Microsoft Viva is now generally available to help transform your hybrid work experience

Microsoft Viva is now generally available to help transform your hybrid work experience

This article is contributed. See the original author and article here.

Earlier this year, we began the journey of building the first employee experience platform (EXP) for the digital era with Microsoft Viva. Our vision was to foster a culture of human connection, purpose, growth, wellbeing, and results

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Microsoft Viva is now generally available to help transform your hybrid work experience

Microsoft Office—Transforming for the hybrid world

This article is contributed. See the original author and article here.

Microsoft Office is changing with the times. That is why we are reimagining Office, adding new apps to respond to new opportunities, and making Office a universal, interactive canvas for creators of all kinds.

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Microsoft Viva is now generally available to help transform your hybrid work experience

What’s new in Microsoft 365—How we’re empowering everyone for a new world of hybrid work

This article is contributed. See the original author and article here.

If there’s one thing we know, it’s that hybrid work is here to stay. But the big question is: what will the next decade of work look like and how will you prepare?

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Microsoft Viva is now generally available to help transform your hybrid work experience

Stay in the flow of work with new collaborative apps for Microsoft Teams

This article is contributed. See the original author and article here.

In the past 20 months, we’ve witnessed an explosive growth of virtual interactions, with people collaborating more—both inside and outside their organizations, with greater frequency and across more applications than ever before. The question facing us now is, how can we shift from merely adapting to thriving with hybrid work?

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Use analytics and reporting to improve routing of customer service requests

Use analytics and reporting to improve routing of customer service requests

This article is contributed. See the original author and article here.

In the world of customer service, unified routing helps you solve the classic supply-and-demand problem as you distribute customer service requests to the best team or agent, no matter the channel. Dynamics 365 Customer Service automates this process by using rules to classify, prioritize, and assign those customer “demands”. To further optimize this process, your staff needs insight into how it is functioning.

We are introducing analytics and reporting capabilities to help supervisors and administrators understand and improve their routing systems.

In the last several months, we have seen companies redefining the roles and responsibilities of their service delivery employees. Supervisors and administrators now need to have a unified view of both on-site and off-site employees. This not only adds complexity to supervision, but it also reinforces the importance of having accurate reporting and analytics capabilities. We have seen supervisors struggling daily to analyze, identify, and mitigate the misroutes that are caused due to their routing strategies. Supervisors and administrators are asking questions like:

  • Why is this work item in my queue?
  • One of the queues is unreasonably overloaded, while another queue nearly empty. Why is that happening?
  • Agents in my queue are complaining about work items showing up that belong in another queue. What is wrong with the routing?
  • Are there enough agents to handle queries or work items of a certain type?
  • Are we assigning the right agents to solve specific customer queries?
  • Customer satisfaction (CSAT) is down the past few weeks. Is it because of routing failures?

Use historical analysis to improve routing configurations

To address these kinds of questions, your staff can use analytics and reports to gauge the effectiveness of their routing configurations, to help optimize the routing strategy, and to improve the workforce efficiency.

Two types of reports are available:

  • Record report: Covers routing-specific KPIs of records that were processed by the unified routing system.
  • Conversations report: Covers routing-specific KPIs for customer conversations.

You access these reports on the Ominchannel historical analysis tab on the Unified routing page in Dynamics 365 Customer Service:

Example of conversations report.

Scenario: Coffee cancellation requests

To illustrate the usefulness of historical analysis, consider a scenario based on Contoso Coffee, which sells different types of coffee beans, including Arabica beans and Robusta beans. To manage customer queries, the company has created separate queues in their contact center for each type of coffee bean. In addition, they have outsourced business operations to a third-party vendor to handle order cancellations.

Alex, who supervises the Arabica beans queue, is getting complaints from agents that they are getting cancellation requests even though such requests should go to the vendor queue. Since the agents need to transfer these queries to the vendor-managed queue, they are wasting a lot of time. To investigate, Alex views the unified routing report.

Unified routing report for Contoso Coffee.

This report shows that the overall transfer rate is more than 25%. Alex then selects the Arabica Beans (Record) queue, and it lists an even higher transfer rate that is way above the target of 10%. The bar chart in this report indicates that most transfers are going to the Cancellation/Refund queue.

