Dave,
Can I start with the maths?
The total amount of time in the call centre is this:
time to answer referral calls + time to deal with other calls + time to complete referrals
This is with 55 agents.
Let us assume that nothing will change, the number of calls, the time to deal and the time to complete referrals will not change. And you are not allowed any more resource! If you simply place the referral completion process in a separate team, what have you gained? You haven't gained any time, you still have the same number of people doing the same amount of work so logically you will still have the same abandon rate.
So you have gained nothing, but you have lost something. You have disrupted flow. Before a referral was completed straight after the phone was put down by the agent who took the call. Perfect flow. You couldn't do it any quicker (unless the agent could complete some of the referral while on the call). But now you have people taking referral details and putting them in some sort of queue where they wait to be made into a referral. How does that affect the customer's end-to-end time? It gets worse.
So you need to change something. You need to affect one or more of the following:
1) Reduce the number of calls
2) Reduce the time it takes to complete a referral
3) Get more people
You can affect (1) by finding out what your failure demand is and stopping it.
You can affect (2) by examining that particular process.
You can affect (3) spending money.
But this is all speculation really, on my part as well as yours. I am happy to repeat myself when I say that you should study the work as a system first. Gain understanding of the what and why of current performance before you do anything. Then if it makes sense to split referral completion then do it. If not, don't.
It is just that in my experience people jump to conclusions about splitting work up a la Adam Smith only to further fragment the flow of work.
And just to address something you said, which was:
You actually take some of the more experienced staff
for escalation / referral work for precisely the reasons you give, they are more
experienced and do know more. Therefore are in a position to be able to
complete work with a far greater degree of efficiency.
If I am clear here you are saying that you would take the more experienced staff off the phones and put them in the referral team? If I have that right then you are doing exactly what I think you shouldn't. You are moving the expertise further away from the customer. So if you have less experienced staff taking the referral details you are more likely to have information missing or wrong when it is picked up by the referral team. So you then increase waste because you
(a) submit an incomplete or incorrect referral or,
(b) have to wait for the customer to call back or,
(c) have to call the customer for clarification.
Interesting question.
I hope Ken will report back on what he does. We don't often hear about what happens when people post about problems like this.
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