When I started in Workforce Management (WFM) in the late 90’s, I was equipped with Excel and an erlang calculator. I felt pretty cool. I could determine the headcount requirement for every interval. I just needed to gather the handle time, volume and service level target. I worked for a small company that had no funding for a Workforce Management tool. Measurements in contact centers were still pretty basic at that point, and many of the leaders had been promoted from off the phones, so there wasn’t a lot of expertise in contact center best practices.
I was able to build forecasts using historical data and projecting it forward. I could come up with interval requirements, and I could schedule a few dozen employees to see what my net staffing was at each interval.
For a small operation, I could do most of what I needed to do with a spreadsheet. Then we determined we needed to improve our occupancy. That meant multi-skilling. Then we decided we needed to switch people intraday between skills to maximize their ability to quickly answer calls.
Then we separated out groups into regular and VIP, with the VIP staff taking calls from the regular line only in certain circumstances.
Everything I did was immediately obsolete.
Spreadsheets aren't designed to take into account this level of complexity. Our ability to schedule effectively and manipulate staff and calls real-time was extremely limited. I was able to build a case for our company to adopt a Workforce Management System.
Immediately, we were able to improve our occupancy, service level consistency, and the employees enjoyed a more consistent workload. It was a win/win/win.
After having the WFM system in place for a year, we couldn’t remember life before it. That technology, by today’s standards, was basic. Workforce Management Systems today are cloud-based, have great visuals, are easy for leadership, workforce management and the employees to use.
If your contact center is experiencing some of the following symptoms, you should consider a WFM system:
Workforce Management technology always has a very strong return on investment (ROI). Anything that impacts staff requirements will generally pay for itself pretty quickly. In addition to the reduction in headcount in the operations, it requires fewer people in Workforce Management to plan, schedule, and real-time manage effectively.
Cloud-based solutions are very low-cost these days, so it’s a small investment to test one out and see what results are yielded.
For companies that are growing, this will allow you to handle more calls without hiring staff. This is a “hard dollar” savings and something that Finance loves to see.
For companies that are flat or shrinking, you achieve a better service level at the same staff levels. This is a “soft dollar” savings. You have savings based on the extra staff you would have had to hire to meet the new, higher service level.
Some Finance departments aren’t as excited about this type of savings. But it is a saving. If they don’t accept the soft dollar savings, then the other business case is the improved customer service.
How much more revenue will you generate by having higher service levels? How much will your net promoter score increase with a better service level? These are just a few examples you can look at.
Need help building a case for WFM software? Ask the experts.