Groove is help desk software designed for small customer support teams that looks, feels, and works a lot like Gmail.
In fact, if you could take your Gmail account, enable it to be shared with others, allow private messaging that customers would not see, and track everything via a backend reporting system, you would have Groove.
According to Len Markidan, Groove’s marketing director, who spoke with Small Business Trends via telephone, Groove is simpler to use than other help desk platforms, provides more personalized assistance and is designed for businesses that have outgrown Gmail or Outlook for customer support.
“When you start out using Gmail for customer support, it doesn’t take long before the workflow starts slipping through the cracks,” Markidan said. “You don’t know who’s responsible for each message, you’re dealing with a single shared inbox, emails get forwarded back and forth a dozen times, you lose track of emails — it looks like a mess. That’s the problem Groove is intended to solve.”
Markidan said that Groove is ideally suited to 20 to 50 person companies that have a support staff of three to ten people.
Groove Help Desk Components
Groove divides its platform into four main components: ticket management, knowledge base, support widget and reporting database.
Ticket Management
Ticket management features include:
- Ticket Assignments. Agents share the workload by assigning tickets to other agents or groups.
- Private Notes. Agents can collaborate behind the scenes with private notes that only the team sees.
- Ticket Statuses. The platform categorizes tickets into one of three statuses: Open, Pending or Closed.
- Multiple Mailboxes. Agents can support multiple email addresses from the same dashboard with an unlimited number of mailboxes.
Other features include the ability to merge tickets, attach files, prioritize tickets, log phone calls, see Facebook posts and tweets, set rules to automate workflows and create labels to organize tickets or tag them for future reference.
Knowledge Base
The Knowledge Base ensures customer service is online, 24/7, even when agents are not available.
Companies can personalize the Knowledge Base with their logo, custom branding and HTML/CSS. Customers can search articles to find answers in 12 different languages.
Agents can save articles in draft mode, add photos and other media and create articles using a WYSIWYG Editor.
Support Widget
A third component of the system is a support widget (shown in the image above) that collapses when not needed but that pops-up when it is. The widget suggests answers as customers search and sends messages into the dashboard so agents can reply quickly. Like the Knowledge Base, the widget is also customizable, to fit the company’s branding.
Reporting
A fourth component is a reporting database that includes metrics like customer feedback and satisfaction ratings, trends, average first reply times and ticket handle times.
Groove Help Desk Benefits
Groove’s focus on simplicity of use and personalized support are what separates it from other help desk software, according to Markidan.
“We built Groove to look and feel like the email inbox you’re used to,” Markidan said. “It’s what you’ve been using for years, and it’s what you know best. Enterprise help desks like Zendesk and Desk.com offer tons of features. And while that may make them feature-rich, it certainly doesn’t make them simple.”
There’s nothing more personal on the web than one-on-one email. However, as businesses grow, it gets harder to keep things that way, which is where help desk software comes in, Markidan said. But that’s also when a lot of businesses start to alienate their customers.
“Have you ever gotten a response to a support email from a business that looked like a corporate template or that clogged up your inbox with ‘We’ve received your email’ confirmations for every response you send?,” Markidan asked. “Or even worse, have you ever had to log in through a support portal to track the status of your ticket? Those are just a few of the features that come standard in many help desks.”
That’s another way Groove is different, said Markidan:
“Groove looks and feels exactly like email to your customers. There’s no templates, no portals, no digging through old emails for ticket numbers, just the simple, personal experience of regular email, scaled up for your team.”
Small Business Trends Uses Groove
Small Business Trends relies on Groove to manage customer support.
“Groove has been extremely useful to Small Business Trends as a helpdesk by enabling us to manage multiple inboxes in one central location,” said Staci Wood, chief operations officer, citing its advantages. “This is not only helpful to the company, but also to readers of the site.
“Through the use of a Groove help center we can provide answers to frequently asked questions, also track incoming inquiries from beginning to end, and archive them for later recall if necessary. The Groove system is intuitive and user-friendly, which also means that very little time is required to become familiar with it.”
Cost to Use Groove
As with other aspects of the platform, pricing is simple and starts at $15 per agent per month. There are also dozens of free third-party add-ons and integrations, including Slack, Olark, MailChimp and Highrise.
Images: Groove
[“source-smallbiztrends”]