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Gurgaon,
Haryana, India - Delhi NCR City
Gurgaon Business - Call Centres
Demystified
Call Centres India: Setup, Evaluation,
Benchmarking, Reports
Call centres combine
the use of highly effective and empowered company representatives with
a service framework that relies heavily on state-of-the-art communications
and in formation technologies. A call centre is sometimes defined as
a telephone based shared service centre for specific customer activities
and are used for a number of customer related functions like marketing,
selling, information dispensing, advice, technical support etc. Thus,
a call centre is a service centre which has adequate telecom facilities,
trained consultants, access to wide database, Internet and other on-line
in formation support infrastructure to provide information and support
to customers. It operates to provide round the clock and year round
service i.e. 24 x 365 service.
The use of call centre
is undergoing enormous growth due to importance attached by companies
to customer care, telemarketing for product offerings, telebanking,
concept of direct response television and home shopping, market liberalisation
of utilities, growth of direct marketing etc. In addition, telemarketing
is growing and information lines are forming part of many product service
offerings. Telephone banking has led to call centre growth in the financial
services sector, while in retail the increase in direct response television
and home shopping have driven call centre growth. Market liberalisation
of utilities has also been a key driver of call centre growth. Finally,
the growth of direct marketing has also contributed to the popularity
of call centres as a means of reacing targeted customer bases. Call
Centres provide large and small international enterprises with the unique
ability to establish a presence in foreign markets without the expense
and complexity of owning and managing their own infrastructure.
A call centre with good
metrics and good data capture abilities represents a credible marketplace
intelligence system. A call centre can be seen as a window to the marketplace
and is also a window to the client organisation allowing call centre
operators to see weakness in client organisations which could represent
business opportunities in future.
Call centre originally
conceived as a separate and individual distribution channel of customer
care system has been transformed into integrated customer management
system. With the enabling of integration of call centre and Internet
technology, call centres of future will handle telephone, fax, web,
internet and interactive TV enquiries on 24x7 basis. These combined
Internet Call Centres or ‘Customer Contact Centres’ will shape the future
of call centre design.
What does a Call Centre do for
an Organisation?
- It
allows a wider customer base to do business with.
- It
offers an economical means of reaching diverse and widely distributed
customer group.
- It
fine tunes offerings to specific customer groups.
- t
allows customers easy access to experts.
- It
facilitates business round the clock and in any geography.
- It allows a company to avoid the overheads of brick
and mortar branches.
Types of Call
Centres
Call Centres could either
be ‘captive In-house' or using an ‘Outsourced bureau’.
Captive Call Centres
are typically used for various vertical segments like Insurance, Investments
and Securities, Retail Banking, Other Financials, Telecommunications,
Technology, Utilities, Manufacturing, Travel and Tourism, Transport,
Entertainment, Healthcare, Government, Education etc.
Outsourcing Bureaus
have experience in running call centres, allow corporations to ‘Hit
the Ground running’, help in dealing with a complex labour market, better
capability to handle volatility, tend to use the latest technology,
lowers the company’s operating expenses, offers a way of cost control
and limits the client’s financial risks, are responsive to their clients
needs and allow the client to focus on their core competencies.
Many companies find
that outsourced bureau operators offer them the flexibility required
in the following manner:
-
Set-up
outsourcing This involves use of a bureau in the early stages of the call centre
life cycle. Having used a bureau for set-up, some companies later
bring the process in-house, while others continue to outsource on
a longer term basis.
-
Transitional
Outsourcing This involves use of a bureau during the period when internal infrastructure
is being revamped or re-engineered.
-
Overflow
outsourcing A bureau is often an attractive option for a company when the demand on the company’s own
call centre is too high for its current capacity. The use of a bureau operator in such circumstances
ensures that the company does not have to ramp up during peak demand
periods. Companies may also use bureaus for ‘out of hour’ demand. In this case, the ability of a
call centre operator to mix time zones offer a competitive advantage.
-
One-off For applications such as direct response advertising which requires
a call centre on a one-off, short-term basis, bureau offers the
best option. Many companies prefer to outsource the handling of
direct marketing campaigns rather than invest in new technologies,
especially for limited period campaigns. Examples of such requirements
would be marketing campaigns, special issues such as recalls, or
anything which generates spikes and large call volumes. Other examples
could be where a company was testing a new business initiative,
new product or a new marketplace.
-
Long term outsourcing This may entail the entire outsourcing of the operations.
Outsourced call centre may further be classified based on:
-
The
delivery channel or mode of customer-call centre interaction e.g.
