While customer service often gets a bad rap for being an entry-level, high churn field, the increasingly customer-centric business landscape presents a wide array of career opportunities for customer service professionals. If you’re someone who loves engaging with clients and helping others get the most out of your products and services, there are many ways to grow your career in the field of customer service.
We’ve outlined six career paths for customer service professionals to help you map out your future.
Customer service representatives go by many names––agents, customer experience managers, or even white glove support specialist. But at their core, the role of these front-line individuals is to resolve any customer issues. Customer service representatives are the face of the company as they help answer customer questions, resolve complaints, process and modify orders, and provide instructional information about products and services.
Qualifications
Responsibilities
Average Salary
$39,460 (Source: Payscale)
Customer service quality assurance managers are the key to ensuring that customer service representatives adhere to a set of quality standards and deliver a great customer experience. Quality standards can include everything from tone to problem-solving ability, and are often specific to an individual company. Depending on the structure of the organization, quality assurance managers may be responsible for establishing and iterating on quality standards, evaluating agent performance, leading calibration sessions, and working with team leads to ensure they are coaching their agents effectively.
Qualifications
Responsibilities
Average Salary
$81,287 (Source: Payscale)
Product support specialists are subject matter experts on the product or services offered by a company. Where a customer service representative can field basic questions around orders or complaints, a product support specialist knows the ins and outs of how the product works, and can answer more complicated questions, troubleshoot problems, and serve as an educational resource on product functionality.
Qualifications
Responsibilities
Average Salary
$54,106 (Source: Payscale)
Customer service training managers create learning and development programs for new and existing customer service representatives, implement new training processes, and iterate as needed. This includes everything from new hire training to management training and beyond. This role requires ongoing maintenance of training materials and innovation around the best training methods. Training managers are responsible for understanding all customer service processes from basic problem solving to technical product troubleshooting.
Qualifications
Responsibilities
Average Salary
$58,631 (Source: Payscale)
For customer service professionals interested in the business to business (B2B) technology space, implementation management might be the job for you. Similar to a product support specialist, you’ll be a subject matter expert on your company’s specific product or service. However, instead of troubleshooting problems, you’ll help new customers adopt and implement your product in their organization. This includes everything from data management to training, and is a key driver of customer adoption and retention.
Qualifications
Responsibilities
Average Salary
$74,395 (Source: Payscale)
Rather than reactive troubleshooting, customer retention specialists provide proactive support to help customers get the most out of their product. This function is designed to help increase customer retention, loyalty, and drive upsells or repeat business over time. Customer retention specialists also handle contract renewal or cancellation requests. In this role, rather than solving a specific issue, specialists work to maximize the customer relationship.
Qualifications
Responsibilities
Salary
$47,500 (Source: Payscale)
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Customer service representatives have the unique advantage of being at the forefront of all business activities, and as a result can move in a wide variety of directions. Whether you hope to move to another department, grow into a specialized role, or climb the ranks to become a Chief Customer Officer, spending time on the front lines will help you identify your passion and give you the skillset you need to make the next move.
As the customer experience becomes increasingly important, so too does the role of the customer service professional. Businesses are now striving to engage not only their customers, but the agents who provide the front line of service. As a result, career planning is a key driver of agent engagement. Team leaders should carve out time during regular 1:1 meetings to talk through agent career goals and help map a path to achieve them.
This post was originally published on September 11, 2019 and has since been updated.