When it comes to making your contact centre operations more efficient, data is king. Focused insights and reporting in your contact centre can show you what you’re getting right, and where you could make improvements to enhance the customer experience and boost your bottom-line.
Call centre reporting is the key to unlocking intel and creating better customer experiences. But great call centre reporting requires two things, tracking the right metrics and collecting the right data. In this blog, we’re taking a deep dive into everything you need to know to improve your call centre reporting, plus the tools that can help you do it effortlessly.
Call centre reporting, also known as contact centre reporting, is the process of collecting relevant data about your call centre operations, the calls you receive, and everything in between into reports that allow you to track and analyse overall performance.
For call centre leaders, call centre reporting can shine a light on key information such as how your agents are performing, what kinds of things your customers are calling about, and how effective your contact centre is at supporting and converting customers.
What kind of things can you expect to uncover from your call centre reports? Here are just a few of the benefits you can unlock when you improve your call centre reporting processes:
Cal centre reporting is often used interchangeably with call centre analytics. But they’re not the same. Call centre reporting is a basic necessity for call centres and can do the following:
Analytics allow you to take call centre reporting to the next level. By implementing analytics tools, such as speech analytics suites, you can enhance your call centre reports with actionable insights – extracted from real customer calls – that can help you make data-driven decisions, understand specific trends, and accurately track the customer journey.
Metrics are the most effective way of monitoring and measuring the performance of your contact centres and are an essential part of contact centre reporting. There are plenty of call centre metrics you can track, here are some of the key ones to pay attention to.
Average abandonment rate is a strong indicator of how satisfied your customers are with your call centre. This metric refers to the number of customer calls that hang-up before connecting to an agent.
After-call work (ACW) is defined as the necessary work performed by your agents after a customer interaction. This can include things such as logging the reason for a call and the outcome, adding notes to a customer record in your CRM system, and scheduling follow-up actions.
AHT tracks the amount of time your agents are spending on calls. It begins as soon as the agent picks up the call and ends when they disconnect. Tracking AHT is important because it shows you how long your agents typically need to spend on the phone to resolve queries or drive conversions.
Average wait time is the average amount of time your customers spend waiting in a queue or for a call-back from your contact centre. This differs from AHT, as it logs the time spent prior to the call when customers are waiting to speak to an agent. Long wait times are likely to lead to unhappy customers and higher abandonment rates.
Conversion rate is the percentage of people that make a purchase on the call. Since a purchase may not happen during first contact, you might prefer to track the number of warm leads that convert into customers.
Similar to conversion rate given its connection to lead generation and revenue, this metric measures what each call actually costs you. racking this makes it easier to understand which high value leads to focus on and which can be converted elsewhere. It can also help you spend your marketing budget more efficiently if you’re using advertising to drive those calls.
First contact resolution (FCR) directly relates to customer satisfaction. It tracks the number of calls in which your contact centre agents are able to address their needs or convert a lead the first time, without further contact. Multiple calls may identify an issue with your customer handling that should be addressed and can lead to negative customer experiences.
A common challenge for call centres is the ability to extract customer insights from each and every phone call at scale. Call centre software is perfectly placed to provide you with data that can improve your call centre reporting.
For example, Infinity’s speech analytics suite, Conversation Analytics, can capture the data needed to build smoother customer journeys, resolve issues faster and reduce manual work involved in handling multiple calls. With Conversation Analytics, you can evolve your tactics based on real data from your customers, instead of relying on intuition. It can tell you things such as
A great example of using call centre software to improve reporting and introduce contact centre efficiencies comes from Access Self Storage. The pandemic meant that many people’s plans changed, and with that so did their storage needs. They needed to handle calls more efficiently to keep costs and waiting times down, as well as gaining a better understanding of the needs and questions people had during a constantly evolving global situation.
They used Conversation Analytics to extract insights that helped them update processes, scripts and training. This practice was crucial in reacting to the changing needs of customers.
Using Infinity’s suite of tools, they saw a 50% reduction in external contact centre costs, a 23% year-on-year boost in calls from offline marketing activity, and an incredible 35% year-on-year increase in converting calls.
Want to find out more about how to take your contact centre to the next level? Book a demo with us today.