Voice, E-Mail, Chat, Web Call Back, Web Call through, Web Collaboration,
WAP, Touch Screen etc.
-
Components
/ features constituting the call centre e.g. Customer Relationship
Managements (CRM), Workforce Management, Computer Telephony Integration
(CTI), Integrated Call Management etc.
-
Location of its target customer.
Potential Customers
Potential Customer industries for call centres are essentially those industries which require customer
interface and transactions success is based entirely on in formation
availability. These industries include:
- Airlines
- Banks / Insurance / Financial Services boutiques
to provide services to the customers / callers
- Telecom services
- Companies providing customized and high value services
- IT products companies
- Tourism & Hotels
- Other services industries
Market Size
According to a survey, there are more than 200,000 call centres worldwide
and this is expected to grow to 1000,000 by 2008 employing approximately
68 million people. By year 2008 a sum of US$600 billion is expected
to be spent on call centre services, mainly driven by e-commerce.
As per a survey conducted
by Nasscom, Customer Interaction Services including Call Centres in
India
employed about 10,000 people as on 30 July 2000 generating an annual
revenue of Rs. 450 crore. It is estimated that during 2008, this segment
will create employment for
2,70,000 people generating revenues of Rs.20,000 crore.
Industry Structure
The potential market of immediate relevance to service providers in
India is USA. During 1997, and continuing into 1998, USA, as an industry
as well as trend setter in shifts in technologies and practices, has
experienced significant changes that have been making substantial difference
to conventional business logic and vendor-customer relationship.
Advancing technology has fueled growth among several product segments;
but resistance has been seen coming from the user sector — which is
impeding more remarkable growth. This essentially is driven by increasingly
felt need of customers to critically work out the cost benefit analysis,
opportunity costs and other more viable options available.
Most of the recent trends in this industry pertain to the technology
behind the call routing and distribution function. Some of these trends
will continue, and include the following:
- Shift
from proprietary to open architectural platforms is rapidly gaining acceptance as is exemplified
by vendors’ frequent introductions of PC-based routing and call
management software.
- A
shift toward the "complete package" or "turnkey"
solution is boosted by this trend to open platforms which allows for
easier integration with existing systems. The growth in turnkey
solutions is also driven by a high level of customer demand.
- In
addition to the formal call center setup, demand for this industry-standards
based, open architecture is seen by those types of call centers
operating in more "non-traditional" environments. For
example: SOHO, virtual call centers, telecommuting, etc.
- Price decline for
products perceived as commodities (due to level of technology and
knowledge sharing).
Besides the above developments, call centre technologies
are making a rapid shift from mere stringing together of boxes and wires
to, more intelligent and manageable solution. For example, select companies
in India
have already developed extremely competitive and technologically advanced
call centre solutions based entirely on PC technologies and platforms,
and IP technologies. This helps to reduce the cost of the system and
reduces changeover or upgradation costs for
the new technologies as a major portion of technology is derived from
software. These are highly automated call centers.
Influences upon the call center market structure have approached from
various directions to such a degree as to create flux. These persuasions
are steering the market through a shake-out phase, culminating in a
leaner and more competitive market within the United States. This would
also mean vendors as well as customers looking to reduce their costs
and outsourcing their requirements /contracts to such call center service
providers who can help to add and continually enhance competitive advantage.
Criteria for
location of call centres
The choice of location of a call centre by overseas MNC’s is based on
a number of factors and include:
- Laws and Regulations.
- Telecommunication Infrastructure, Technology &
Tariffs -
India is perceived as technologically savy but with keen desire
to emerge as a country with sound telecommunication infrastructure.
Therefore, technology is an important deciding factor in location
decision. Similarly, tariff is another significant factor. There
are also issues of connectivity (to PSTN etc.) that need to be addressed
by the government quickly.
- Work force
- Companies look to countries that can provide them with work force
that is proficient in English (and possibly other languages); cost
effective with disciplined work culture.
- Real Estate, Availability and cost of office space.
- Economic Incentives - These may take the
form of grants
or tax exemptions, repatriation of profits, corporate tax on profits
generated by call centres, tax treaties etc.
- Feel-good factor- Companies look for
countries where the people are positive, service minded and friendly.
Call Centre Technology Suppliers
Some of the suppliers of Call Centre technology are as follows. This
is just an indicative list:
-
Hardware :
Aspect, Clarify, Brightware, Cisco (webline)Convergys, Corepoint,
Dialogic, e-Gain, eShare, Genesysd, Kana (including Silknet), Lucent,
Nortel, Quintus, Rockwell, ServiceSoft, Siemens etc.
