Agent Coaching & Development

How Agents Can Make the Most of Customer Service Coaching

September 27, 2021
0 minute read

Your next customer service coaching session is coming up, you might be feeling nervous, and possibly even anxious about a potentially long list of ways to improve. Coaching sessions don't have to be that way! In fact, if you come with questions, ideas, and (most importantly) data, it can be a collaborative process that improves your customer service skills and advances your career.

Before we dive into specifics, let’s quickly cover the agenda you can expect during a 30-minute coaching session:

  • Review Quality Assurance (QA) scores: 5 minutes
  • Review productivity metrics: 5 minutes
  • Discuss feedback on scores and metrics: 10 minutes
  • Discuss goals and action items: 5 minutes
  • Discuss miscellaneous questions and insights: 5 minutes

The more you prepare for these meetings, the more value you’ll get out of them. Here are five tips to ensure you make the most of your time. (If you’re a CX coach or manager, be sure to share this resource with your agents!)

1. Come Prepared with Performance Data

Data is the foundation for a productive coaching session because it grounds your conversation in evidence—not opinions. Every agent has unique strengths and areas for improvement, so digging into the data ensures you get the individualized feedback you need to excel.

If your company uses customer service coaching software like MaestroQA, your performance metrics are centralized in a dashboard like this:


There are two pillars of data to familiarize yourself with before heading into your coaching session:

Quality Assurance (QA) Scores

Your QA scores indicate how well you performed against your company’s standards for customer service interactions. This may include criteria such as adhering to the brand’s communication style guide or following the right process to resolve an issue.

If you’re new to QA scores or just need to refresh your memory, check out our complete guide here.

Productivity Metrics

These metrics gauge customer sentiment and reflect how efficiently you resolved their issues. Here are four common metrics you might discuss with your coach:


Productivity metrics aren’t as actionable as QA scores because they only indicate if—not why—your customer interactions are successful or not. In other words, this data is a jumping-off point, but it’s not the end all be all of your career.

It’s natural for productivity metrics to fluctuate, so don’t get down on yourself if you don’t improve them every month.

2. Review Feedback and Progress

Ideally, your coach gave you some feedback or assigned you some tasks and/or goals in a previous session. Now you have an opportunity to circle back on the progress you made and call out any challenges you faced along the way.

Here’s an example of what your coaching notes might look like:


If you feel like you aren’t being challenged, let your coach know you have higher expectations for yourself. On the other hand, don’t be afraid to speak up if you feel overwhelmed by unrealistic goals or a mounting to-do list. In either case, your coach can work with you to align your workload with your capabilities.

If you’re going into your first coaching session and you don’t have much to review, get proactive and ask about the company’s internal standards for performance. This gives you a feel for what goals to set for yourself, which is a perfect segue into...

3. Collaborate with Your Coach to Set Goals and Action Items

Once you have a clear understanding of your performance data and progress, you’re ready to set goals and plan how you’ll achieve them. Your coach may suggest a specific goal, but it’s important to remember that the goal-setting process is a collaborative one. If you’re not comfortable with a goal or think you can aim higher, this is your time to say so.

Here are some examples of customer service goals:

Setting a goal is great, but it can be tough to stay on track without a step-by-step plan to reach it. That’s where action items come in—these are the links between goals and results.

For example, if you want to improve your rapport with customers, ask: “I want to establish more authentic connections with customers—what are some specific steps I can take over the next few weeks?” In this case, an action item could be completing an online course about emotional intelligence from a learning management system like Lessonly.

When you work alongside your coach to set action items, make sure they meet the SMART criteria: specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, and time-bound.

4. Bring Your Point of View to the Table

The ideal coaching session is one where you feel equally comfortable sharing and receiving feedback.

For example, you might feel that you were scored unfairly on a recent QA scorecard. In this case, appealing the score is the first step to resolving the discrepancy between your impression and the score you received.

Let’s say the QA grader noted that there was friction between you and a customer when they had trouble getting a refund. Instead of accepting a low score, start a conversation with your coach by saying, “I felt the interaction went smoothly. The customer seemed satisfied throughout the conversation and thanked me for my help at the end of the call. I think my score should reflect that. What do you think?”

