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Records issues customers have experienced with a software product, and it enables support agents, engineers, and managers to track those problems until they have been successfully resolved. Often referred to as a bug tracking system, these tools present an organized way via tickets for customer service and help address issues efficiently while also providing users with timely status updates.

How are issue tracking tools used?


Most commonly used for handling bugs when a user attempts to perform an action in a software product such as logging in, exporting data, or creating a dashboard for analytics and cannot complete the task, it will likely contact the company for help. That customer will contact the business via one of the available support channels. When the user makes that initial contact, the issue tracking system creates a ticket, which is assigned to a customer support agent.

An agent can impart information and close the ticket. A good issue tracking system will enable support agents to search for similar tickets (past or present) to either find a solution or identify an ongoing trend that multiple customers have experienced. However, if the issue is new, the agent can either flag the ticket for the software development team or attach it to a master ticket that has been created to address a trending problem that affects a wide number of users.

What features should users look for in an issue tracking solution?

 CHANNELS

Customers will report bugs or request new features via their preferred channels, whether that’s through a web form on a company's self-service page or via email, phone, chat, or social media. What makes issue trackers so powerful is their ability to centralize these conversations while enabling customers to move from channel to channel seamlessly. For agents (as well as engineers and managers), an omnichannel issue tracker provides end-to-end visibility of the life of a bug or request.

 TIME TRACKING

A robust issue tracker will also enable time tracking, which measures how much effort a software engineer expends while researching, coding, testing, and resolving a bug. That's especially important for project managers, manage their team members while updating planned sprints to reflect which bugs or requested features will be included in upcoming releases.

 ANALYTICS AND REPORTING

Enables bug tracking include the ability to generate detailed reports, which can simplify the project management process by identifying trends. Those reports can refine how resources are used for software projects and ultimately lead to updates to the product roadmap for a company's app. Managers can use a tracker to set up automated reports that will get delivered to their email inboxes, as well as create helpful dashboards that track KPIs such as first reply time, ticket volume, and more.

 CUSTOMER FEEDBACK

To elicit actionable feedback from customers. Tracking software should enable agents to automatically reach out to customers after an issue is resolved to gauge how well they've done and what they can do better. Common tools that agents can use to gather this feedback is Customer Satisfaction Score.

 SLAs, AUTOMATIONS, AND WORKFLOW CUSTOMIZATION

When choosing an issue tracker, it's vital to think about workflow guidelines. If your company is a vendor for another business, and your customer expects bug inquiries to be answered (or resolved) in an agreed upon time frame, you will need tools that flag requests as high priority.

Beyond SLAs and workflow customizations, issue tracking becomes much easier when the software enables administrators to set up automations of routine tasks, whether that's how tickets are assigned or automatic closing of tickets after a specified time frame. In essence, automations drive efficiency, improve the agent experience, and most important, help customers get the help they need faster.

 SCALABILITY

Issue tracking software can play a significant role in managing resources, whether that's by helping get more productivity (and effectiveness) from a lean support organization to giving customers helpful self-service content that lets them resolve common issues on their own. But as your business grows, a tracker must offer more complex tools to ensure that your customers continue to enjoy excellent service.

For instance, chatbots powered by artificial intelligence can take on easier support requests while employing machine learning to get smarter over time.

 TRIAL PERIODS

Test periods can be a handy way to assess whether a tracker will lead to more efficient projects while providing the kind of real time reports that will help organizations resolve customer issues faster.

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