Diagnostics for Arabica bean routing.

Alex now moves to routing diagnostics to check on the details of a few work items in the queue that were transferred out. Alex verifies that many transferred work items were actually cancellation requests regarding Arabica beans. Since the routing configuration does not include rules to differentiate such cancellation queries from other Arabica queries, all these work items are coming to the Arabica queue (example highlighted below).

Canceled Arabica bean orders going to Arabica bean queue.

Alex raises this issue with the administrator, Alicia, and also provides the analysis. Alicia uses these details to quickly identify and mitigate the issue by introducing an additional rule.

Historical analytics for unified routing is helpful not just to gauge the health of an organization’s routing system, but it can also guide businesses on how to improve their routing strategies.

Next steps

To understand more about analytics and reporting for unified routing, and how to enable them for your organization, read more in the documentation:

This blog post is part of a series of deep dives that will help you deploy and use unified routing at your organization. See other posts in the series to learn more.

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A blueprint for cross-organization collaboration: marketing and sales

A blueprint for cross-organization collaboration: marketing and sales

This article is contributed. See the original author and article here.

Dynamics 365 and Microsoft 365: the blueprint for cross-organization collaboration

It’s one of the toughest challenges for organizations today: how to foster collaboration in a workplace that is more decentralized than ever, with people scattered across offices and locations.

Working together to move business forward is nothing new, but the way we collaborate is changing dramaticallyno longer confined to face-to-face time in a conference room or even a virtual web conference. The future of collaboration for all of us is about seamlessly switching between individual work and collaborative activities in the momentin context with the business application on the screen. That’s how information, ideas, and knowledge are shared in a natural way without breaking the flow of work. Everyone can collaborate as one business, everywhere.

In this blog series, we’ll explore blueprints to build a culture of collaboration with Microsoft Dynamics 365 and Microsoft Teams, with examples of how one organization has woven cross-team collaboration into its DNA.

Before we get started, we encourage you to register for our upcoming session at Microsoft Ignite, “Accelerate cross-organization collaboration with Dynamics 365 and Microsoft 365,” where we’ll announce and demonstrate new integrations between Dynamics 365 and Microsoft 365. We’re unveiling a lot of new features in the 30-minute session, so be sure to tune in.

More than meetings: collaboration redefined

Before unrolling the blueprints, we need to set the stage with an updated look at how people collaborate in the workplace.

Collaboration needs no introduction. Many of us spend the day collaborating synchronouslylive, in real-timein-person or in online meetings, one-on-one or in groupswhere we plan, review, share, co-create content, brainstorm. All the familiar activities that have traditionally defined collaboration.

Real-time collaboration is just one way we work together. We also collaborate asynchronously, with ideas and interactions contributed over email or in response to a chat message as schedules permit, rather than in real-time.

Infographic showing elements of collaboration

Whether working together synchronously or asynchronously, collaboration should feel natural and seamless, without breaking your focus. That’s why the business applications you use need to integrate collaborative experiences nativelyso that any person or information you need is immediately available in the moment.

At Microsoft, we are prioritizing collaboration across the applications your organization uses every day, such as Dynamics 365 and Microsoft Teams. Collaborative apps ensure people engage and interact with each other naturally and spontaneously, in context with the task at hand. That’s the key to ensuring everyone achieves more together.

Introducing the blueprints for collaboration

Let’s take a closer look at one day in a typical organization with people scattered across headquarters, home offices, retail stores, and beyond.

A manufacturer of electric bicycles produces a growing line of brands sold online, in several flagship retail stores, and through dozens of retailers across North America. Many departments across the company rely on Dynamics 365 and Microsoft 365including Microsoft Teams and Office applicationsto keep up with demand for the company’s product line. Together, these seamlessly integrated applications keep the business moving in high gear by breaking down all the silos in the business, between data sources, people, processes, and insights.

Marketing

The marketing team hosts monthly webinars for prospective retail partners that showcase product innovation and partner incentives. In the past, planning, hosting, and promoting the presentations was a time and resource-intensive effort for two marketing managers and a third-party production vendor.

