SAS Call Center

Evaluating Call Center Services

Congratulations! If you’re reading this then you’ve decided that it’s time for your business to start exploring call center services. Understanding that you can benefit from outsourcing to a call center is a critical first step. So now what? It’s the next step that often leaves businesses a bit bewildered – choosing the right call center for your small business that will give you the fastest return on your investment with as little friction as possible.

To help you on your journey, we’ll start by going over the two basic types of call center services you can adopt, then we’ll dig a bit deeper into what each type can do, and review the pros and cons of each including a quick cost analysis. If we can capture your attention until the end of this article, you should have a pretty good understanding of what type of call center outsourcing will work best for your business.

Types of Call Center Outsourcing Services

When small businesses are starting out, cost is probably the most important factor when doing anything. From what to get for lunch to what stationary to buy, how much you’re spending and on what is paramount. To that end, a lot of small businesses will think that they can handle their own inbound phone traffic. They’ll answer calls in the middle of meetings, give cell phones to employees to handle calls after hours, and forward their business phone to their home phone. If you’re not getting many calls, these methods may work. But as your business continues to grow, what used to be a cheap lead capture and customer service method will eventually take over your life.

What works for customer service and sales communication when a company is just starting out are colossal headaches if those methods are still used as a business grows. Customers end up waiting to communicate to a live person which leads to frustration.  Sales prospects are left interacting with voicemail which leads to missed opportunities. Employees feel chained to the office because they’re on-call 24/7. Current business suffers and new business doesn’t have the chance to connect.

Any of the above reasons are why successful businesses look to call center service companies like SAS to consolidate their customer service and sales communication. Without getting into the on-shore, off-shore, and near-shore varieties, generally call centers come in one of 2 flavors: shared call center and dedicated call center.

Let’s jump into what a shared call center and dedicated call center are, and some of the pros and cons of each.

Shared Call Center

A shared call center is exactly what it sounds like. Instead of one agent answering calls for you, you are sharing agents with all of the other call centers clients. For example, when your dedicated line rings at the call center, your script is presented on the screen and the agent handles calls according to your protocol. The next time the phone rings, it could be from another customer where the screen will present their script and their protocols.

PROS:

CONS:

Dedicated Call Center

A dedicated call center, also known as a brand center or dedicated agent service, refers to agents that you lease from the call center who solely answer calls for your business and your business alone. These agents are able to be trained according to your nuanced protocols to make sure that customer service experience is seamless from calls answered in your own shop to calls answered in the call center.

PROS:

CONS:

Why Do Businesses Choose Shared Call Center Services?

With a much lower price per entry, it’s easy to see why most businesses initially exploring call center outsourcing choose shared agent services over dedicated agent services. But surely cost can’t be the only factor? What other reasons are there?

Sure, lower startup costs have huge appeal for any business starting out when compared to the $3500 and up monthly cost for each US agent a company may lease on a dedicated agent platform. Looking outside of cost, businesses who are using a shared call center as a Tier 1 helpdesk or front end receptionist have great success in outsourcing. Acting as either of these, businesses are able to use their own in-house team as the experts, and use the call center team as the foot soldiers with the ability to offset simple requests from reaching the next level.

In this manner, your in-house personnel are left to handle the bigger ticket items, where the call center staff handles little things. For example, for an eCommerce store, the shared call center staff can answer questions about shipping times, enter in orders, and answer inventory questions if given the appropriate software access. In this model, your in-house staff can handle escalations for irate customers who received the wrong order, or processing refunds back to the customer’s credit card.

By handling the easier requests, the shared call center model gives your in house staff the chance to focus on more complex problem solving – the type of customer service that really matters.

The notion of letting your in-house staff focus on the bigger picture also fosters growth. When your staff isn’t focusing on the daily grind of customer service contact, your resources will be free to reallocate to other essential business duties like marketing and social media management.

Evaluating Shared Call Center Services

If you’ve decided that a shared call center solution is the right type of call center outsourcing model for your business, then you’re at least one step into your journey. The next is to decide which of the thousands of call center service providers is right for you. Without looking at the providers themselves, you should start by looking at the features – i.e. what’s going to be available to you if you do sign up.

While not exhaustive, here are a few of the main points to consider:

You’ve Nailed The Features, Now The Questions To Ask

Once you’ve decided on which platform is going to work best for you and you’ve checked a few boxes that you’ll need from the technology or operations perspective, it’s time to see what vendor is going to work best. With so many providers to choose from, which one is best? We’ve put together some questions you should ask potential vendors before you commit to any contract.

Shared or Dedicated, Invest In Your Growth

Now that we’ve educated you on what types of call center services there are, and the pros and cons of each of the two models, you’re ready to select a vendor. Using the information above, you’re well equipped to find the best call center service provider for your needs who is going to deliver the biggest ROI with the least friction.

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