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Remote Agent Stations
By Peter DeHaan,
Ph.D.
April/May 2005
There are many benefits to having remote agents as part of your
call center. Remote agents can
either reside in a secondary, but connected call center, or work out of their
home. Among the many benefits of
using remote agents, according to Tom
Curtin, President of Amtelco, are reducing or
eliminating commute time, nullifying the ramifications of traffic problems, and
avoiding weather related issues.
Home-based agents are much more open to accept split shifts, being
on-call, and logging in at the request of management (Curtin calls them
"on-demand" workers). All three
of these scenarios are less intrusive to and easier to accomplish by a
home-based agent who does not have the issues of a commute or dress code to
impede their availability or thwart their responsiveness.
"If
you know your traffic patterns you know when you get hit with high call
volume," said Curtin. "By using
remote agents you can more economically have on-demand workers that may be part
time, but get you through the high spikes in your traffic."
Also, "Remote agents can work nationally and internationally, across
many time zones, which will also help with staffing."
"This leads to more content and productive agents," said Bob
Erdman, Vice President of Qualify Assurance, Amcom Software.
Plus, "a certain level of redundancy can be
obtained by having multiple application node/agent sites."
Another benefit is "if the call center has reached capacity, allowing
agents to work remotely allows for more FTE's without necessarily having to
build out more office space." This
is especially important when space is at a premium or simply not available at
the main call center site.
Other reasons to use remote
agents include a "desire to capitalize on a wider pool of labor" and reduce
overhead, stated Peggy Gritt, Senior Director, Global
Market Solutions, Interactive Intelligence Inc.
Tax incentives are another benefit she recommends be considered.
Today's technology, specifically the Internet, has taken much of
the uncertainty out of remote agent stations, ensuring that "telephony traffic
can be presented to the remote agents as if they are in the main call center,
allowing them to access a remote data store for lookup information and to [send]
back relevant information, in real time," said Erdman.
The
future is promising for remote agent stations.
"Demand for remote agents will grow as
employees look for more flexible scheduling and for ways to avoid the daily
gridlock that plagues many areas. Employers
will increase their use of remote agents as a way to cut costs and increase
redundancy and employee productivity," predicted Erdman.
"It will become more of a necessity as our population expands and
sprawl continues," Curtin concurred.
To
make a remote station work, there needs to be a provision made to extend audio
and data from the main call center to the remote location.
There are various ways to accomplish this, each with inherent advantages
and disadvantages.
For
the audio connection, dialup and VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) are common
methods. When using dialup, the
connection is made at the beginning of each shift.
This may need to be accomplished by manually dialing a phone number to
access the needed analog port at the main location, though more commonly this is
automated and therefore transparent to the remote agent.
The VoIP option uses the Internet as a voice transmission path, sending
audio, in digital form, over the Internet. In
order to achieve quality audio, a high-speed connection, such as DSL or a cable
modem is needed (though some vendors recommend avoiding cable modems due to
reliability and availability issues that sometimes result on certain systems).
The minimum recommended data speeds for VoIP varies from vendor to
vendor. In addition to VoIP, Amcom
can provision audio to remote agent locations via an ISDN (Integrated
Services Digital Network) phone.
In
similar fashion, a data path is also needed in order for the remote agent
station to communicate with the call center switch and databases.
All of the vendors contacted for this article accomplish this using the
Internet (generally through a VPN - a Virtual Private Network).
Two vendors, Alston Tascom and Amcom, also allow for dialup access as an
alternative, but recommend VPN for both speed and reliability.
Again, the recommend minimum data rates vary from vendor to vendor, but
it is safe to say that, in this case, faster is always better.
The
following call center vendors provided information for this article and offer
remote agent stations:
1Call,
a division of Amtelco
www.1call.com
info@1call.com
800-356-9148
Alston
Tascom
www.alstontascom.com
info@alstontascom.com
866-282-3266
Amcom
Software
www.amcomsoft.com
info@amcomsoft.com
952-829-7445
or 800-852-8935
CadCom
Telesystems, Inc. (now
Onvisource)
www.onvisource.com.
800-537-1827
To read other articles written by Peter DeHaan,
go to Vital Signs or check
out his blog at
blog.peterdehaan.com. In addition to publishing AnswerStat and Connections
Magazine, Peter is offers
custom
publishing and Internet publishing (www.MyArticleArchive.com). He may
be reached at dehaan@answerstat.com
or www.PeterDeHaan.com.
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