Author Profile Picture

Neil Davey

Spotted Zebra

Senior Content Manager

Read more about Neil Davey

Empowering call centre workers boosts morale – and the bottom line

200225959-001_thinkstock_digitalvision_daviddelossy_phonecall

If call centre workers are given the power to provide customers with a personalised service rather being subject to scripts or call time targets not only does staff morale rise, but the bottom line improves too, a new study has found.

Researchers from Loughborough University studied operations at the Velux Company Ltd contact centre in Scotland, which uses Systems Thinking Design (STD) to handle customer queries. STD is based on designing organisational systems around customer demand instead of functional hierarchies.
 
Contact centre staff manage each customer call from start to finish – in ‘one stop’ – and are empowered to make decisions and contact colleagues and managers across the organisation for specialist information, using conference calls involving the customer. 
 
The study found that organic structures such as STD remove call-handling time targets and scripts, reduce training time for new recruits, and widen job scopes, with employees empowered to perform a variety of tasks. Additional benefits for staff include a more rewarding job experience in a less stressful environment. 
 
Businesses, meanwhile, experience improvements in productivity and service quality as well as lower levels of turnover and absenteeism among front-line staff, who have a high level of commitment to their employers.
 
At Velux, staff turnover was less than half the average as reported by the Contact Centre Association at the time the research was undertaken. Customers also benefit by having their calls dealt with at the initial point of contact in a friendly and efficient manner.
 
“Call centres regularly get bad press, but they are often the main channel of contact between an organisation and its customers, so getting the service right is of utmost importance,” said Dr Ayham Jaaron from Loughborough’s Wolfson School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering who alongside Professor Chris Backhouse conducted the research.
 
“In cases where products or services are comparable, and in an ever-competitive market, customers base their choice of provider on their levels of customer service. Our research has shown that by implementing a Systems Thinking Design approach, staff gain greater affective commitment to their employers, which has multiple benefits to companies including financial and reputational gains. It’s a win-win situation,” he added. 
 
The study was conducted over a 12-month period at Velux’s contact centre in Scotland, which has adopted the Vanguard Method of Systems Thinking.
Author Profile Picture
Neil Davey

Senior Content Manager

Read more from Neil Davey
Newsletter

Get the latest from HRZone

Subscribe to expert insights on how to create a better workplace for both your business and its people.

 

Thank you.