How call recording can save the day
Contact centers that recognize the power of call recording use the recordings in a variety of situations that positively impact customers, the organization, or both. Here are some ways call recording can save the day.
1. ComplianceThere is a multitude of state and federal laws that govern how organizations record, use, and store call recordings. And call recording is mandatory in some industries. The ability to record calls helps businesses in these industries comply with relevant laws and avoid costly fines. Best-in-class call recording software have features that help businesses stay compliant, but ultimately it's the organization's responsibility. Consulting with
trust and legal departments is a must-do.
2. Quality assuranceCall recordings are a common element of
quality management programs. In a typical QA process, analysts will listen to a small (2-3%) percent of each agents' calls every month. Calls are evaluated according to specific criteria and the agents are coached on the results. Contact centers will establish their own evaluation criteria based on what type of customer experience they want their agents to deliver. Agents might be evaluated, for example, on how well they built rapport with a caller and whether they accurately solved the caller's issue. The goal is to improve agent performance and it's made possible by call recording.
3. Agent complianceCall recordings can also be used to ensure agents are complying with organizational policies. For example, the company might want agents to begin the call with a branded greeting, or they might require agents to offer a cross-sell item when customers place orders. Just knowing their calls are being recorded will yield some degree of agent compliance. The rest can be garnered by listening to calls and coaching agents.
4. Initial trainingCall recordings can be eye-opening and educational. Many contact centers flag both superb and tragic calls to be used in training. Listening to these calls gives new agents often unforgettable examples of good and bad call techniques and provides trainers an opportunity to break each part of the call down into teachable moments. It's a very effective method of introducing new employees to the art of providing exceptional customer experiences.
5. Dispute resolutionIt's unfortunate, but sometimes customers and businesses have disputes about what happened during a phone conversation. Maybe the customer swears they purchased a warranty they're now trying to use, or perhaps they're claiming the agent didn't read them a financial disclosure. A call recording is a direct record of the phone conversation and can help bring closure to a dispute.
6. Identification of customer-impacting issuesThrough call recordings, organizations can identify issues that otherwise may have festered for days or weeks. This is especially true when they use
speech analytics tools that can assess all calls and identify common call reasons. Now businesses can quickly address coupon codes that don't work or the quality issues with a specific product. Faster issue resolution translates to higher customer satisfaction.