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The Future of the Contact Center
Contributed Article by Renaud Charvet, CEO, Ringover
Forget call centers, contact centers are
the future
~ Data driven, multi-channel contact centers
elevate the customer experience ~
Fans of Friends may
recall the episode in which Phoebe works as a call center agent for Empire
Office Supplies, desperately trying to sell as much toner as possible. Luckily,
the times of isolating cubicles and reams of contact lists are over and contact
centers are the way forward. Here, Renaud Charvet, CEO of business phone system software provider
Ringover, explains how data driven contact centers elevate customer
experiences.
The US remains a global competitor in the
call center market. In fact, Statista
reports that over 100 call centers opened up across the nation in 2021, more
than any other region worldwide.
Call centers’ primary industries include
financial services, technology, media and telecommunications. The South is
particularly significant for call and contact center operations, as Texas has
the highest employment in telemarketing with approximately 22,500 employees,
followed by Florida with 15,000 workers. But times are changing for many of
these facilities. We’re seeing a move from what’s traditionally considered to
be a call center, and towards the notion of a contact center.
Instead of relying on just one
communication channel — the telephone — contact centers are multi-channel
facilities that use several forms of communication to talk to their customers.
They rely on advanced analytics to learn more about the people they’re contacting
and dig deeper into data to inform their decisions. So how can a call center
become a contact center?
The relationship hub
Call centers have long been considered as a
means of making sales and dealing with customer problems. General strategy has
been to react to the needs of the customers, rather than adapt. A contact
center goes beyond the immediate goals of making sales and managing complaints,
and is instead, positioned as a hub for all forms of customer relationship.
A contact center is where all critical
communication from customers comes in, and everything customers tell agents inform
a business of what their customers are like, how they’re feeling, and what is
and isn’t working. That doesn’t mean contact centers aren’t making sales calls
and dealing with customers — the key difference is that they’re capturing data
from customer interactions and using it to benefit all areas of the business.
Data-driven
In a contact center, data is king. A customer
relationship management (CRM) infrastructure is an essential piece of contact
center technology that’s used to track, compile and analyze all areas of
communication. A CRM stores information such as who has been contacted, how
many times they’ve spoken to an agent and whether they’ve made a purchase in a
single system.
Generally, a data-driven contact center gathers
relevant data from multiple channels — be it via the phone, email, webchat or
any other platform. This data allows contact center agents to gain insights on
their target audiences, allowing them to offer personalized services.
Typically, a contact center team will have an
overview of not just who they have contacted, but other data including what stage a sale may be at, who
their direct contact person is, how this person prefers to be contacted, what
language they speak and what information was previously provided. This data,
and having easy access to it, sits at the heart of any successful contact
center.
Rise of the super-agent
If a ‘bot can do it, why should a human? The
“super-agent” is the idea that using technology and automation can move every
agent in the contact centre up a notch, elevating their level of expertise. The
process of creating super-agents involves automating administrative tasks that
take up valuable employee time, and gives agents time to focus on more advanced
responsibilities.
A good CRM system that’s linked to the
contact center’s calling system also helps create super-agents. Aligning a
center’s CRM with its cloud-calling system means customer data can be updated
in an instant, without manually adding in details. Some CRMs even have
automated features that “listen in” to phone calls and make transcripts for the
contact agent to review later.
Promoting better business relationships can
be further enhanced by implementing an advanced
call routing software solution like Ringover’s. Having call routing
software connects callers with qualified agents that have the skillset required
to best assist the customer, without needing to bat them between agents before
reaching the right person.
Call, or rather contact, centers continue
to play a crucial role in building better relationships. But there is no need
to opt for yesterday’s lines of desks and endless printed contact lists à la Friends’
Empire Office Supplies. Embracing the contact center allows employees and
customers to have simpler, more meaningful conversations.
To learn more about Ringover
and its business communication solutions, visit www.ringover.com