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May 02 2008

Seven Tips To Optimize Your Contact Centre

Published by customer_care at 1:55 am under 1 Edit This

With a difficult economic period ahead the Professional Planning Forum looks at how to drive efficiency in your contact centre. With ideas ranging from removing the need to contact at all to the more traditional multi-skilling approach, we provide some key areas to be looked at when driving efficiency, whilst maintaining or improving the customer experience.

1. Cause of contact: The first and perhaps most effective area in which to improve efficiency is to consider the reasons your customers contact you. Once you understand why a customer contacts you, you can identify what is causing that need for contact. In some cases processes can be improved to reduce the handling time, in others the need can be removed altogether. Using data from customer surveys, IVR, call coding or even old-fashioned tick sheets can provide a valuable insight into improving the service your organisation offers your customers.

2. Document your processes: One approach is to look at documenting your processes. This often unearths inconsistency and helps to identify obvious areas forprocess improvement. Or why not simply ask your employees what processes they think need to be changed? If we can make these changes we can reduce the volume of calls coming into our centres, the amount of time it takes to complete tasks and aim to get things consistently right first time.

3. Multi-skilling: Cross-skilling or Multi-skilling has long been seen as a way to drive efficiency. Establishing which skills logically go together, both from a knowledge retention and customer experience point of view is an important first step. Understanding how employees will retain the skills is important, with many centres adopting a knowledge system to support the employee in delivering good service. The economies of scale that can be achieved through multi-skilling help to reduce the amount of available time required to achieve service levels, therefore reducing the amount of employees needed to answer the calls.However, it is important not to push this too far, as employees will become “burnt out” if they are worked too hard, resulting in higher sickness and then attrition.

4. Staff retention: Experience and knowledge is important when it comes to providing the customer with the level of service they expect. The excessive churn of employees in some contact centres means they need constantly to bring in new staff and train them to the desired level. With many centres experiencing attrition rates of 40-plus per cent annually it becomes extremely difficult to achieve a fully skilled workforce. If this can be achieved benefits will be seen in AHT and first contact resolution, therefore driving improved levels of productivity and customer satisfaction. Staff retention starts from the beginning of the recruitment process.

5. Good recruitment procedures: Good recruitment and selection procedures are vital in employing the right person. How this person is then integrated intothe culture of the business and trained to do the job will have a significant impact on whether they stay.

6. Schedule fit and adherence: The right skill, in the right place, at the right time, doesn’t sound that difficult! The schedules worked by employees must match as closely as possible the demand from customers, whilst still providing the employee with the flexibility they need to have a true work-life balance.

7. What gets measured, gets managed: Whether you have a real-time team watching screens, or simply a reporting system that allows employees to be assessed on their performance but that encourages a self-management approach, depends on the culture of your centre. Simply not managing adherence to schedule is a very risky approach.

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One Response to “Seven Tips To Optimize Your Contact Centre”

  1. customer_careon 13 May 2008 at 12:30 am edit this

    Today’s enterprises – under pressure to improve efficiency – face many challenges, including increased competition, globalisation, mergers and acquisitions, and cost increases. However, consumers expect a faster and more efficient service, offering multiple contact channels and 24/7 availability. Indeed for many organisations higher service levels has become a key service differentiator.
    Our solutions help facilitate the rapid deployment of new applications, are designed to improve customer service across your distributed operations, and support the flexible working requirements of your staff. Skilled employees within your organisation, irrespective of their actual location, can now form part of a virtual network of experts, set up to optimise the service your customers receive.

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