Mastering the Multi-Sourced Call Center

June 27, 2008, 11:52 AM —  Echopass Corp. — 

At first glance, sourcing agents from multiple call centers — which mix in-house, remote, and outsourced call center agents to create a distributed, virtual call center — would seem to promise cost savings and flexibility. Agents from across town or across the globe can be quickly added to or subtracted from the call center agent pool to respond quickly to changing business needs.

A closer look, however, reveals underlying risks that can actually undermine the objective of better and more flexible customer service. Sourcing from multiple centers can damage customer loyalty and brand as well as jeopardize cost savings, especially when the call centers lack a common hosted infrastructure. Without a common hosted infrastructure:

  • Agents can’t deliver consistent customer service because they lack the same set of tools, often driving a company’s most valuable customers to take their business elsewhere.
  • Companies (and their customers) face unpredictable, unmanageable response times.
  • Management’s lack of complete agent visibility creates the inability to reconfigure and reallocate call distribution in real time and when needed, which keeps cost per call artificially high.
  • Siloed sites on different platforms within the multi-site deployments require separate upgrades, maintenance and staffing, which drain savings sought by having multi-sourced agents.

How do companies like American Express Incentive Services (AEIS) minimize the risks and maximize the rewards of customer service through a multi-sourced call centers? With a common hosted call center platform.

Improving service availability
One of the attractions of multi-sourcing is reduced risk of call center downtime, yet companies that engage in sourcing agents from multiple call centers without a common hosted platform still expose their call center operations to heightened risk. Disparate platforms cause each agent pool to be invisible to one another and, in most cases, to call center management, necessitating the blind distribution of calls. This lack of visibility reduces the company’s ability to view problems at outsourced locations and to respond to them with timely remedies.

For instance, AEIS runs four major call centers in the United States and the Philippines that handle several hundred thousand calls per month, with call volumes seasonally increasing to nearly triple that amount during the fourth quarter. Prior to implementing a multi-site, multi-sourced hosted contact center from Echopass in all their locations, AEIS couldn’t shift excess capacity from one center to another because it didn’t have visibility of all its agents. AEIS was penalized for overstaffing in one call center while another center had call-abandon rates of 30 percent.

With a common hosted platform, AEIS dynamically routes calls to the best available agent location, based on the current status of all agent locations and queues. No matter what location, skills-based routing coupled with complete agent visibility ensures calls are routed seamlessly and answered promptly. As the environment changes — as more agents become available at one location, for example, and capacity drops at another — call distribution automatically adjusts to the new realities.

In addition, because call center managers with a common hosted platform have real-time visibility into the status of the entire agent pool at all locations as well as the entire call queues, they can perform load balancing and maximize asset utilization to deliver a higher level of service at a lower level of staffing.

Achieving service consistency
Companies running disparate call centers risk delivering inconsistent customer service. Tool deployment delays, business intelligence obstacles, and other differences among call center platforms mean service levels can fluctuate on a call-by-call basis, depending on which pool of agents a caller reaches.

When these systems are out of sync with each other, the in-house, remote and outsourced agents risk giving callers conflicting or contradictory information. Similarly, an agent’s access to CRM information — or lack thereof — can mean the difference between a fast, efficient transaction and a call that gets bogged down as agents question callers for basic information. Worse yet, customers do not get their first call resolved and have to make a second call to the contact center.

With a common hosted call center platform, multi-sourced agents at all locations use the same systems and tools, and have access to the same data, scripting tools, and the threaded business intelligence through the complete integration with the company’s enterprise systems and databases. As a result, customers receive consistent answers and prompt treatment no matter which agent pool they reach.

Finding efficiency in numbers
To meet service quality and agent availability goals, companies running multi-sourced call centers often staff them beyond optimal and cost-effective levels. They end up shouldering additional costs — both direct and indirect — when they deploy service enhancements across heterogeneous multi-sourcing environments.

The common hosted multi-sourced environment uses shared tools, applications, and services to generate ongoing savings in IT and outsourcing fees. Moreover, the standardized call center infrastructure and associated standardized workflows and methods dramatically reduce the cost and time required for agent training. Companies can even consolidate the monitoring, evaluating, and coaching of all their agents.

As call centers migrate toward a distributed agent model, companies also need to consider how these dispersed resources can be most efficiently managed to maximize the cost savings without diminishing service quality and availability. A common hosted call center platform is essential to fully realizing the benefits of call center multi-sourcing.

Leading companies that adopt this strategy will be able to deliver unmatched customer service with unmatched contact center efficiency. System-wide visibility into the status of all agents; the ability to provide them with shared tools, data and business intelligence; and the capability to manage them in real-time with unified reporting and controls will enable these service leaders to deliver consistently excellent service regardless of where the agent resides.

Bruce Dresser is chief marketing officer for Echopass Corp., the experts in on-demand, always-on, hosted contact center solutions. Learn more about Echopass at http://www.echopass.com, or contact Bruce at Bruce_Dresser@echopass.com.

» posted by nrichmond

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