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3. Benefits of a Call Reduction Strategy Minimize any business impact
Increase employee productivity
Increase adherence to service levels
Increase customer satisfaction
Lower overall support costs
Repositioning the support team to handle more strategic, value-add and business critical types of issues
4. Call Elimination Increases Cost per Call – T or F? True, assuming no increase in aggregate call volume
You must reduce targeted and categorical call volume
It Must be measurable – before and after
It Must be linked to an initiative – something you did
Good news!
We reduced our Total Call Volume
Bad News
We did not do anything except………force our customers not to call
5. Something Simple What is a Abandon?
Positive or Negative?
Do you take credit for placing an Emergency Message (EM) during a Global Outage?
You Should!
A simple Proactive, Call Avoidance strategy that communicates the situation/update to your customers so they can make an educated decision of what to do next – hopefully go back to work!
Doughnuts and Coffee Anyone?
“What else do you do when the network is down?”
6. Reducing Cost Per Solution The real benefit of doing Root Cause Analysis is that you know WHY your customers are calling and what problems and Call Types are reoccurring in your environment.
The Real Value Add is:
Targeting these reoccurring problems for elimination at a very real cost savings (25 application ‘How To’ problems eliminated per month equals 300 per yr. @$25 a contact yields a support savings of $7,500 a yr.). This is not just one months savings we are talking about – these were problems and Call Types that happened every month and now they are reduced every month.
Target these reoccurring problems for movement from Level-3 to Level-2 to Level-1 to Level-0 and eventually elimination.
Once Call Types are identified – they should be systematically targeted for movement down to a lower cost per contact. This focus on identifying Call Types and pinpointing them at the Level they are resolved will yield you the cost of resolving those Call Types at those Levels
(100 Virus infections resolved by desktop visits, 50 PeopleSoft application corrupted files resolved by desktop visits @ $100+ a call quickly adds up to a great deal of money). This is not just one months savings we are talking about – these were problems and Call Types that happened now they are reduced every month.
You now identify all of the Call Types that are escalated to the level-2 teams ( e.g. network, applications, email, data base, security, etc.) and you identify numbers and costs associated with all escalated Call Types.
You then follow the same process for all of the calls that are being resolved at Level-1 on first contact.
As you gain visibility to where these Call Types are being resolved, you will now work to shift where they get resolved and hopefully, one-day, eliminate them.
Something that is not readily and easily understood by senior managers is the Total Cost of Support. This chart and the ability for YOU and YOR customers to explain it – will give them more visibility as to the real impact and value the support team can have on the business and improving the quality of support at a lower cost.
To emphasize how expensive Call Types being resolved at Level-3, I use the analogy of “a taxi cab ride” - when a Call Type gets first reported to the Level-1 team, if not resolved then escalated to Level-2 and eventually Level-3 – all of this time the ‘taxi meter’ is running from the very first contact. This translates to adding all of the costs associated with all of the Levels of support people needed to resolve this Call Type. (Level-1 costs$ + Level-2costs$ + Level-3 costs$).
Shifting them to the lower cost support alternative means you need to put work plans, incentives and metrics into action.
For example, desktop remote control, backup and restore, anti-virus protection software and tools will reduce the amount of desktop visits for those Call Types and shift them to Level-1 or even better Level-0.
Working with your Service Providers to reduce calls escalated by implementing documented problem resolutions into the Knowledge Base to be leveraged by Level-1 or High Impact Training or shadowing, etc…. Will focus in shifting Call Types from Level-2 to Level-1.
It all results in a clear focused strategy to reduce support costs, improve employee productivity and leverage and utilize the support resources better to provide more value-add to the business and resolve more complex problems – inexpensively.
It also makes for a great senior management report (e.g. The Marketing Report) where you clearly show the support cost savings by shifting Call Types to a lower resolution cost as well as eliminating Call Types and providing big savings from reoccurring Call Types – month over month.
My executive marketing report would show my month over month savings by shifting and eliminating Call Types. It would also target next months Call Types for shifting and eliminating.
One Slide – tons of value and cost savings. The real benefit of doing Root Cause Analysis is that you know WHY your customers are calling and what problems and Call Types are reoccurring in your environment.
The Real Value Add is:
Targeting these reoccurring problems for elimination at a very real cost savings (25 application ‘How To’ problems eliminated per month equals 300 per yr. @$25 a contact yields a support savings of $7,500 a yr.). This is not just one months savings we are talking about – these were problems and Call Types that happened every month and now they are reduced every month.
Target these reoccurring problems for movement from Level-3 to Level-2 to Level-1 to Level-0 and eventually elimination.
Once Call Types are identified – they should be systematically targeted for movement down to a lower cost per contact. This focus on identifying Call Types and pinpointing them at the Level they are resolved will yield you the cost of resolving those Call Types at those Levels
(100 Virus infections resolved by desktop visits, 50 PeopleSoft application corrupted files resolved by desktop visits @ $100+ a call quickly adds up to a great deal of money). This is not just one months savings we are talking about – these were problems and Call Types that happened now they are reduced every month.
