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Energy Company

ActewAGL is an Australian multi-utility joint venture that provides electricity and gas services in the Australian Capital Territory and south-east New South Wales.

In 2022 we embarked on a program to replace our aging contact centre solution with a modern customer interaction solution. To ensure we maximised benefits realisation, we recognised the need to engage expert assistance and guidance for requirements analysis, approaching the market, solution selection and contract establishment.

[Read more…]

How Has The Pandemic Impacted Traditional “Bricks and Mortar” Contact Centres?

While many contact centres had the technical ability to work from home, only a small number encouraged staff to work from home on a semi-regular basis, and very few had permanent work-from-home staff.

There were still a large number of contact centres that did not have the technology that allowed work-from-home, which required a flurry of upgrade activity in the early stages of the pandemic.

Once staff were working from home the focus turned to how best to manage a remote workforce. This included supporting, training and motivating staff in a new working environment, adopting new technology (including the widespread use of video conferences) and so on.

Now management are wondering what the future looks like – are staff going to work in an office, at home or a mixture of both? What is the best way to achieve this? Is it going to be the same for everyone or will staff have a level of personal choice?

We would be interested in your thoughts.

What were the main challenges you experienced during the pandemic?

Has it been difficult to retain staff?

How is your contact centre likely to operate in the future – in the office, remotely or a hybrid?

For assistance or more information please give us a call on 1300 789 456 or check our web site.

What Are You Planning For Your Contact Centre This Year?

The last two years have been rather reactive for the contact centre industry due to the pandemic.

With the focus on working from home and maintaining customer service, a lot of improvements and strategic planning have been deferred as higher priority tasks were attended to.

As the pandemic settles into the “new normal” contact centre managers are starting to think more strategically.

  • If you replaced or upgraded technology, is the solution right for you? Is there functionality available that you are not using? Have you adapted your work practices to leverage the capabilities of the new technology?
  • There is a lot of talk in the media about staff changing roles post-pandemic. How will you be able to retain staff?
  • In some ways customers became more tolerant during the pandemic as we all experienced a situation that we had never been in before. Again, as we adapt to the “new normal” customer expectations are likely to rise again.
  • Everyone is talking about artificial intelligence. There are lots of applications for AI from self-service to agent assistance but is it right for you and your customers?
  • What are your customers actually thinking and saying? How are they behaving. Understanding customer sentiment and behaviour through analytics allows you to tailor your offerings to optimise the customer experience.
  • Is your contact centre operating as efficiently as possible? Are there any capabilities available in your current technology that would allow you to increase efficiency and reduce cost?
  • Have you moved all your technology to the cloud or are there still some components that need to be moved?
  • Staff are working from home but are they working well? What is their environment like? Do they have the equipment they need? Is your data secure? Do they have access to all the information they require? How do you ensure your staff still feel like members of a team?
  • Do your business continuity plan and disaster recovery plan accurately reflect the changes made during the pandemic or do they need updating? When was the last time they were tested?

Do you have a strategy for the next 5 years?

What is the most important change you will be making this year?

If you need any assistance to develop a strategic plan, or to assess your current operation, please give us a call on 1300 789 456 or check our web site – www.ccaction.com.au.

Financial Services Company (2)

I have worked with Steve over the past 24 months and during such a tumultuous time with Covid-19, our success in migrating from full on-premise outdated telephony to VOIP/SIP and Cloud contact centres would not have been possible with Steve’s know-how and can-do attitude.

A trusted advisor who consolidated the work of multiple vendors to deliver the best outcome for McMillan Shakespeare,

[Read more…]

Health Checks

people

Contact centres are not “set and forget” environments. Businesses change, customers (and their expectations) change, and technology changes. Unfortunately, many contact centres do not review their operation in the light of these changes on a regular basis.

Every contact centre should have a strategy – a plan for the next 1 to 5 years – to allow for growth planning, budget planning and changes to customer service. This strategy should be reviewed every two years or so to ensure it is still relevant, to include any evolving technologies that are appropriate and to cater for any changes to customer needs.

At the same time, a comprehensive review of the current operation should be undertaken – not just from a technology perspective, but overall. This includes organisational structure, staff skills, training, rostering and scheduling, recruitment, internal and external communication, use and effectiveness of technology, and customer service.

The health check should cover technical, operational and personnel aspects of the contact centre and will provide a baseline of current capability and recommendations to proceed into the future, considering the likely expectations of customers and the business itself.

The health check should cover all areas of the contact centre, including:

  • The current technology including versions and support.
  • How the technology is used, including whether there is additional functionality that could be activated easily to improve business outcomes.
  • IVR configuration and call routing.
  • Reporting and metrics.
  • Scheduling and rostering.
  • Job descriptions and KPIs.
  • Recruitment and training.
  • Staff skills.
  • Organisational structure, roles and responsibilities.
  • Customer service and call quality.
  • Internal and external communications.
  • Contact centre features and facilities.

At the conclusion a detailed report including prioritised recommendations will be produced. The report will provide an objective, independent opinion of the best way to progress while considering the short, medium and long-term business requirements.

