Do you ever wish you could wave a magic wand and solve the challenges you face in your contact centre? If you had unlimited budget these would be easy to fix. You could simply replace those old legacy systems, get better insight data and pay your front line staff more. This would enable you to attract and retain the very best talent and invest in the training and development of your people.
However, if you’re a contact centre manager reading this then it’s likely that you need some quick wins that aren’t going to demand a massive budget. In my experience working as a performance improvement consultant to some of the UK’s biggest contact centres, I’ve noticed a recurring theme and identified a number of things that can be implemented quickly to have an impact. Working with front lines and management and listening to thousands of calls I’ve been struck by five important areas that had to be aligned for perfect contact centre performance.
If you are a smaller contact centre, it is quite normal to sigh wistfully at the bigger entities and wish you had their budgets for technology and resources; but equally the bigger centres can have so many layers of managerial approval to get through that it, too, can feel like banging your head against a brick wall. It is possible that you can get past either of these issues with some simple and fast fixes. Many contact centres struggle, often managers know what they want to do but can’t get the approval to do it, sometimes an external voice can help.
I am passionate about contact centres, but often customers prefer not to have to get in contact with your brand unless they absolutely have to. Contact costs your organization too. On average it can be around £5 per phone call, depending on your Average Handling Time. Also, with every contact customers must make, their satisfaction often decreases. This impacts your metrics such as Customer Satisfaction, Net Easy Score (Customer Effort Score) and Net Promoter Score (how likely they are to recommend your organization to their friends and family). It makes sense that the best customer service is no service! This concept of ‘silent service’ is the swan upon the lake. It glides, while the legs paddle like crazy under the surface. Your organization wants to be like that swan, where everything just works together effortlessly. But life doesn’t always go that way! Let’s take some steps to identify what’s going on:
Contact centre life should be enjoyable! If your front line agents aren’t engaged with their role and employer then this negatively impacts their performance. Love it or hate it, the phrase ‘Happy People Sell!’ is absolutely true. Happy people also give better customer service.
How can you help your agents to be happy employees?
More than half of all agents I ask say the technology in the contact centre hinders them from doing their jobs more than it helps them. If your technology helped your agents how much better could they be? Are outbound calls dialed automatically? Do inbound calls come with a screen pop of information? Are calls routed intelligently to agents who have dealt with this customer before? Do agents have full access to customer history? Do they have a searchable knowledge management system from which to draw answers? If you answered ‘no’ to any of these you have a host of opportunities to leverage.
Feedback is something that many people dread receiving or even giving. Somehow we often believe that if we are getting feedback, or if we are deemed to need training, we must be doing something wrong. But feedback, training and coaching are essential tools to keep agents on track and help them improve their performance. You don’t have to be ill to get better! Think of a cruise ship travelling between Southampton and New York. During the journey the ship may steer slightly off course due to bad weather or some other reason. If the ship’s captain or navigator doesn’t correct the course, the ship won’t get to New York as it is supposed to. The same is true in the workplace. Constructive feedback can help agents improve their skills and performance. If they are just left to their own devices, they may well assume they’re doing just fine. Then at a later stage when they are called in for feedback and it isn’t all positive they can get defensive and wonder why they weren’t told this before. A good rule to have is that everyone gets feedback, every day. This takes the drama out of feedback sessions. Instead it becomes an expected part of the culture, and people will be more open to receiving it. Feedback is supposed to be helpful. But, if it isn’t given in the right way it can be harmful. Here are three things that can help you think about how you’re going to give feedback:
Achieving high performance used to be associated with the mindset of “do more with less.” However, three recessions later that phrase no longer has the connotation of efficiency. Rather most people think it means having to work longer hours, with less resources, and feeling overworked and exhausted. So is there a better alternative? We all have good and bad days at work. There are times where we are full of energy and just burn through our to-do lists. On other days we can feel sluggish and it takes an extra effort just to get through what we need to do. We all have at least 20% extra that we can put into our work to make us more effective. Is there a way to harness this 20% so that every day can be a good day? Here’s how you and your leadership style can impact your performance results by at least 20%! Whatever approach you have to leadership, it needs to fit both your personality and the culture of your organization. Great leaders know how to make a positive impact on their team and give focused attention to individual team members at just the right time. They can flex their style and approach so that they deliver the right amount of direction, support and delegation as needed. Your leadership style will be a reflection of your personal values – what you think is important. When there is consistency in your approach it produces authentic leadership behaviour.
Some top tips to remember.