WHAT IS A CALL CENTRE? There are many different terms used to describe call centres – service centres, sales centres, contact centres etc. In its basic form the key role of a call centre is its responsibility for handling the telephone (channel) calls for an organisation For centres with more than 100 agents this may mean they handle several thousand calls per day! The calls may be inbound from customers or outbound made by the company to the customer. The calls may be for any type of function ranging from sales enquiries, order taking, service, debt management, technical help desk – the list is almost endless. Some call centres will also deal with faxes as part of their remit. Most call centres aspire to become contact centres. A contact centre is where the centre handles both the telephone and fax contacts but also other channels including the web or electronic business and could also handle the paper processing as well. Again, the more contact channels the centre handles for an organisation, the more complex the centre becomes. Let’s use the term call centre throughout this document, but do remember we could be referring to a contact centre as well. Why did call centres become such a major business? All centres were set up as a means of dealing more effectively (and at lower cost) with large numbers of customers. By consolidating a number of separate customer facing departments into a call centre allows the organisation to achieve economies of scale. These financial benefits arise from consolidating business support costs – just paying for a single location, one management structure and one set of technologies. This was and still is a very important business consideration. Call centres have been a victim of their own success for the following reasons:
We will explain each of the above points in turn: Your competitor has one, so you must have one too! A very simple reason why many organisations set up their first call centre was that the senior management felt they could not lag behind the competition. Call centres are seen as an important direct ‘channel’ to customers - in the UK more than 95% of homes have access to a telephone. With the increasing popularity across the world of mobile phones, this trend is continuing. Unfortunately, setting up a centre as a response to someone else doing it, has meant that some organisations have not thought through the strategy of what they wanted the centre for, how it was to meet their business need and how it was to be managed! The result – a poorly performing centre that leaves those organisation’s with problems which can be very costly to rectify later! Employment opportunities Many call centres have been set up in places were there were location grants available. These incentives encourage firms to locate there, as the area may have had high unemployment. As a result the call centre has become an important employment tool in that area. In addition, call centres provide important employment opportunities to many different types of people. Young people starting out on a career or first job after school or college; parents returning to work after looking after their children or needing hours to fit in with school times; part-time work for students; and also more mature people looking for routine jobs. In addition, the minimum skills required by many call centres included the ability to talk to customers nicely over the phone and how to use a PC and a keyboard. Few other jobs can offer such diverse opportunities and therefore they are a very important sector of employment. Ease of contacting a centre – results in customers calling more often! We as consumers, have got used to directly contacting different organisations ourselves in order to find what we want. Previously we may have gone to a third party broker to help us to find the best deal, or spent a Saturday on the high street looking for what we wanted. Now we can browse catalogues or brochures at home, organise our bills etc. then make a call. Our whole pattern of shopping and household maintenance has changed significantly so we have driven the growth in call centres in the same way that their availability has changed how we transact business. We have as consumers become much more demanding whilst products and services have become significantly more homogenous and available.
Sophisticated telephone system - A machine to handle the incoming or outgoing calls, known as an Automated Call Distributor (ACD) – this replaces the switchboard telephonist and in itself is a complex piece of kit that will handle all the calls made, identify what they are for and route them to the right person to answer the call (provided it has been set up correctly). They can handle and report on thousands of calls per hour!
The evolution has added to the complexity even more because organisations are looking for ways to better manage and handle the calls that customers make. It is very difficult to understand how all the technology works together but more importantly how customers will react to it and how the people using it will cope. Many thanks to Paul Weald of RXP http://www.rxp.co.uk for providing this information. |