You now identify all of the Call Types that are escalated to the level-2 teams ( e.g. network, applications, email, data base, security, etc.) and you identify numbers and costs associated with all escalated Call Types.
You then follow the same process for all of the calls that are being resolved at Level-1 on first contact.
As you gain visibility to where these Call Types are being resolved, you will now work to shift where they get resolved and hopefully, one-day, eliminate them.
Something that is not readily and easily understood by senior managers is the Total Cost of Support. This chart and the ability for YOU and YOR customers to explain it – will give them more visibility as to the real impact and value the support team can have on the business and improving the quality of support at a lower cost.
To emphasize how expensive Call Types being resolved at Level-3, I use the analogy of “a taxi cab ride” - when a Call Type gets first reported to the Level-1 team, if not resolved then escalated to Level-2 and eventually Level-3 – all of this time the ‘taxi meter’ is running from the very first contact. This translates to adding all of the costs associated with all of the Levels of support people needed to resolve this Call Type. (Level-1 costs$ + Level-2costs$ + Level-3 costs$).
Shifting them to the lower cost support alternative means you need to put work plans, incentives and metrics into action.
For example, desktop remote control, backup and restore, anti-virus protection software and tools will reduce the amount of desktop visits for those Call Types and shift them to Level-1 or even better Level-0.
Working with your Service Providers to reduce calls escalated by implementing documented problem resolutions into the Knowledge Base to be leveraged by Level-1 or High Impact Training or shadowing, etc…. Will focus in shifting Call Types from Level-2 to Level-1.
It all results in a clear focused strategy to reduce support costs, improve employee productivity and leverage and utilize the support resources better to provide more value-add to the business and resolve more complex problems – inexpensively.
It also makes for a great senior management report (e.g. The Marketing Report) where you clearly show the support cost savings by shifting Call Types to a lower resolution cost as well as eliminating Call Types and providing big savings from reoccurring Call Types – month over month.
My executive marketing report would show my month over month savings by shifting and eliminating Call Types. It would also target next months Call Types for shifting and eliminating.
One Slide – tons of value and cost savings.
7. Are your Services Value-Add? List all services you currently deliver
Rank in order of importance/value to customer
Categorize services into problems and requests
Identify services where you add no value
Look for ways to deflect or eliminate
Implement best practices
Estimate cost to deliver services
Map your team’s skills to your services
Any bandwidth?
8. You Really Made It When… 1. Work to find and win more responsibilities, customers, call volume, work load, business units, etc.
2. Maintain or improve on SLA commitments to the business while supporting new business
3. Implement call reduction strategy to reduce targeted call volume periodically
4. Capture support savings that can be returned to bottom-line or leveraged for cost-avoidance
9. Talk to your Customer lately? Customer conversations are critical to your success and value-proposition
Learn their business from them
Talk to customers that leverage your services and ones that do not
Ask three questions
What are we doing well?
What are we not doing well?
What are we not doing to help you achieve your business goals and object?
10. Root Cause Analysis The Root Cause Analysis (RCA) process was to provide results in the following areas of concentration:
Trend Analysis
Problem Prevention
Call Avoidance Methodologies
Feedback loops to Help Desk training and Client Educational Programs
Reports
Top Cases Logged by Category
Frequency of Category Tree
Top Cases by Time Spent
Pareto Rule = Frequency X Time Spent
Top Cases by Value
Dollar Impact
Leverage Reporting to substantiate your case to “Do The Right Thing for the business and your customers”
11. Back to Basics and Best Practices Utilize call categorization data (reporting)
Know what types of calls should be targeted for reduction/elimination
Using the Pareto analysis, concentrate your efforts on the issues that produce the:
highest percentage of calls
highest percentage of handling time
largest pain and business impact
highest cost per resolution Guarantee that your analysis is based on sound numbers first by 100% call logging
Must train your professionals to properly categorized all problems and requests correctly and consistently
12. Call Elimination and Reduction Best Practices You must have a well-maintained, updated and robust knowledge base with self service and learning capability
Training/educating customers to prevent problems or questions
Conduct a simple basic training/maunal for new employees
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) publication
Mandatory during a new roll out or change process
Professionals can use a talk training format to step the customer through “how-to” requests or ‘simple solutions” while on the phone
Hopefully, customer won’t rely on the support center next time
A role in Change Management and technology rollouts
Communication of global outages presented in:
Front-end phone message
Portal or intranet
Targeted communication for customers
Web-enable as many functions as possible to eliminate or deflect calls
Case submittal, Requests, Status checks and Password resets
13. The Built-In Call Reduction Strategy Understand why your customers are calling
Understand the impact and determine where to focus efforts
Identify the 'owners' of the root of the problem/question
Conduct interviews with repeat offenders and “owners” of problems, questions, and requests
Seek recommendations (360 degrees) on what can be done to eliminate, reduce or deflect calls
Engage and get the buy-in from the owners to work to eliminate or reduce the impact of the root cause
Debrief global outages, technology rollouts and changes
14. Formulate recommendations for solutions
Update metrics to avoid any conflict
Implement ‘80-20 rule” solutions
Train/education all involved parties on the solution
Communicate and market the solution, business impact and results to all involved parties.