As an agent, you have a unique vantage point into the customer experience and the company as a whole. If you see any red flags, don’t hesitate to speak up. If you notice a bug in your company’s product or find a resource that can help your team solve problems more efficiently, pass that information along to your coach, who can relay it up the chain.

Your feedback doesn’t need to be limited to customer support topics, though.

Take a minute to discuss your morale, stress levels, and work-life balance. Considering how high the agent turnover rate is, CX leaders appreciate insights that can prevent burnout and help them retain their top talent. If you feel like your concerns aren't being taken seriously, initiate a discussion with a human resources (HR) representative.

5. Ask About Professional Advancement Opportunities

Your coaching session might not be the right moment to ask for a promotion or raise, but it is the moment to determine the steps you need to take to earn one. Toward the end of your meeting, take some time to discuss your career goals and how you perceive your current role on the team.

Here’s an example of how you can broach the subject: “I’m really happy with the progress the team and I have made over the past few months. What is the typical timeline for promotions, and what can I do to reach the next level?”

You may feel uncomfortable talking about promotions, but discussing long-term planning can actually be reassuring to CX leaders because it demonstrates that you’re committed to the team.

Customer Service Coaching Is a Team Sport

Your coach has the insights and expertise to put you on the path to success. But there’s still plenty of room for you to take ownership of your growth as a customer service professional.

To maximize the value of your learning experiences, get proactive by digging into the data, offering feedback, and asking questions. You’ll know you’re having a productive coaching session when it feels more like a conversation than a lecture.

Ask your coaches to consider MaestroQA as part of their coaching toolkit here.

Previous Article

Don't Settle. Dig Beneath The Surface For Customer Insights.

Using Zendesk CSAT Reviews and Slack to Appreciate CX Agents

Customer Support Best Practices From The NYC Support Driven Meetup

Why Failure To Provide Great Customer Service Is A Risk To Company Success

Maintaining Quality Of Customer Support In The Face Of Hyper-Growth

Customer Service Quality Assurance and Soft Skills

The 2 Agent-Controlled Factors to Improve CSAT Scores

Guide to Building Call Center Quality Monitoring Scorecards

How To Improve CSAT Scores for Your Call Center in 3 Steps

Customer Service Quality Assurance for Higher CSAT Explained

How To Build Your First QA Scorecard — A Comprehensive Guide

Innovation in Quality Management with Freshly at The Art of Conversation

A maybe-too-honest perspective on our rebrand

How to Create A Customer Service Quality Assurance Form

Quality Management and Customer Service Training Programs

CSAT Scores vs. Quality Assurance Metrics – Which Is Better?

5 Ways Quality Assurance Programs Can Improve CSAT Scores

MaestroQA Partnerships: Introducing Zendesk Suite

Is Your Quality Assurance Program Built For 2018?

Fresh Take: How Peer Review Can Identify Improvements

How Customer Experience Teams Can Impact a Company's Brand

Roger That! Assume Nothing Until You Get Confirmation

Creating a Multi-Channel Quality Form For Contact Centers

The Art of Training with Harry's Razors and FuboTV

Omnichannel Support For Agents And Customers: A Necessity

2 Types Of Agent Skills That Impact Customer Satisfaction

Mastering Customer Interactions in the Age of DSAT

Leanna Merrell

How Shinesty Uses Alternative Positioning as a Best Practice

Dangers Of The 90%+ QA Scores

Navigating AI Implementation Strategy in Customer Experience: Risks and Strategies

Leanna Merrell

Elevating Call Center Performance with Six Sigma and MaestroQA

Lauren Alexander

Elevating Business Excellence Through Non-Customer-Facing QA: A Strategic Imperative

Leanna Merrell

Elevating Trust and Safety through QA: How TaskRabbit Sets the Standard

Leanna Merrell

The Essential Guide to Chatbot Quality Assurance: Ensuring Excellence in Every Interaction

Leanna Merrell

Unlocking Superior CX: The Bombas Blueprint for Quality and Coaching

Leanna Merrell

Agent Empowerment: 5 Tactics for Customer Retention from Industry Leaders

Mastering Agent Onboarding: Quality Assurance Lessons from ClassPass

How Angi Unlocked Growth and Continuous Improvement with QA

The Transformation of QA: Driving Business Results - Key Takeaways from MaestroQA’s CX Summit

