CallCentreVoice Topic Service Level Calculations

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Louise Smith on 8/9/2009 14:53:00.
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Louise Smith
Forecasting & Planning Project
HLIS

6 posts
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Service Level Calculations  [8/9/2009 14:53:00]

Hi All,

I have recently established that our telephony system only provides historical service levels on calls answered rather thatn calls offered, although our real time displays (Which are generated from the same system) are bassed on calls offered.

In order to establish our historical service levels on calls offered I put together a simple calculation to track this based on-
calls answered in service / calls offered

I quickly realised that this calculation still did not give me the same daily service level as our real time boards and after a lot more digging found out that this was due to the complexity of the formula within our real time boards, which takes calls abandoned before threshold out of the equation.

I am now hoping to get some information on what other call centres base their service levels on in order to base our calcualation on the market standard-

Overall calls offered
Overall calls offered- calls abandoned before threshold
Anything else????

Please help

Thanks
Lou

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Paul Titcombe
Contact Centre / CRM Architect
Quick Contact Centre Ltd

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Overall calls offered- calls abandoned before threshold   [8/9/2009 17:20:46]

In my experience most go with Overall calls offered- calls abandoned before threshold

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Robert Tuck
Planning & Performance Manager
Thames Water

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pick and mix!  [11/9/2009 19:51:48]

Unfortunately you will find that there isn't a standard and it can depend on a number of reasons.

Some will argue counting all calls offered it the best way because it takes account of your total service offered - not answering the calls clearly not being a good thing for a contact centre.

Others will use a defined number of seconds to abandon as a threshold, what your system seems to be doing. The rationale being that calls that abandon before that threshold either didn't provide you with an opportunity to answer them or may have dialled the wrong number (although with IVR's now so common, and the delay through the IVR often not counted before this calculation begins, it's a persistent person who gets that far only to realise it's the wrong place).

The other set-up you had is much rarer, I hope, these days and harks to a culture of trying to achieve a goal rather than measure the impact of your service on the customer.

I tend towards the first option, which probably means a bit of script writing in the reports suite you have and/or the real time displays. You'll always abandon calls, and it's fair to say you'll end up counting some more than once when customer redial on a bad day, but if target poorer service, you'' provide it.

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Sreeraj B
WFM - Scheduler
Ageis

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SL and Occupancy  [22/3/2011 18:12:49]

What are the situations where the SL and occupancy remain steady compared to other situations where these both factors are inversly proportional?

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Pamposh Raina
Sr.Manager -Workforce management
American Express

66 posts
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SL calc  [22/3/2011 20:56:17]

Hi,

Service level calculations are done based on Target Average Speed of Answer as per SL definition.

For e.g. for a business that has service level agreement of 70/30

Offered calls - 1000
Answered calls - 800
Answered within 30 secs - 700
Abandoned calls - 200
Abandoned within 30 secs - 50

My SLA for the business would be -

(Calls answered within 30 secs + calls abandoned within 30 secs) / total calls offered i.e 75%

your abandoned rate would be - 20%

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Sreeraj B
WFM - Scheduler
Ageis

6 posts
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WFM Basics  [25/3/2011 18:13:56]

Hi Pamposh,

I would like to know more about the basic formulas and FTE calculations. Is there any source where I can get reliable information. When I search I get lot of terminologies that is not related to call center. Could you please help on this?

Thank you,

Sreeraj.

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Pamposh Raina
Sr.Manager -Workforce management
American Express

66 posts
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basics  [26/3/2011 15:35:46]

Look out for a literature called "Call Center Mathematics" on google. It should suffice your requirement rest of it comes from experience. Thts why i always say that I "practice" WFM just like doctors do

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Sreeraj B
WFM - Scheduler
Ageis

6 posts
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Basics  [28/3/2011 19:09:23]

Thank you Pamposh.

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