-
Software :
AnswerSoft, Brooktrout, Edify, eFusion, Genesys Labs, Geotel, IBM/Lotus,
Intecom, KnowledgeX, Microsoft, Multilink, Nabnasset, Netcentric,
Netphone, NetSpeak, Oracle, Paresc, Scopus, Sitel Corporation, SpanLink,
Sun, Teloquent, Vantive, Venturian, Voicetek, Webline etc.
Setting up a Call Centre in India
Establishment of a call centre needs efficient integration and management
of telecom and IT infrastructure. The main elements constituting a call
centre are telecommunication links (IPLC, typically E1 Link), call centre
infrastructure (hardware in the for m
of LAN, Agent PCs, Headsets) and the requisite software (CRM).
The decision process should typically include the following sequence:
- Define Business requirement
- Define Decision Criteria
- Research options and deduce
- Evaluate options against decision criteria and
business requirements
- Pursue vendors of technology along chosen path
viz. Technology Vendors for
In-house call centres, Service Bureaus for outsourcing entirely, and ASPs for
outsourcing technology.
Decision criteria. Some key criteria to consider and define
for your
environment are listed below:
-
Operations .
What operational environment you want to use for call support? What media functions, applications,
and hours of coverage are required?
-
Technology .
What infrastructure is needed to meet business goals? Are you in
the process of procuring technology solutions like CRM, CTI that
web integration may be part of or need to integrate with?
-
Resource .
Consider Call Centre staff and management, technology, HR training
etc.
-
Workload .
Volumes and variability of volumes. How are they likely to grow?
-
Culture .
Some companies need control of technology, staff or both in order
to deliver the level and type of service and support they desire.
-
Cost .
What are the investment priorities? Consider the cost of technology,
resources and ongoing maintenance and support.
-
Core Competencies .
Are call centres core competency for your company, or will they be? Consider technology
implementation, integration, development and management
Systems Selection . In the race to gain a competitive edge in this
market, it is easy to be seduced by an advancing technology. In doing
so, many companies lose sight of the ultimate business goal: to become
more competitive, productive and efficient in providing the most effective
customer service. It is important to look carefully at the call centre’s
real technology needs, vendor selection, and the possibility of increasing
the efficiency of a technology project by rethinking the organisation
be forehand.
The technological systems choices while setting up call centres include:
- Entry options ranging from traditional voice, e-mail,
internet for ms, web triggered calls, fax and video
- Desktop tools including knowledge based systems
(AI), electronic documentation, new contact management applications
and CTI and screen based telephony;
- Resource locations ranging from home agents to
centralised or decentralised centres;
- Service options ranging from self-help or assisted
services via Internet, voice response units, fax back systems, and
electronic technical support forums.
Introducing the right technology will benefit every component of
a call centre including training, staffing, scripting, customer
relations, tracking and reporting etc.
Proven Success Factors
Operation of a Call Centre revolves around serving an existing and potential
customer base. This need translates into providing satisfying and well
in formed
responses to a customer query, or in case of a potential customer, meeting
his expectations with regard to quality and quantity of service. The
difference in services can be made through a number of factors. Some
of them are discussed as below:
-
Process Integration :
The call center service flow should be closely integrated with the
process of customer for whom this service is being rendered. This
translates into easy access to and presentation of updated information.
-
Customer Satisfaction :
Defined as Direct-to-Quality (DTQ), this is akin to ability to satisfying
the customer’s (caller’s) query the first time.
-
Responses Time :
Waiting period and responses time for a query should be minimised. The only way is by benchmarking
against some of the best call center operations in the world.
-
Quality :
Vendors should aim to achieve quality certification such as ISO
9000 or other certification applicable to this industry. This includes
full COPC-2000 Certification (COPC - Customer Outsourcing Performance
Center). This distinction means that the facility has met the requirements
of all 32 areas described in the COPC-2000 Standard. It thus helps
to validate call center’s quality and continuous improvement initiatives.
-
Professional Service :
The quality of service rendered by an outsourced call centers should
be equal to or exceed service levels already achieved by the client’s
in-house call center.
-
Employees :
Call Center staff should be trained on the client’s business, the
role of the call centre, nature of potential callers, and service
expectations of the client.
-
Accent and Fluency :
Call Centre staff need to be constantly trained to help improve
accent and diction capabilities, especially for region being served.