Technology Consulting

recruitment

The contact centre technology environment is changing rapidly There has been a strong push to cloud-based telephony solutions for some years now, but during 2020 that ramped up significantly as businesses had to transition their contact centres to a work-from-home model.

Amongst vendors there have been mergers and acquisitions, and companies that were well known overseas are now starting to operate in Australia, with many new players in the market today. Often their products are innovative, feature-rich and competitively priced in comparison.

There are significant advantages in enlisting specialist, external assistance when investigating or evaluating new technology – for example:

  • Specialist consultants know how other companies are using technology to enhance their customer service and improve business efficiency as they are working with a variety of different companies on a daily basis.
  • Specialist consultants maintain an understanding of the capabilities of different technology vendors (including new and emerging vendors) and how the different features and functions can benefit your business.
  • Specialist consultants maintain an understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of the different technology re-sellers (dealers) and can assist clients with their selection to minimise their risk during the project implementation.
  • Specialist consultants can leverage their knowledge of the industry and key technology vendors to ensure your business requirements and tender document contain the features and functions that will enhance your business in the short, medium and long term. Where internal staff write the tender document it often contains current business practices rather than current and future business needs, resulting in a “like-for-like” technology replacement that does not provide the business with strategic benefit in the future.
  • “The devil is often in the detail”, and an experienced consultant knows what to look out for with the different solutions – challenges that may not be immediately apparent during the purchasing phase – again reducing the risk to the client.

CCA are in an ideal position to assist clients with the evaluation, selection and implementation of new contact centre technology. In our 20+ years of experience in the industry we have undertaken many similar engagements for other clients in all industry verticals.

We maintain knowledge of the different vendors and solutions in the market today, ensuring the most appropriate vendors are included in the tender process.

We are vendor-independent. We have no commercial relationships with any technology vendors, ensuring that we work only in the interests of our clients, and our clients get the best possible solution to meet their individual requirements.

We have extensive experience in contact centre operations and technology, allowing us to easily translate business requirements into technical specifications, and to translate technical capabilities into business benefits.

Tips For Successful Contact Centre Management – Part 9

In this series we will look at some useful tips for contact centre management, as seen by our work in the Australian contact centre industry. They are not presented in any particular order.

This article is the last of nine articles in the series.

We want to know what you want to hear about. Contact us here –www.ccaction.com.au/contact-us and tell us what you would like us to write about.

All Hands On Deck

We have all seen it before – the contact centre is humming along, service levels are good, NPS scores are right up there, staff morale is good, stress is down and the business is happy.

Then “something” happens.

“Something” could be anything that unexpectedly pushes up workload – an advertising campaign, a web site update, unexpected staff absences – anything that will cause service levels to drop and abandoned calls to increase. If it is short-term, management can usually ride it out with an explanation for the reason, however if it lasts longer, senior management will most likely want to see action.

The most common response is to put more people on the phones – a valid, short-term response. The temptation is for those extra people on the phones to be made up of contact centre team leaders, managers and other support staff, because they usually have the knowledge and can have an impact more quickly. Unfortunately this has unintended consequences and can actually prevent the workload from dropping again.

Firstly, team leaders are there to lead and support the team and manage process on a day-to-day basis. If they are on the phones, they are not able to adequately support the team so service levels drop and morale is impacted.

Secondly, if staff know there is nobody “watching the gauges” there is a possibility some may relax a bit and reduce their effort. It will certainly impact staff development and learning. This will also reduce customer service and puts pressure on other staff.

Thirdly, team leaders and managers are the very people that should be performing the analysis of why the impact to service occurred in the first place, and developing a strategy to return to normal levels. They cannot be doing this if they are on the phone serving customers.

The temptation for supervisors and managers to get on the phones during busy periods is strong – but it must be avoided at all costs. For the three reasons described above, it is unlikely the work volumes will decrease if team leaders and managers are on the phones – the phone becomes the priority and their “real job” doesn’t get done.

By all means increase staff numbers for short periods if necessary, but the additional staff should come from part timers working longer hours, staff in other parts of the business helping out, or temporary staff from a recruitment agency. Team leaders and managers should be left to do their “normal” jobs – they should not be on the phones.

For more information please email spels@ccaction.com.au or call +61 3 8648 6577.

All previous articles are available on our web site – www.ccaction.com.au

Tips For Successful Contact Centre Management – Part 8

In this series we will look at some useful tips for contact centre management, as seen by our work in the Australian contact centre industry. They are not presented in any particular order.

This article is the eighth of nine articles in the series.

Communicate Effectively

This point relates to communication within the contact centre, as well as communication across the wider business.

Communication within a contact centre is difficult to get right. It shouldn’t be too much or key messages are going to get ‘lost’ in the noise. It also shouldn’t be too little – staff need to know what is going on and how it affects them.

The format of the communication is important too. Often, team leads send out emails with information, product updates, promotions, break times, birthdays and all sorts of other subjects. Staff either ignore them, or read them at a suitable time (which might be too late). People also learn (and receiving information is learning) in different ways – some learn best by reading, some learn best by seeing, some learn best by hearing and some learn best by doing. Tailor your message to your staff – it may even be appropriate to use multiple formats for the same message.