Today, one marketing manager, Taylor, runs the entire show.

Taylor uses Microsoft PowerPoint, Microsoft Teams, and Dynamics 365 to produce, host, promote and engage attendees for each monthly webinar. At each step, he can pull in experts when needed right from within the application on the screen, without breaking the flow of the task at hand. The entire marketing team also has a clear view of engagements that the sales team is working on and can recommend or prioritize marketing tactics based on the sales stage for each engagement.

After the event, Taylor follows up with the event participants by sending personalized emails and orchestrating customer journeys using Dynamics 365 Marketing. For this marketing team, webinars aren’t just another marketing tacticthey are one of the best performing tactics to expand its retail footprint across North America. Dozens of qualified leads are delivered to the sales teama seamless hand-off between Dynamics 365 Marketing and Dynamics 365 Sales that lets the sales team rapidly nurture, further qualify and convert opportunities to customers.

Infographic showing how to produce and host webinars

Sales

The marketing webinars are a hit. Leads are flowing in; so many, in fact, that the sales team has been inundated, including opportunities ready for a proposal. It’s a good problem to have, but one that would traditionally lead to a push for quantity over quality.

With Dynamics 365 and Microsoft Teams, the sales team doesn’t need to compromise on detailsfrom the proposed solution to pricingthat can make or break a deal. Right from within Dynamics 365, a sales manager can reach out to experts across the company and quickly get the guidance and information needed to create an unbeatable offer.

Joanna, a sales manager, gets started by browsing a prioritized list of opportunities in Dynamics 365 Sales. Since the marketing and sales teams both use Dynamics 365, they can access a single source of trutha unified record of leads and customers, at every stage of the journey, from the very first engagement to purchase, service, and renewals.

Joanna has been nurturing a warm lead, a prospective customer ready for a quote. With familiar Microsoft Teams capabilities natively integrated in Dynamics 365 Sales, it’s a breeze to find the right people and information needed to create a quote custom-fit for the prospect’s unique challenges and needs.

In our blueprint for team selling (below) Joanna can see who has been engaging with the prospect or working similar deals, as well as any subject matter experts who can offer insights into the prospect’s business or industry. People and related documents discussed on Teams chats and channels are visible right from the customer record within Dynamics 365 Sales.

As Joanna mobilizes the team, she can share the opportunity record in Dynamics 365 to anyone in the company within a Teams chat. Without leaving Teamsand without the need for Dynamics 365anyone on the organization’s Teams domain can directly view details in the shared recordfrom contact details to engagement history, purchases, account notes, and more. They can see the very latest context needed to provide Joanna with informed and relevant guidance.

With collaboration, sharing, and communication capabilities integrated into Dynamics 365, It no longer takes hours or days to hunt down the right people and information across email chains, meetings, and callscollaborative activities are brought to Joanna front and center in the application she depends on to move deals through the funnel.

Infographic showing how to develop a proposal

Once she shares the quote with the customer, it’s just as easy to bring together her team of experts and the prospective customer on a Teams meetingagain, right from within Dynamics 365 Sales. Together, they walk the prospect through quotes and address any questions and concerns. Conversation intelligence transcribes the call and provides meaningful insights and analyzes content, sentiment, and behavioral stylesuch as competitors and keywords that the prospect mentions during the call. AI-guided live feedback and suggestions can help sellers adjust their sales pitch, as well as provide managers with a way to track team performance and provide valuable coaching to help boost customer satisfaction.

The result: an unbeatable proposal, insights to optimize future quotes and sales processes, and plenty of time in the week to convert more webinar attendees.

Up next: blueprints to elevate collaboration across retail and customer service

In the next installment, we’ll share blueprints to elevate collaboration with Microsoft Dynamics 365 and Microsoft Teams on the customer frontlines, from retail storefronts to customer service. Until then, we invite you to explore the four essentials to collaborate as one business, everywhere and take a behind-the-scenes look at two companies reinventing how people collaborate across the organization.

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Brought to you by Dr. Ware, Microsoft Office 365 Silver Partner, Charleston SC.