Lauren Alexander

Unleashing the Power of Customer Conversations: Top 6 Tech Trends Revealed at the CX Summit

Lauren Alexander

Important Factors to Consider when Exploring Sentiment Analysis in Customer Support QA: A CX Community Discussion

Driving Business Impact with Targeted QA: Insights from an Expert

The Art of Outsourcing Customer Support: Lessons from Stitch Fix's BPO Partnership

Larrita Browning

How to Revamp QA Scorecards for Enhanced Quality Assurance

De-Villainizing QA Scorecards with Hims & Hers Customer Service

How to Maximize Call Center & BPO Performance | MaestroQA

Larrita Browning

Writing the Auto QA Playbook & Transforming Customer Support

Larrita Browning

MaestroQA Named One of Comparably’s 2023 Best Workplaces in New York for the Second Consecutive Year

Larrita Browning

Advancing Customer Service Metrics with AI Classifiers

Lauren Alexander

MaestroQA Named on Comparably’s Best Workplaces in New York

Larrita Browning

CX Strategy: The Future of AI in Quality Assurance

Larrita Browning

Elevating Customer Satisfaction with Visibility & Coaching

Larrita Browning

How Customers Collaborate with Their BPO Partners Today

5 Key Strategies to Supercharge Your BPO Partnership

Larrita Browning

Champion-Challenger Model: Improve Customer Service In BPOs

Larrita Browning

Kick Start Your Customer Service BPO Partnership Successfully

Larrita Browning

BPO Call Centers: Best Practices for Quality Assurance

Larrita Browning

Call Calibration: What is It & What are the Benefits?

Larrita Browning

Increase QA Team Alignment with Call Calibration & GraderQA

Dan Rorke

Measuring An Organization's 3 Ps: People, Process and Product

Larrita Browning

Empathy in Customer Service: Everything You Need to Know

Larrita Browning

Average Handle Time (AHT): How to Calculate & Reduce It

How to Onboard Your Customer Service Team to a New QA Program

21 Key Customer Experience Definitions for QA Professionals

Should You Have Dedicated Quality Assurance Specialists?

How Top eCommerce Brands Ensure Exceptional Customer Service in a Remote World

The Top 4 CX Books Recommended by Our QA Community

A Guide to Customer Service Quality Assurance Programs

5 Key Components of a Remarkable Customer Service Experience

The Ultimate Guide to Improving First Call Resolution (FCR)

How to Refresh Your Call Center Quality Monitoring Scorecard

The Key to Customer Service Coaching Is More Data (and Fewer Opinions)

Call Center Quality Assurance with Zola and Peloton

How to Update Your QA Scorecard

3 Ways to Test Your Call Center Quality Assurance Scorecard

The 9 Customer Service KPIs Needed To Improve CX

What is DSAT and 5 Steps to Improve It

Leveraging Customer Sentiment to Improve CX in Call Centers

Larrita Browning

Customer Experience Management and Quality Assurance Jobs

How Deeper CX Analytics Lead to Better CSAT | MaestroQA

Customer Service Management 101: Everything You Need to Know

Beyond Low CSAT Scores: Finding the Root Cause of Poor CX

How to Create an Omnichannel Call Center Quality Assurance Scorecard

Achieving Effortless Customer Experiences (CX) with QA

This Is What an Effective Customer Service Coaching Session Looks Like

Customer Service Coaching 101: Improve Agent Performance

Auto-Fail in Call Center QA: What It Means and When to Use It

MaestroQA's Aircall Integration: Bring Your Calls to Life

Build the Ultimate QA Scorecard Process for Email and Chat

Why Poor Agent Experiences Happen (and How to Fix Yours)

20 Call Center Coaching Tips to Boost Agent Performance

Setting Up a Grading Cadence for Your QA Scorecard

How to Avoid Bad Customer Service as you Scale your Business

Why Getting Buy-in for Quality Assurance is Essential

Building a New Call Center Quality Assurance Scorecard

What CX Leaders Need to Know About Ecommerce Industry Trends

Quality Assurance and Training with Seismic Learning & MaestroQA

11 Customer Service Training Ideas and Skills for Your Agents

Call Center Cost Per Call: How to Calculate & Reduce It

6 Tips to Automate Your Customer Service Management Process