|
Call Recording in
Your Call Center
August/September 2007
Once thought of as a call center luxury, call recordings (also known as voice
loggers) were used exclusively to document agent conversations with callers.
However, call recorders are no longer just a tool to prove who said what or how
it was spoken. Call loggers have proven themselves invaluable as a training
tool, for agent self-evaluation, for quality control, and most recently, as a
call compliance device.
Some systems record all headset audio, both during calls and between calls.
This can offer additional insight about a call that just took place, as well as
agents' perceptions of their jobs and employers. It can also raise privacy
concerns. Other systems record only the call audio and not idle conversions
with co-workers in between calls. Some systems can work in either mode,
allowing the call center management to decide which is appropriate for their
center.
Before recording any calls, check into the legal issues
with an attorney familiar with your state's laws. The biggest factor is whether
one or both parties need to be made aware that recording is taking place.
Agents should always be notified when call recording is happening (one-party
notification); notification to the customer can be made by a preamble recording
("This call may be monitored or recorded for quality assurance purposes") or a
periodic beep tone (two-party notification)
For more information
about vendors who provide call recording equipment and software, see
our listing
Voice Logging listing.
Read
more articles
relevant to hospital and medical related call centers.
|