Contact centers are very similar to call centers. Or, rather, contact centers expand on the abilities of call centers. With a contact center, you can receive more than just calls. Agents also handle emails, messages, live chats, and social media chats.
But what makes contact centers so important?
We’re going to discuss three of the most prominent uses for contact centers: lead generation, customer experiences, and agent training.
Of course, there are plenty of other uses for contact centers, just as there are lots of other reasons why your business might want one. These are just some of the most broadly applicable ones that can benefit just about any business, and that come with just about any contact center.
Your contact centers are hubs of activity and interaction between customers and agents working for your company. That is to say, they’re the perfect space to start generating new leads, driving conversions, and gauging interest from prospects.
If your call center agents are given the right direction and tools, they can turn lots of interactions into opportunities for conversions and lead generation. For instance, if they have access to a great CRM, they can see previous purchases made and use that as a springboard. That means you get to increase your sales, and your contact centers prove just how useful they are to your business.
As mentioned, contact centers are spaces where lots of interactions between your brand and its customers happen. That means they’re the perfect focus for improving customer experiences and providing customers with lots of reasons to stay with your business.
Your inbound customer service is the bread and butter of this use for contact centers.
The better your agents’ customer service is during inbound voice and text communications, the more clearly you can show your customers that your brand is worth staying with. Someone who spends an hour on old, only to be passed between three different departments, is going to have a much worse impression than someone who gets through in five minutes and has the whole thing resolved in ten.
In other words, a good contact center doesn’t just resolve customer issues - it also makes customers feel valued. It should encourage customers to keep coming back to your company.
That, in turn, drives up your average customer’s CLV, since they’ll know to return to you whenever they’re looking to make a purchase within your sector.
Whether your contact centers are mostly staffed via outsourcing or in-house hires, it makes a lot of sense to use the information generated inside those centers to train new agents.
When your contact center keeps a record of its communications, those records (both transcripts and audio recordings) can be used to show new recruits exactly what kinds of situations they’ll be facing at your contact center.
In other words, there’s no better way to prepare for a situation than to learn directly from others who have been in it.
Speech analytics are particularly helpful in this regard. That’s because they show your agents which parts of past conversations they should pay particular attention to, directing their training in the direction you need it to go.
Analytics are also hugely helpful when it comes to quality management - meaning you can keep training your existing agents long after they finish onboarding.
Your contact center might expand in the future, especially if you’re hoping to scale your business up. That means dealing with greater call volume, which is a lot easier to do when you’ve got more agents available.
Even without considering upscaling, it’s a good idea to be prepared to train new agents in case positions become vacant. And what better place to do that than within your center itself?