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Case Study: Star Contact Implements VoIP
By Joanne Lowy
May 2007
As the Spanish-speaking market
inside and outside of the U.S. continues to becomes more lucrative, companies
are looking for more efficient and effective ways of serving Hispanic customers
across North and South America. Now, with a VoIP switching platform,
Panama-based call center outsourcer Star Contact can now help them do so.
One of the biggest challenges
historically faced by companies doing business in Latin America has been the
multi-national fragmentation of the Hispano-American market. Companies doing
business in this region have had to maintain offices, communications equipment,
and staff in each of these countries. That's been expensive and inefficient,
since it eliminates economies of scale. Maintaining a small presence in each
country also creates labor inefficiencies as staff in one country may be
relatively idle, while staff in another country is overloaded.
Star Contact's solution is to use
VoIP to cost-effectively "funnel" calls from every country to a single,
centralized Spanish-language call center in Panama City. This allows Star
Contact to provide its corporate clients with a virtual presence in each
country, while gaining the efficiencies of scale that result from pooling all
calls to a single facility.
"With VoIP, we can provide our
clients with local in-country phone numbers anywhere in the world and then
inexpensively route those calls to our main call center," explains Jason Laffrey,
Star Contact's director of IT and Business Process Management. "We can allow
them to provide their customers with excellent service delivery at reduced cost
while at the same time maintaining the healthy operating margins we need to be
profitable."
Necessity and Invention:
Laffrey and Star Contact originally investigated VoIP-based call routing after
one of its biggest local customers in Panama, Copa Airlines, began looking for a
better way to support English and Spanish-speaking customers in the United
States. Connecting a toll-free U.S. number to an offshore call center in Panama
enabled both the airline and Star Contact to provide that support at a much
lower cost-per-agent. Once the model was proven, it was extended to Central
America, the Caribbean, and South America.
According to Laffrey, the
benefits of a centralized call center extend well beyond labor cost savings.
With its entire staff and all of its calls located in a single facility, Star
Contact can more readily apply capacity wherever and whenever it's needed most.
"When every agent can take a call from any country, you can more easily respond
to the periods of peak activity that occur when circumstances or special
promotions drive up traffic from a particular geographic market," says Laffrey.
"That flexibility also allows us to dynamically allocate our staff resources to
different customers as their needs fluctuate from day to day and week to week."
Another advantage in keeping
everybody under one roof is control. With all agents for all countries in one
place, Star Contact can more closely monitor their performance and keep them
updated with each client's changing business information -- which is essential
for clients like Copa that have to keep customers informed about flight and
ticket availability. "Hands-on management is really essential," notes Laffrey.
"You can't do that if your agents are scattered all over the Americas."
The Right Technology:
Unfortunately, not everything went smoothly when Star Contact first started
using VoIP. At first, Star Contact used time division multiplexing (TDM)
equipment that required multiple devices in each location and was not reliable
enough. "When you have a bunch of equipment in different locations, you run
into a real problem when things go wrong," says Laffrey. "It's just not that
easy to get a technician out to a remote office in an emergency."
Laffrey adds that those outages
weren't good for Star Contact's client relationships: "It's not good when your
client informs you that there is a problem with your phone service. That's the
kind of thing you want to know about and fix before they find out about it."
Then Star Contact adopted Quintum
Technologies's Tenor VoIP technology, which turned out to be far more
effective. First, the switching architecture only required one device in each
location and those devices turned out to be much more reliable than their
predecessors. The management software also ensured that Laffrey was alerted if
there was any kind of hardware problem.
The switches allowed Star Contact
to provision failover measures in the event of a network problem. For remote
offices connected to the Panama City facility via leased lines, the switches
automatically switch over to a virtual private network (VPN) connection. For
remote offices connected via a VPN, the switches can automatically route calls
over the public switched network until the problem is resolved. The "automatic
failover capabilities are very valuable when it comes to maintaining service
continuity," says Laffrey. "That's not something you can find in other VoIP
switches."
A Growing Opportunity:
Based on its initial success with Copa, Star Contact has extended its
centralized call center services to other clients. The power of its new value
proposition is underscored by the fact that its Panama City call center has
grown 400 percent from 200 to 800 agents in the last three years. Plus, thanks
to the efficiencies offered by its new model, the actual volume of business it
has been able to support has grown even faster than that.
Star Contact has also used its
VoIP capabilities to introduce a variety of calling and paging services to
business and consumers throughout Latin America. Because VoIP allows Star
Contact to reduce its call-carrying costs, it can offer these services at very
competitive prices and still maintain good profit margins. With the buying
power of the Hispanic consumer growing every day -- especially in the United
States -- and with the new economics being created by today's highly reliable
VoIP technology, Laffrey sees no slowdown in sight for the growth of his
company.
"There is tremendous synergy
between today's large-scale demographic shifts and recent advances in call
center technology," declares Laffrey. "If you're willing to change your
business model and infrastructure investments accordingly, you can ride those
twin waves to a very, very bright future."
For more information about
Quintum Technologies and using VoIP in a call center, visit
www.quintum.com or contact Joanne Lowy at
Joanne_Lowy@quintum.com
or 732-460-9000 x238.
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