Another complaint of some contact centre staff is that they never know what is going on in the rest of the business – they just come to work, do their job and go home and aren’t fully engaged in the success of the business or (worse still) don’t understand how their job benefits the business as a whole.

This point is related to Article 7 in this series – Work With The Business (available at www.ccaction.com.au). It is essential that contact centre staff see themselves as integral to the entire business. It is just as important that the rest of the business views them in the same way – after all it is highly likely that the contact centre is the biggest and most important interface between the business and the customer – therefore the success of the whole business is heavily dependent on the performance of the contact centre.

For more information please email spels@ccaction.com.au or call +61 3 8648 6577.

All previous articles are available on our web site – www.ccaction.com.au

Next article – All Hands On Deck.

Tips For Successful Contact Centre Management – Part 7

In this series we will look at some of the common mistakes made by contact centre managers, as seen by our work in the Australian contact centre industry. They are not presented in any particular order.

This article is the seventh of nine articles in the series.

Work With The Business

Contact centres often operate in isolation, with little or no interaction with other departments in the business – even if their performance has a direct impact on the other department.

Contact centre staff should meet regularly with all other parts of the greater business that are impacted by the performance of the contact centre – after all, those other parts of the business are customers of the contact centre too.

In order to be truly effective a contact centre manager must know what other departments expect of them, and must also show other areas how their work impacts the contact centre. For example, if Accounts send out inaccurate invoices, or Marketing put an ambiguous statement on the web site, contact centre volumes will increase, which has a real and measurable cost to the business. By demonstrating that cost (or even re-charging it internally), it will encourage the other departments to consider the impact of their actions in the future.

This frequently occurs when a customer calls the contact centre to request something (maybe a new service or a fault repair), but the contact centre can’t resolve the issue immediately and has to pass the issue to another department. If the other department doesn’t resolve the issue quickly the customer will call the contact centre back thus increasing workload. In extreme cases they will become frustrated with the contact centre and its staff, which can adversely impact staff morale – even though the contact centre can’t do anything to resolve the problem.

While regular meetings are the most common way of interacting with other parts of the business, there are other strategies that can be employed, including:

  • Encouraging management from other departments to visit the contact centre and see how it works – even listen to some calls.
  • Creating a staff exchange program so call centre staff and staff from other areas that interface with the contact centre can “swap jobs” to experience each other’s challenges and successes.

Providing customer service is not the responsibility of a single department, even though a single department maybe the interface to the customer. Customer service is the responsibility of everyone in the organisation, and everyone needs to work together to provide that service.

For more information please email spels@ccaction.com.au or call +61 3 8648 6577.

All previous articles are available on our web site – www.ccaction.com.au

Next article – Communicate Effectively.

Tips For Successful Contact Centre Management – Part 6

In this series we will look at some useful tips for contact centre management, as seen by our work in the Australian contact centre industry. They are not presented in any particular order.

This article is the sixth of nine articles in the series.

Celebrate Success

This is different to selling success – it is internal to the contact centre.

Contact centre work is difficult and often thankless – but you can change that! If staff exceed realistic targets, get good customer feedback or similar, celebrate their success – reward them and actively promote their achievements.

This can be through a formal reward and recognition program, or it can be simply ‘catching someone doing something right’. Ideally, it should be both.

Don’t ignore it – recognise it, then others will put in a greater effort to be recognised and customer service goes up.

Every contact centre should have a reward and recognition program. It has to be fair, defined and documented so the right staff are recognised. If staff believe the wrong staff are being recognised it will have a negative effect. However, it needn’t be expensive – the short-term rewards can be very small and very inexpensive, because it is the recognition that counts. Longer term (quarterly, half-yearly or annual) need to be a bit more substantial but they still don’t have to be expensive in terms of your overall budget. The benefit to customer service will more than offset the cost.

A reward and recognition program has to be balanced. If you include only productivity, or only quality, you will drive the wrong behaviours. The key attributes of a reward and recognition program are:

  • Objective
  • Fair
  • Balanced
  • Measurable
  • Open
  • Viewed as desirable by staff.

Without these attributes it is unlikely to be successful.

For more information please email spels@ccaction.com.au or call +61 3 8648 6577.

All previous articles are available on our web site – www.ccaction.com.au

Next article – Work With The Business

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Latest news…

How Has The Pandemic Impacted Traditional “Bricks and Mortar” Contact Centres?

While many contact centres had the technical ability to work from home, only a small number encouraged staff to work from home on a semi-regular … [Read More...]

What Are You Planning For Your Contact Centre This Year?

The last two years have been rather reactive for the contact centre industry due to the pandemic. With the focus on working from home and … [Read More...]

Tips For Successful Contact Centre Management – Part 9

In this series we will look at some useful tips for contact centre management, as seen by our work in the Australian contact centre industry. They are … [Read More...]

More news...

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(ABN 27 107 085 558)
trading as Contact Centre Action.