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By Oscar Alban, Witness Systems*
Much has been written about the evolution our
industry is making from the call center to the
contact center or customer interaction center.
In fact, this publication's very purpose is to
serve as "the forum for customer contact center
information." As organizations strive for competitive
advantage, industry analysts agree that call center
agents will be increasingly challenged with handling
cross-medium interactions (email, web, fax, etc.).
Your call center may route specific interactions
to the agent with the appropriate skills or even
have a few talented "universal" agents, who can
handle any medium. Either way, these new interaction
points into contact centers are important for
the sake of enhanced customer service, which in
many cases is a company's sole point of distinction
competitively.
If customer service representatives (CSRs) are
going to be summoned to respond to these new channels
of communication, how are we going to prepare
them and help them improve their performance?
You want to ensure your CSRs are meeting your
quality standards, regardless of how they are
interfacing with your customers.
Many of your customers relish the opportunity
to communicate with you via email or fax. But
how are you responding to them using these mediums.
Are your CSRs consistent in their response? When
communicating via email or the web, are you maintaining
the sound reputation for quality service that
your company has established through voice interactions?
Are you able to see and measure exactly how well
your agents are performing?
Like most companies, you are probably performing
some type of call monitoring to coach your CSRs
and improve call quality. Is that really enough
as your call center emerges into a customer interaction
center? As call centers continue shaping themselves
into contact centers, recording is fast becoming
an urgent need. And it's not only basic call recording,
but customer interaction recording that will become
key.
Over the next several years, industry analysts
from the META Group contend that interactions
will be observed and recorded "cradle to grave"
(i.e., from interaction entry through call resolution).
Having this information will not only help your
supervisors and call center managers train your
CSRs, it also will help senior management gauge
the overall performance of your company's service
delivery.
Recording your customer interactions will provide
valuable insight into the effectiveness of your
service operations. Customer interaction recording
software will record and evaluate complete customer
contact across a variety of mediums.
Already available today are voice and data recording
applications, the most effective of which boast
a multitude of installations where customers are
using the synchronized voice and data recordings
in a production environment as coaching and training
tools. Securing a client/server voice and data
recording solution is a critical first step toward
a full-fledged customer interaction recording
environment.
Data recording is crucial because in addition
to seeing how well your agents are verbally interacting
with your customers, you want to know how well
they're using your in-house software applications
for taking orders and providing customer service.
By capturing agent screen activity, you can train
agents to navigate screens more effectively and
see that they are using your software to its fullest
potential. The most effective and advanced data
capture techniques will capture only changed areas
of the screen to minimize your network utilization,
as opposed to remote control capture methods that
tax network resources and offer a less fluid presentation
of the captured data.
Some recording applications available now can
perform random monitoring based on specific events,
such as Dialed Number Identification Service (DNIS).
By recognizing any incoming calls delivered to
a particular CSR from the automatic call distributor
(ACD) as an event, call center managers can hone
in on specific campaigns or callers. Other event
monitoring examples include call centers that
want to track a certain caller using Automatic
Number Identification (ANI) or customer account
numbers. This approach helps call center managers
gauge customer service delivery by collecting
historical data on customer interactions.
Next-generation customer interaction recording
solutions will take the recording process one
step further. Your recording software will soon
have the capability to recognize specific call
information -- such as call type, dollar value
per call or sales volume per agent - which will
activate customer interaction recordings. Whether
your CSRs are interacting with customers via the
web, email or a traditional call, recording will
begin when the business rules (i.e., call type)
are initiated. Who establishes the business rules
that trigger the recordings? That information
is simply supplied by you and your call center
management team.
Center managers will then be able to review these
recordings and link them to evaluation and reporting
software for agent analysis. Your quality monitoring
software may already include a module that facilitates
review, evaluation and scoring of agents, providing
immediate performance summaries. Those software
products that have custom design capabilities
can enhance the way your call center measures
productivity. By customizing the reports and graphs
to meet your exact specifications, your supervisors
will become more productive and have the right
tools for improved coaching sessions.
The next level of analysis from your customer
interaction recordings will combine scores from
your monitoring sessions with other performance
data, such as ACD or workforce management information.
The software will then produce customized graphs
and reports showcasing service delivery, and perhaps
even recommend specific courses of action to improve
service performance. This is valuable information
to help management make proactive decisions that
enhance the business.
If your organization is focused on progressing
to a comprehensive customer contact center, then
now is the time to begin researching the technology
needed to record your resulting customer interactions.
A good starting point is securing an integrated
voice and data monitoring solution that has the
underlying architecture and clear future direction
to support customer interaction recording capabilities.
Oscar A. Alban serves as principal, market consultant
for Witness Systems, a global provider of multimedia
customer interaction recording, performance analysis
and e-learning management software that enables
companies to optimize their customer relationships.
This article was originally published in the April
1999 issue of C@ll Center Solutions Magazine.
©1999-2003, Witness Systems, Inc. All Rights
Reserved Worldwide.
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