Cost / Profit Analysis
A call centre facility with seating capacity of 100 persons is estimated
to cost between Rs.4 to 4.5 crore including premises, leased circuits,
hardware and software.
Call
Centres in India
In the last couple of years, India has emerged as one of the preferred
countries for
setting up of call centres. Many companies including GE, iDLX, Bechtel,
British Airways, Dell Computers, Bharti Telecom have already chosen
India as the base for their new global call centres. These are choices
made for
solid, practical reasons which guarantee them competitive advantage
in the global marketplace. Many banks - ICICI, HDFC, Standard Chartered,
Citicorp, American Express to name a few- telecom service providers
and infotech companies - Lotus, Hewlett Packard, 3Com etc. have deployed
call centres in india for better customer support and care.
Guidelines from Department of Telecommunications
In India ,
Call Centre operators have to get a no objection certificate from Deputy
Director General (Customer Relations) at Department of Communications,
Government of India, New Delhi. This NOC is granted with the aim of
granting a special permission to use voice circuits over international
gateways with the dedicated and stated purpose of serving overseas customers,
and accompanied by an undertaking that it will not be connected to a
PSTN within India.
The Government of India has released a set of Terms / Conditions for
Call Centre operators in India .
The new policy initiatives are aimed at liberalising Call Centre operations
in India. Some of the salient points of the policy are as under:
The Call Centres are being permitted on nonexclusive basis against the
requests received from IT Service providers. These call centres can
either be international or domestic in nature.
- However,
no interconnectivity of the international and domestic call centres
is permitted. But, interconnection of two domestic call centres
of the same company is permissible, subject to prior approval of
the DoT.
- The
International Call Centres will be permitted on IPLCs (International
Private Leased Circuits) only and will cater to calls from foreign
end PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Netweork). However, no PSTN
connectivity will be permitted at the Indian end. At Indian end,
even linking to any private or public network is not permitted for
IPLC, even if it is of the same organisation.
- The
domestic call centre can have PSTN connectivity at one end or both
ends or at multipoints in a more complex configuration, with only
incoming and with outgoing disabled at all places, wherever PSTN
termination is provided.
- No other interconnectivity, except as permitted
above, with any public or private network, shall be permitted to
the call centre set up.
Nasscom
welcomes the above initiative announced by DoT. This is expected to
give boost to proliferation of call centres in India. However, there
is a strong need to permit PSTN connectivity at the Indian end, to international
call centres as well as for
software companies in India (who provide software support from
India ).
This is important not only for large establishments of international call centres
( a great source of export revenue and employment) but also to encourage
software companies to enable their employees to per form
as teleworkers. Nasscom is presently working with concerned authorities
to resolve this issue. It is also desired that domestic and international
Call Centres be permitted interconnectivity. Actually, there should
be no distinction between them.
Marketing
Call Centre services are provided to clients customers on the basis
of a long term contract (running upto 2-4 years or more). Therefore,
it is advisable to approach clients directly. This may be effected through
establishing a branch office / subsidiary in USA or any other export
market. It is also advisable to appoint a local person as a senior /
head executive of the office as it helps to increase comfort level of
the target customer(s). Further, in order to attract initial customers,
it may be worthwhile to operate on Build-Own - Operate- Transfer basis.
Companies may also bear in mind that it is easier to sell services by
having a functional ‘proof of concept’. In other words, a functional
call centre, preferably operating closer to service levels expected
by the customer. Such concerns may be common as call centres represent
interaction in real time and companies would not appreciate any faux
pas in such interactions.
However, companies may also consider establishing and managing facilities
for a large call centre services company or even enter into a joint
venture agreement. This would help ensure profitability as well as growth.
The call centre is also a viable business proposition as it is considered
to be a good launch pad for other service areas in various segments
of the value chain and thus providing end-to-end platform for virtual
value chain.
Nasscom plans to lead a Call Centre delegation every six month to Europe
and USA. This is expected to bring in a lot of business to India.
Summary
Call Centres have clearly emerged as one of the most favoured of all
IT enabled services. On one hand, this is due to the success and prominence
acieved by call centres already operating in India. On the other hand,
global call centre industry has proven to be amongst the most stable
revenue growth centres amongst all related services. The enthusiasm
of global corporations as well as domestic entrepreneurs are validated
by some of the inherent advantages enjoyed by India. Further encouragement
through proactive encouragement by Government of India to promote this
industry augurs well for India
emerging as the prefered choice for
setting up call centres in India .
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