Off Center

ACTIVE NETWORK

10/31/2011

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Almost as challenging as handling all the customer contacts that Active Network’s contact center receives is managing the slew of job applications and resumes that arrive daily. Once you hear about how much Active Network values and empowers its staff, it’s easy to understand applicants’ attraction.

The San Diego-based company’s heavy emphasis on agent wellness, development and empowerment – as well as its popular work-at-home initiative – are among the key reasons why the resumes keep flowing in and existing employees keep sticking around. In fact, San Diego Business Journal named Active Network among San Diego’s Best Places to Work in 2011 and listed it among the finalists for the magazine’s “Healthiest Employers Award” in 2010. 

“The leaders of Active Network believe in our mission of connecting people with the things they love, want, and need to do,” says Dennis Triplett, Senior Vice President of Operations at Active Network. “This extends to, if not begins with, our employees. From the first day of training, our call center agents feel empowered to provide high-level customer service to our clients.”

Active Network is the largest network of activities, organizations and people linked by world-class technology. The company’s flagship media property, Active.com®, is the leading online community for people who want to discover and participate in activities about which they are passionate.



A Healthy Approach to Contact Center Management

Agents at Active Network don’t merely feel empowered; they feel powerful –thanks to the company’s passionate commitment to employee health and well-being.

Agents at each contact center location participate in a comprehensive employee participation and wellness initiative called “Active X”, which includes such offerings as daily exercise programs, walking/running groups, nutritional behavior workshops, smoking cessation courses, yoga classes, nutritional seminars, and community volunteer opportunities.

“ActiveX is the internal manifestation of our company mission, and one of the reasons why we are frequently listed as a best place to work,” says Triplett. "Our wellness beliefs are rooted in participation and the intrinsic outcomes of being part of something healthy. And our [wellness programs] are filled with success stories – in just a short period of time, they have made significant changes in our employees’ lives. These lives have touched others, infecting active participation across our company, spreading to their families and into their communities.”


Ensuring Agent Success

Having physically and emotionally fit agents on the frontline is a big benefit, but wellness programs alone don’t drive lasting agent engagement and performance improvement. That’s why Active Network invests a lot of time and effort in agent development and recognition, too.

After a careful applicant selection process, new-hires are immersed in a rigorous and engaging training program featuring a healthy mix of traditional classroom training and role-playing as well as e-learning via the center’s Learn.com web-based training/testing application.

Active Network’s agents continue to receive ample training and coaching throughout their tenure. Those committed to serious careers in customer care can take part in the contact center’s Leadership Development program, which grooms staff for more advance positions within the division. “Agents are able to apply for open positions not only in the call center,” explains Triplett, “but also in other departments in our division – particularly with the Customer Service and Help Desk departments. The majority of our call center Support staff, Supervisors, Team Leaders, and Call Center Senior Management began their career as call center agents."

There’s still plenty of opportunity and allure for agents who don’t go the Leadership Development route. For instance, all frontline staff are encouraged to participate on teams and task forces committed to enhancing performance and employee engagement. Direct agent involvement on such projects has led to numerous new programs and initiatives, including a couple of rewards & recognition programs (“Kudos” and “Shining Star”) and improved system workflows (e.g., scripting for sales calls).

Driving additional agent engagement and performance is the extra cash that agents can earn by learning advanced new skills, and by achieving goals set around such key metrics as quality, attendance and sales productivity. Says Triplett, “We foster a ‘The more you know, the more you can earn’ philosophy.”  

Not all incentives in the contact center are monetary; agents enjoy plenty of public praise and recognition whenever they exceed key performance objectives, show notable improvement and effort, or receive positive comments from customers.  
  
 

Work-at-Home Works Well

Many agents get to enjoy Active Network’s enticing culture without ever even having to show up to the contact center. That’s thanks to the company’s progressive and thriving work-at-home initiative, which features up to 170 home agents during the peak season.

Unlike home agents at many other organizations, Active Network’s virtual crew members are truly untethered – they can live pretty much anywhere in the U.S. Having such a non-restrictive geographical policy is a big boon to the contact center’s recruiting efforts and ability to handle an ever-fluctuating workload, says Triplett.

“We have the ability to hire high quality customer service agents in a seasonal environment without expanding the operational hours of our ‘brick & mortar’ locations.”

The only people happier than him and his management team are the home agents themselves.

“We have seen an increase in our [overall] Employee Engagement results," Triplett says, "specifically with the work-at-home team.”


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Active Network – the Big Picture:
Location: 7 brick & mortar centers (+ numerous home agents) located throughout the U.S.  
Hours of operation: Most centers are 8 am-10 pm ET. One center is 24 x 7.
Products/services provided/supported: Inbound sales and inbound/outbound service for Active Network’s technology solutions (for online registration, transaction processing, and marketing services)
Channels handled: Phone, IVR, email , web self-service, and social media
What’s so great about them? Their heavy emphasis on agent wellness, empowerment and development drives a highly engaged frontline to deliver exceptional customer service.


