With so many call routing strategies out there, creating routing rules that service your unique business and customer needs might take some trial and error. Let’s take a look at some of the most commonly-used call distribution methods in contact centers.
This routing method delivers incoming phone calls to agents based on predefined orders.
All incoming calls are initially sent to the first agent in the order (let’s call them agent one). If agent one is busy, the call will be sent to agent two, and if agent two is busy, the call would then be sent to agent three, and so on.
Fixed order routing is often used to distribute calls based on agent performance and experience, with the most experienced handlers higher up in the queue.
Time-based routing distributes calls depending on agent availability. If a specific agent is unavailable, the incoming call will be directed to the next available agent.
Time-based routing is an optimal solution for businesses with many remote employees working across different time zones. It ensures that agents aren’t disturbed during off-hours. If there’s no other agent available to take an incoming call, ACD systems can send the call to voicemail or initiate automatic callbacks.
If you’re looking to decrease customer wait times, simultaneous call distribution is the perfect routing method.
Here, incoming calls are sent to every agent in a ring group. All of the agents’ phones will ring at the same time, and the agent who answers first takes the call. In addition to improving your time-to-answer and customer wait times, simultaneous routing helps to decrease the number of calls that go to voicemail.
Also known as idle agent routing, this type of distribution sends incoming calls to the agent with the least amount of talk time. This method is used to distribute call volumes fairly between agents, ensuring that agents with lower average handling times receive as much talk time as those with higher average handling times.
Another way to equalize workloads between agents is with rotary call distribution. Here, incoming calls are answered by agents on a turn-by-turn basis. The first call will be sent to agent one, the second call will be sent to agent two, and so on until every agent in the queue has taken a call. At this point, the cycle returns to agent one and repeats.
Also known as weighted routing, skills-based routing distributes calls to agents and departments based on their individual skill set in relation to the specific needs of the incoming call.
For example, skills-based routing ensures that a caller experiencing a technical difficulty would be directed to an agent in the IT department rather than, say, the accounting department.
A Spanish-speaking caller could be directed to a multilingual agent. The great thing about skills-based routing is that it can be determined by whatever metrics are most important to your call center, from language proficiency and expertise to handling or response time.