Continuously improve and reinforce use of automated and self service solutions
Review Change Management process for improvements
Always monitor progress and set new targets
The Built-In Call Reduction Strategy
15. Make Full Use of Support Automation Always look for ways to:
Eliminate calls
Deflect repetitive, non-value-add calls to a non-phone support alternative
Reduce the diagnostic time for complex calls, the number of desktop visits, and customer reliance on the phone
Communicate, educate, and train your customers to be self-sufficient
Prevent problems from impacting productivity by using auto-correcting features
Support the 365x7x24x60x60 availability model – don’t be a barrier to it!
It’s about keeping the phone-queue open for mission-critical problems
It’s about shifting work to more high value, business impact
16. Project Scorecard
17. Real Case Studies Allstate Insurance Company
18. Call Reduction Strategy
19. Call Reduction Trends
20. Kemper Insurance Companies
21. Kemper Insurance Companies Assign a Customer Support Center (CSC) professional to all new project teams
Firsthand knowledge
Influence and improve design, training, testing and communications with problem prevention in mind at all times
Review all technology communications
Identify potential points of confusion and suggest wording changes
Use real examples and stories to make a point
Recently we worked with a business area rolling out a new application, but we were not provided an opportunity to review their communication.
One poorly worded sentence resulted in over 200 calls in one day
Once the cost of lost productivity was explained to that business area, they committed to involving us in all future communications
22. Kemper Insurance Companies Daily/weekly "spot" identification of problem trends
Daily and weekly changes are communicated to the entire Support Center
When technicians notice or managers hear a trend developing, “on the spot" analysis is done to:
Understand what's going on
Determine the root cause
Get the right outside people involved
Assess remedial steps
Take action
Most common after a significant change has been introduced into the environment (e.g. Application/Infrastructure change or rollout)
Good relationships with our business customers and the other IT departments enable quick identification of root causes and quick remedial steps
23. Kemper Insurance Companies Monthly review of tickets for identification of problem trends
Proper categorization by System, Component, Item, and Module
For example, PCSoftware/Notes/Email/Attachments
Use a Cause Code when closing tickets
Monthly reports determine the highest volume problems by Category/Cause Code
The category view tells us the nature of the problem
The cause code view helps us understand what caused that problem
Where customer lack of training is the cause, the business area is involved in the problem solving process
Trends and remedial actions are summarized and reported to Business Partners, the CIO and IT Directors quarterly.
Implemented Ticket Quality Program to ensure that problems are labeled correctly
Involves "spot check" reviews of tickets each month with feedback to technicians for improvement
24. Welcome! Alston & Bird
25. Alston & Bird Help Desk and Training Dept. report into same organization
Greatly improved the relationship between the two groups
Call records are regularly reviewed
Frequently asked questions are incorporated into training classes and shared in an e-mail "Tip of the Week" that is sent firm-wide
The Help Desk staff:
Works hand-in-hand with the Trainer in developing the courseware and documentation for all new applications
Is the pilot training class, adding "real life" foresight into what will be covered in the training class delivered to employees.
Results:
Training related calls to the Help Desk were reduced by 20% within 4 months of combining the two departments
26. Refined the process for proactive system status notification
A real-time system status scrolling "marquee" is on every desktop throughout the firm
New employees are trained to check the marquee when experiencing system problems
Additional notification methods include:
Voice mail
Email
Greeting message updates
Positive abandon
Roles and responsibilities are defined throughout I.T. to ensure that the communication and delivery of timely system status information is top priority.
Alston & Bird
27. Know What and Who You Should Know Identify the Critical Elements of Your Support Business
Supply, Demand and SLA adherence
Total Cost of Support, Cost per Contact and Solution
Help Desk Professional Utilization
Top 5 Call Types by Volume and Mean Time To Resolve
Identify and Report Business Impact and Employee Productivity Trends
Barriers to Total Contact Ownership
Identify Key Sponsors and Champions of Help Desk
Senior Level Management
Customers
Business Drivers
28. STI Knowledge Educationand Certification Program Launching refreshed and new education and certification content
CHDD – refreshed
CHDP Online - refreshed
CKM – refreshed
MindShare – relaunched
Certified Team Lead –new
Emotional Intelligence – new
Community Building
Increased RoundTables, Webinars and Executive Consortiums
Certified Education Center (e.g. New Horizons) - new
Seminar series - new
Managing Change and Conflict
Time Management
Root Cause Analysis
Sales Strategies