8th February 2007

Everything to improve call centre management and training:-
Acknowledge your staff
Making management information available to team leaders and customer service representatives means acknowledging that they are professional people, doing a professional job.
Contributed by Anne-Marie Stagg, Co-Op Financial Services
Agent input
Give agents the opportunity to determine how they will work together and create their own team rules for performance.
Contributed by Simon Pell, Chairman, Pell & Bales
Automate where most cost effective
Identify the more mundane and repetitive calls the agents are taking and see if there are ways to automate them. This will help increase the job satisfaction of your agents, by allowing them to focus on the more interesting and challenging calls.
Contributed by Nigel Solsby, IR Business Development at Avaya
Availability to work as team, not location
Make it possible for individual team members or contact centre agents to work as a team dependent on their availability but irrespective of their location thereby making life easier for home workers, individuals limited in mobility but not in capability and those on maternity leave. And of course at the same time ease the pressure on the contact centre manager to recruit and cover for leave of absence situations.
Contributed by Lesley Hansen, Marketing Director, TeleWare Group Plc
Choose your headset
Give staff a choice of headset so ensuring they are working in the style they are most comfortable with – there are today an almost limitless number of telephone headsets to choose from – internal, external, fixed or mobile.
Contributed by Lesley Hansen, Marketing Director, TeleWare Group Plc
Choose your reward carefully
Contributed by Clare Rutherford, business incentives manager at House of Fraser
Communicate with Marketing
Go and speak to Marketing and make them your best friend. They are probably trying to figure out what is on the customer’s mind today. You probably have this information.
Contributed by Bill Durr, Witness Systems
Communication
Communicate regularly using more than one medium. Think about company e-mails, weekly and monthly meetings. Update participants regularly on progress, reminding them of the rewards available to maintain enthusiasm.
Contributed by Clare Rutherford, business incentives manager at House of Fraser
Empower your team
If you want to improve customer service, give agents the authority and tools to provide the right way to treat customers – don’t beat them over the head with Average Handling Time (AHT).
Contributed by Oscar Alban, Witness Systems
Feedback on performance
Contact centre performance is often thought of at too generic a level, but it’s the ability of every representative to delight the customer while managing the cost to serve that makes the difference. Let them know how they’re doing without the need for any managerial intervention.
Contributed by Tim Burfoot, Managing Director at Teasel Performance Management
Forget status
Forget status. Management information should help people manage the contribution they are making, regardless of their role in the organisation.
Contributed by Tim Burfoot, Managing Director at Teasel Performance Management
Know your team
Improve the teamwork in the call centre. How well do the team leaders really know their teams? On a Tuesday ask your team leaders to tell you what each of their team did at the weekend. Hint. You will be surprised at the results. We have often seen that the best performing team leaders know what all of their teams did, while the lowest performing often had very little idea.
Contributed by Clare Rutherford, business incentives manager at House of Fraser
Making information available
Think about which groups of people really influence real-time performance, and about what information they need. Start by making management information available to them.
Making management information relevant
Contributed by Tim Burfoot, Managing Director at Teasel Performance Management
Management information
It’s not just for managers
Contributed by Tim Burfoot, Managing Director at Teasel Performance Management
Measure the correct information
Develop a culture where ACD statistics do not get in the way. Measure attendance, and total time on the phone and available time rather than the number of calls and the average handling time.
Contributed by Anne-Marie Stagg, Co-Op Financial Services
Motivation Schemes
Relevant Training
Suitable break areas
Create a designated quiet zone where agents can truly rest their voice during breaks.
Contributed by Greg Duffy, ICT Solutions, BT Business
Team Leader Investment
Invest in your team leaders – they are the most important resource in your call centre.
Contributed by Anne-Marie Stagg, Co-Op Financial Services
Working together
Customer service representatives are most likely to be the first people to feel the effects of service degradation. With the right kind of management information, they can act quickly to manage the customer impact and support the organisation’s wider objectives.
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