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FirstEnergy

10/3/2011

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While waiting for a live agent, callers on hold can become easily frustrated.  At FirstEnergy, callers on hold simply get on with their lives. 

Thanks to its strategic use of “virtual queuing”, which enables customers to request a callback without losing their place in the phone queue during the call center’s busy periods, FirstEnergy has managed to  enhance service levels and the customer experience while lowering operational costs and improving agent morale.

“We implemented Virtual Hold in our multiple locations back in mid-2008,” says John Falvy, FirstEnergy’s Director of Contact Center Operations. “We just felt that at times, especially during peak periods like Monday mornings, some of our customers were waiting in queue way too long. Increasing customer satisfaction was our primary goal.” 

Soon after implementing the virtual queuing solution, FirstEnergy followed up with customers to gauge their opinion of the new service option. A sampling of the results included:

·      The vast majority of customers surveyed believed that FirstEnergy should continue to offer the virtual queuing solution. Moreover, 75% of customers who used it had a more favorable opinion of FirstEnergy because of the  virtual queuing.

·      Customers who used the virtual queuing option were more satisfied with their contact experience than those who waited on hold.

·      The median wait time virtual queuing users found “unacceptable” was 20 minutes, compared to just 10 minutes for those staying on hold.



Virtual Queuing Success Driven by Solid Planning & Processes

FirstEnergy’s success with the Virtual Hold solution required careful planning, proper implementation, daily testing/monitoring of the system, and a solid understanding of the art and science of call center workforce management, says Falvy.

“It’s just one tool among many in the call management toolkit. It’s a vital tool, but you also have to have  good forecasting and scheduling systems [and processes] in place, as well as some other enabling technologies in order to augment what Virtual Hold offers.”   

In other words, call centers that invest in virtual queuing expecting it to automatically solve all their call-handling and on-hold headaches are going to be disappointed – as will their customers.

But for companies like FirstEnergy that already do an impressive job of calculating call volume and staffing accordingly to ensure that service level objectives are met, virtual queuing can be a helpful solution.

One of the keys, according to Falvy, is to not become overly reliant on the system. “Generally speaking, we offer Virtual Hold if the wait time for the customer is greater than 120 seconds. It doesn’t make sense to offer [callbacks] if you are already achieving a 30-second average speed of answer.”

Falvy adds that it doesn’t make sense to use virtual queuing
at all in the midst of a particularly dramatic spike in call volume, such as during a widespread power outage. “We don’t offer it on outage- or emergency-related calls. During a very large outage, we can get 30,000 calls in a half hour. We just don’t have the port capacity for that.” Instead, the center provides information about power outages (including areas affected, estimated time to recovery, etc.) via its IVR system. Such proactive messaging keeps affected customers in the loop and virtually eliminates their need to speak to a live rep. 

On average, a little over 50% of FirstEnergy callers who are offered the option of being called back rather than waiting on hold accept the offer. “We’re generally in the 52%-54% range, and we’re seeing it get more accepted,” says Falvy
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Enamored Agents and a Bolstered Bottom Line

Because of its ability to reduce the number of customer complaints, the call center agents have grown to appreciate virtual queuing.

“Customers can become irate if they have to hold for a significant amount of time,” Falvy explains. “The agent must then diffuse the customer right off the bat.”

That can take a big toll on agent motivation and morale. But now that far fewer FirstEnergy customers enter a call feeling like they’ve just had precious minutes taken from their lives, agents receive far fewer verbal complaints. 

“Customers [who opt for a callback] are not nearly as annoyed or angry,” says Erin Badger, an agent at FirstEnergy’s call center in Akron, Ohio. “They have had time to focus on something other than waiting.”

Of course, cutting down on customer rants also helps to reduce call handle times. That’s not a bad combination – higher customer satisfaction AND lower costs.

"We used to hear complaints on how long people had to wait on hold,” says Megan Engleman, Senior Customer Service Associate at FirstEnergy’s call center in, Reading, Pa. “Now we hear compliments on how nice it is to have the service."


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FirstEnergy – the Big Picture:
Location: Akron, Ohio; Toledo, Ohio; Reading, Pennsylvania; Fairmont, West Virginia
Hours of operation: 24/7 for emergency and 911; 8 am to 6 pm for all other customer service contacts
Number of agents: Over 600
Products/services provided/supported: Start/end electric service, outage reports/questions, emergency/911, billing/payments, credit, and new construction
Channels handled: Phone, IVR, email, web self-service  
What’s so great about them? The call center has greatly enhanced the customer (and agent) experience while reducing operational costs via virtual queuing. 


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Contact Centerfold

Here's where I feature “sexy” contact centers – customer care organizations that are doing exciting things and aren’t afraid to reveal some “hot” secrets of their success.

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