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The Mega Queue: Give Your Clients Individual
Reporting While Maintaining Efficiency
By Tom Cunningham
June 2009
One of the most common quandaries in call centers is to
successfully meet the customer's expectations while maximizing the efficiency of
your staff. While no one likes to admit it, many times call centers allow the
reporting demands of their clients to dictate how they set up virtual queues and
conduct business. This setup usually means multiple virtual queues that require
a greater number of FTEs (Full Time Equivalent). With the global economy
demanding that companies do more with less to maintain a competitive edge and
efficiency, how can those companies also maximize customer satisfaction?
Most call centers try to maintain as many virtual queues as
required with their current FTEs. This leads to a failure to reach benchmark
goals while trying to explain the results to their clients. In response, many
call centers then begin to slowly expand their FTE expense by offering overtime
and hiring additional staff. This has proven to be only a temporary fix,
because employees begin to burn out while the company exceeds its budget and
loses efficiency. Once the call center is over budget, they cut back on FTE
expenses and begin the process all over again. While many call center managers
struggle with this dilemma, there is a strategy that can solve this crisis.
The Mega Queue Strategy:
When examining this issue,
remember that the goal is to do more with less. In simpler terms, how can the
center give its clients what they want while maximizing the bottom line for the
call center? It's fundamental that the call center must deliver its clients'
expectations. This only leaves the ability to alter the company's bottom line.
With the first part of the problem working directly against the second, how is
it possible to achieve success? How can the call center gain efficiencies by
the scales of economics to save money when each virtual queue has to be
maintained?
This is accomplished by taking every virtual queue, grouping
them by type of call, and then dumping them into a larger mega queue. The mega
queue is nothing more then a large bucket that takes calls in order from each
virtual queue in its group. The agents are scheduled against the bell curve of
the larger mega queue, thus reducing the FTE requirement and allowing the
company to gain efficiencies while cutting costs. The clients won't see any
difference in reporting because each virtual queue is maintained with individual
statistics; however, by grouping them together the performance of each virtual
queue will improve, as it will have a bigger pool of resources to handle the
calls.
With the call center industry continuing its growth, the
necessity to augment the delivery system to remain competitive and profitable
will intensify. Only by thinking outside the box will the company be able to
avoid traditional obstacles and exceed clients' expectations while maintaining
the call center's efficiency. The mega queue helps achieve both goals. In the
long run, by having a larger pool of employees versus only having individual
virtual queues, it will reduce attrition by lowering teams' occupancy levels as
well as increasing the ability to deliver quality training programs and meeting
sessions.
Tom Cunningham is the North
American senior workforce operations manager for customer service with Elavon
Global Payment Solutions. Tom has over fourteen years of call center operations
management experience. His background also includes management positions with
ADT and Securitylink from Ameritech. He can be reached at 865-403-8256 or
Thomas.Cunningham@elavon.com.
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