Call Center Scheduling Featured Article
Call Center Scoring Offers Additional Insight With Call Center Management
"Your call may be monitored for quality assurance."
This is one of those phrases that is widely heard when it comes to customer care, but it’s not quite fully understood. Call recording is an essential tool for call center management, as it gives managers information on agent performance; how calls are being handled, whether they’re being accurately routed, or, if a problem arises, how to use the information for future calls. A call recording system is wonderful for call center management, however, it isn’t optimal if it can’t provide call scoring as well.
Call center management experts Monet Software say that call scoring – in addition to call recording – comes with a host of benefits that can help call center managers get an idea of how their agents are performing.
Call Scoring helps managers to handle agent evaluation within their call recording software by allowing them to create evaluative and scoring templates. Information gathered from customer service agents and their interaction with clients can have a huge impact on a company’s productivity, customer service quality and its ability to compete in a recessionary, sluggish economy where budgets are tight and resources are lean.
Monitoring of recorded calls provides the best opportunity for reliable assessment because the agents are not aware of being monitored, and the monitoring professionals can check the accuracy of their assessments by replaying the recording.
A dual approach to monitoring call center agents that use call recording and scoring gives a more accurate, overall picture of an agent’s performance. For the purpose of setting goals, tracking improvement and triggering incentives, scoring can provide additional insight into specific performance criteria.
With the knowledge gained from call recording in addition to call scoring, call center managers can take their missteps and use it to evolve and offer better customer care. These tools provide real evidence of where there can be room for improvement and supply call centers with the knowledge to move forward. By assessing and evolving, the future of customer care is hopeful.
Edited by Ashley Caputo