2. Automatically have rules set for example that when the person is on holiday it re-directs the inbound call to their sales admin, their PA etc to help the customer advising the customer automatically, ‘<Name> is on Holiday this week, well direct your call to Paul in the office to assist”, instead of simply letting the call go to the mobile voicemail, where often they have forgotten to edit the message to say they are on holiday.4

There are several additional benefits of this approach;

·        It separates business and personal calls, meaning that you get a more distinct cellular breakdown of the % of associated costs

·        It supports BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) well. Often today an employee either uses their own phone and number or are issued a company phone and end up carrying around 2 mobile phones, meaning out of work it is easy to leave work behind, taking only the personal mobile! Another challenge of the BYOD approach is that if you put the users ‘own’ mobile number on their cards, when they leave customers may still be calling direct to your ex-employee, perhaps now at a competitor!

o  With this new approach you can allow an employee to use their own phone and mask that number with your business owned one, meaning if they leave calls still come to you and you can even easily re-direct all calls to another individual or  group. Better still you can re-allocate that persons accounts and set a rule centrally to direct the calls to the relevant new account manager and electronically whisper to that person before the call is put through that this is one of (LEAVERS_NAME) accounts calling and being diverted to you!

o  It also means that for the user claiming calls back from the company is simpler as they simply claim back data costs and mobile outbound calls from the native phone/number are treated as their personal calls.

  Natterbox empowers our customers to improve their telephony alongside their Salesforce investment. With an ever-increasing mobile workforce, incorporating the user’s remote calls easily into the overall Salesforce world is important.

Natterbox allows a user working remotely to easily select their mobile as their calling device, perform click to dial inside Salesforce and have Natterbox do the rest; Connecting the call between the users mobile and customer number, capturing the automatic telephony data, recording the call and improving the user experience and efficiency of the call and logging of data for the user inside Salesforce (such as notes and wrap-up codes). Importantly you now gain the easy option to incorporate mobile users and their calls into the centralised data and reporting capabilities that Salesforce provides you.

“We need to be able to capture data, make sure it is accurate and do it fast. Our customers now expect it as standard. Natterbox gives us that whole picture, which means we can give our contact centre teams the knowledge they need to help customers quickly.” Andrew Evers, Head of IT at Reconomy.

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Priya Singh
https://thestarbiznews.com/

Expertise: Technology Trends, Startups, Digital Disruption Bio: Priya Singh is a tech-savvy millennial with a finger on the pulse of the ever-evolving digital landscape. A graduate of Stanford's Computer Science program and a former engineer at a Silicon Valley giant, Priya has a deep understanding of the technologies shaping our future. Her passion lies in demystifying complex tech jargon and exploring the disruptive potential of emerging trends, making her articles essential reading for anyone who wants to stay ahead of the curve. When not scouring the web for the latest tech tidbits, Priya enjoys traveling to off-the-beaten-path destinations and immersing herself in diverse cultures, always seeking new inspiration and insights.