A beginner’s guide to the Ofcom regulations

Page Views

Written by Jo Robinson

Do you make outbound calls from your call centre?  If so, you might fall under the cosh of the latest Ofcom Regulations.

Sian Ciabattoni takes us through them.

Outbound automated diallers were first introduced into the UK in the early 1990s.  As a result of initial ‘over-enthusiasm’ by contact centres, the Telephone Preference Service was set up in 1999 and today has over 15 million phone numbers registered.  The DMA Code of Practice was published in 2001, closely followed by the Communications Act which was set up in 2003 to regulate outbound dialling operations.

The regulations are key to regulating silent or abandoned calls, which can be annoying and irritating and for some people can cause worry and anxiety.  Silent calls occur when automated outbound diallers dial telephone numbers automatically and connect the customer to an agent as soon as the phone is answered.  Problems sometimes occur when these systems generate more calls than can be answered by call centre staff.

All contact centre solutions providers should be vigilant to ensure their clients remain compliant and operate within the silent call regulations.  We have spoken to many people who are either not aware of the regulations or do not understand the implications of non-compliance.

Following the Ofcom Revised Statement in September last year, we have summarised the key points as follows:

Ofcom Revised Statement:

  • Whilst Ofcom has not specifically banned Answer Machine Detect (AMD), they are aware that even the most accurate AMD will, unavoidably, generate some false positives and therefore abandoned calls.
  • The consultation suggested that companies using AMD need to factor AMD “false positives” into their abandoned call rate by subtracting AMD calls from the number of calls categorised as being passed to a live operator.  AMD ‘calls’ are calls answered by an answer machine and correctly identified as such; these should not be included in the abandoned call rate calculation.
  • With regard to AMD, Ofcom has not stated a specific false positive rate. However, in the course of an investigation, the onus will be placed on the user to demonstrate the basis and evidence on which an estimate has been made and would likely require practical testing.
  • Any abandoned calls must carry a brief recorded information message which identifies the source of the call and offers the person called an opportunity to decline further calls from that source.   The message must be played ‘within 2 seconds of the telephone being picked up’, rather than the earlier ‘within 2 seconds of the call being answered’.
  • Calling Line Identification (CLI) must be presented on all outbound calls from call centres using automated calling systems. CLI allows people to dial 1471 and access the telephone number of the person or organisation calling them.
  • Telephone numbers dialled and then abandoned should not be called again by that organisation’s automated calling system for at least 72 hours, unless a dedicated operator is available to take the call.
  • Abandoned call rates must not exceed 3% of live calls for any 24-hour period for each campaign.  Unanswered calls must ring for a minimum of 15 seconds.
  • Records must be kept to demonstrate compliance with these requirements.

The initial penalty for silent calls enforced by Ofcom was £5,000; this was increased to £50,000 in March 2006.  Recent press coverage has shown that the new Chairperson of Ofcom, Colette Bowe would like to raise this fine even further.

To date, Ofcom has prosecuted ten companies between £10,000 and £50,000.  The fines are mainly because of the following misuse:

  • Abandoned call rate higher than 3% within a number of 24-hour periods
  • Campaigns did not allow calls to ring for a minimum of 15 seconds
  • No information message played when calls connected to customers were abandoned
  • No presentation of Calling Line Identification

So if you are a contact centre, what are your options?  If you have already turned off Answer Machine Detect (AMD) you are likely to be compliant.

Contact centres still using AMD will need to make sure that their systems are set to comply with the guidelines outlined above. This is likely to reduce agent productivity, so it is likely that they will have to recruit more contact centre staff to ensure that the same number of calls/connects are being made.

Contact centres also have the option to implement new technology, such as  Intelligent Voice Messaging (IVM) or SMS Text Messaging.

Intelligent Voice Messaging (IVM) allows contact centres to push messages out to customers, (e.g. informational messages, such as “your account is close to going overdrawn,” “your payment is due,” or “your tickets have been issued”).  If IVM is utilised, contact centres should ensure regulatory compliance by gaining prior consent for these types of message contacts from their customers.

SMS Text Messaging can be used both for inbound and outbound campaigns. Similar to IVM, SMS Text Messaging allows contact centres to push and receive messages.  Web Chat enables immediate customer contact, with the benefits of increased website leads and conversions, reduced website abandonment, access to detailed reporting, and the ability to gain greater intelligence about your website traffic.  The results of Web Chat have been proven to be 30% more productive than handling phone calls, and recent US studies have proven that Web Chat can reduce shopping cart abandonment by up to 20%.

It is an ideal opportunity for contact centres to review their dialling strategies and techniques. This could relate to a number of areas, including pacing, telephony strategies, filtering, ‘no contact’ recycling, scripting, skill-set routing, and call-back management, to name but a few.  Best practice strategies can increase agent productivity by up to 30% and also increase contact and list penetration rates.


Sian Ciabattoni is Marketing Director EMEA for Noble Systems.

Noble Systems are holding a series of Compliance Seminars which will cover details of the new regulations and advice on maintaining a compliant yet efficient system.  If you are interested in these please contact Sian through the Noble Systems website.

Author
Jo Robinson

Jo Robinson has worked at Call Center Helper since 2007. She started off as News Editor and is currently Operations Manager. Jo quality checks a large number of the articles on Call Centre Helper, along with caring for our customers, managing the eblast programme and sponsorship of our annual benchmarking survey.

Connect with Jo on LinkedIn

Read more by Jo Robinson