Copyright  Goodheart-Willcox  Co.,  Inc.  827  Chapter  24  Customer  Support,  Communication,  and  Professionalism  Th  e  customer  may  be  at  the  counter  to  make  a  purchase,  request  assistance  in  a  purchase,  or  solicit  technical  support  for  an  item  purchased  at  the  vendor  location.  In  the  small  business  environment,  a  service  technician  will  most  likely  fulfi  ll  multi-  ple  roles  for  the  employer.  He  or  she  may  be  responsible  for  selling  computer  hard-  ware,  software,  and  related  materials.  Th  e  service  technician  may  also  be  responsible  for  technical  support  and  answering  customer  questions  in  person,  by  telephone,  or  through  e-mail.  He  or  she  may  be  dispatched  to  a  customer  location  to  install  or  troubleshoot  computer  equipment  or  provide  training.  Depot  Technician  A  depot  technician  is  one  who  performs  repair  work  usually  covered  by  warranty.  Th  e  depot  technician  receives  the  hardware  item  after  the  client  has  contacted  customer  support  through  a  call  center  or  help  desk  or  if  the  fi  rst  contact  does  not  immediately  resolve  the  problem.  Once  the  equipment  arrives  at  the  depot,  it  is  assigned  to  a  technician  for  inspection  and  for  repair  or  replacement.  A  depot  tech-  nician  has  very  limited  customer  contact  or  no  customer  contact  at  all.  Corporate  Enterprise  Support  In  the  large  corporate  environment,  technical  support  services  can  be  composed  of  many  people  working  as  a  team.  Typically,  an  employee  contacts  a  help  desk.  Th  e  help  desk  technician  generates  a  repair  or  incident  ticket,  Figure  24-2.  If  the  help  desk  technician  fails  to  assist  the  fellow  employee  in  making  the  necessary  adjust-  ments  to  the  item,  the  ticket  is  then  assigned  to  a  technician  who  will  report  to  the  employee’s  location.  At  the  location,  the  technician  will  either  repair  or  replace  the  piece  of  equipment  in  question.  Th  is  model  is  found  where  there  are  suffi  cient  numbers  of  computers  and  related  equipment  to  justify  the  cost  of  a  full-time  staff  dedicated  to  this  function.  Support  Software  Th  ere  are  many  software  packages  designed  to  keep  track  of  service  requests  and  the  results.  Th  is  is  typically  how  service  is  organized  and  tracked.  For  example,  when  a  customer  or  client  fi  rst  contacts  the  help  desk  with  a  service  request,  the  call  is  logged,  Figure  24-3.  Th  is  includes  adding  the  date  and  time  and  a  description  of  the  problem.  Th  e  software  will  typically  generate  a  repair  ticket.  Th  e  help  desk  technician  may  resolve  the  problem  immediately  or  may  dispatch  a  technician  to  the  client’s  location.  Th  e  copy  of  the  repair  ticket  is  distributed  to  the  technician  who  will  report  to  the  physical  location  of  the  problem.  Once  the  problem  is  resolved,  the  technician  completes  the  ticket  by  adding  the  procedure  used  to  resolve  the  problem.  Any  hardware  or  software  that  needs  to  be  provided  or  has  been  provided  to  remedy  the  problem  is  also  listed.  A  follow-up  of  the  incident  can  be  reviewed  at  the  end  of  the  day  to  ensure  all  problems  have  been  resolved  and  that  no  incident  has  been  left  unresolved.  Levels  of  Support  Th  ere  are  typically  three  levels  of  support  within  an  organization,  Figure  24-4.  Level-one  support  is  the  initial  technical  support  contact.  Th  is  is  typically  made  with  technical  support  from  a  help  desk,  website,  or  call  center.  Most  problems  can  be  corrected  at  this  level.  Level-two  support  is  when  the  problem  is  elevated  to  a  person  with  more  experience  or  expertise  than  the  fi  rst  person  contacted  has.  While  level-one  support  
