Article • 4 min read
Time to tackle your ticket backlog
โดย Brett Grossfeld, Associate content marketing manager
อัปเดตล่าสุด September 21, 2021
A huge ticket backlog can be an intimidating prospect for any customer service team. Whether it has built up over time or a sudden event caused your inbox to explode overnight, it’s a major test that all agents will face at one time or another in customer service.
But don’t worry, we’re here to help. Our advocates have shared a few tips and methods (and the right kind of attitudes) for handling a landslide of customer inquiries.
First off, it’s a good thing to have a bit of a backlog
“Having a ticket queue of zero isn’t exactly healthy”, says Collin Murray, an Advocacy Manager from our Madison office. It’s important for customers to engage with your product or service in different ways, which should encourage them to ask questions and create support tickets.
“Some sort of backlog is to be expected,” he says. “Once established, helping your team understand the differences in what is healthy versus unhealthy from a low or high perspective is essential.” Having a ticket backlog helps the team learn how to approach it in a variety of situations. They can start to learn the opportune time to grind through the backlog versus spending more time on new tickets or more complex and challenging tasks.
3 tips for clearing your ticket backlog
Fortunately, there are tools you can use to help take control of your ticket volume. See what our Advocacy team had to say about how they manage tickets and clear backlogs.
1. Pick which tickets take priority
When there’s a large number of tickets to get through, a smart strategy is to break your backlog down into prioritized groups. Zendesk Advocate Madison Davis, a Team Lead for Product Support, shared her preferred method for busting the backlog: first, knock out any tickets that require more information from the requester, then go at the ones that are awaiting action from her. That way, she can focus on other tickets while waiting on the necessary info for others.
She also recommends paying close attention to reply time—if a ticket has been sitting in the queue for a long time without a response, it could be worthwhile to prioritize it and mitigate the requester’s waiting period. “We sort tickets by the impact the customer’s issue has on their ability to interact with their customers (i.e. “I can’t log in” has a higher business impact than “How do I create this report?”),” Madison says. “But sometimes even low-impact questions have a deadline from the customer’s perspective.”
2. Set up scheduled, automated responses for pending tickets
What about those pending tickets where the customer seems like they’ve gone AWOL? It can take a lot of effort to ping all of them—when that number of unresponsive customers grows, it can add some heft to the backlog. That’s where automated responses and triggers come in.
Zendesk agents use a method called Bump Bump Solve to automatically remind customers with a “bump” if they don’t respond. It’s a configuration that sends an information request on a pending ticket with an automated prompt after a few days. It sends two of these reminders (hence the “Bump Bump”), giving the customer an ample opportunity to resolve their issue.
Automations and triggers help to take pending tickets off of the agents’ plates so they more of their day focusing on more immediate and challenging tickets. You can learn more about Bump Bump Solve and how to configure it here.
3. Pick a time and a place for a “Ticket Smash”
If your team’s backlog balloons to a ridiculous size, then you might need an “all-hands-on-deck” approach. Block off a few hours of the day, grab some food, and work to crush those tickets together.
Agents at Zendesk call it a “Ticket Smash”—they collaborate to break down the workload and figure out great responses for the backlogged tickets. Throwing a Ticket Smash (you can call it whatever you want) might have to be after hours or during a weekly team meeting, so make an event out of it by ordering food and putting on some relaxing music. Whatever you choose, the group mindset will provide a great atmosphere for moving through all of your tickets.
Don’t forget: A good attitude goes a long way
According to our own Advocacy team that handles Zendesk customer support, winning the battle against a messy ticket backlog means learning to see the positives in it. Bryan Flaherty, a Technical Support Engineer at Zendesk, says that he “loves having a large ticket backlog,” especially with a good number of different ticket types. He gives himself permission to bounce to a different ticket if he gets stuck. “Notching a win or two and then coming back to a tricky issue often leads to breakthroughs were previously I am stuck,” he says. “The key is to keep the momentum!”