Calabrio product training
Home » Complete Guide to Contact Center Quality Management
What is Quality Management?
As organizations increasingly compete on the basis of customer experience (CX), call center performance has become a critical business focus. Workforce management (WFM) solutions can help you properly allocate resources to ensure you’re prepared to meet demand—putting the right people in the right place at the right time to ensure consistent service levels. But agent scheduling and other WFM functionality only covers a portion of the contact center performance equation.
Moreover, agents are not identical—and even the same agent can perform at various levels from hour to hour, day to day or week to week. That’s where call center quality management (QM) comes in: A QM solution gives you the tools to continuously measure and monitor agent performance, assess the quality and depth of your customer interactions, and drive constant improvement.
The impacts are hard to argue with: A single call between a contact center agent and a customer can make a lasting impact on that customer’s impression of your organization. In fact, the success of a contact center is often directly tied to the performance of the professionals staffing it. Why? There is a strong relationship between the quality of agent and customer interactions and a company’s overall growth. Positive one-to-one engagement between your agents and your customers is the root of brand loyalty, and brand loyalty drives revenue growth. In essence, an effective contact center quality management program is directly connected to the success of your business.Â
Select a tool that guarantees to capture 100% of your calls securely and reliably. Being able to easily filter, search for and playback the calls in an easy to use, intuitive interface is important for efficiency. Also consider how your customers contact you, as you will need a tool capable of capturing and evaluating multichannel interactions.
Solid, well-defined scripts are key to call center efficiency, compliance, and customer interaction success. Scripts should be comprehensive and useful to the agents. Your agents should also be well trained on the scripts to understand where there is room for deviation should the situation call for it.
A Quality Standard Definition Document (QSDD) enables you to map your quality process to existing and future enterprise goals. It should outline and detail the necessary information that is being evaluated. The QSDD should contain the overall guidelines and procedures of the Quality Management program.
When drafting evaluation forms, keep it simple. Sections should follow the general flow of a typical call. Most calls will have a greeting, interaction, and closing section. You may decide to have different evaluation forms for different queues and types of calls.
The QA Evaluator (also called Specialist or Analyst) should be involved in creating, reviewing, and updating your quality program. They are typically responsible for monitoring and reviewing calls, completing evaluations, coaching agents, and ensuring the standards of your QA program are upheld.
Calibrations are a great way to determine if your Evaluators are grading interactions on the same curve, as it helps standardize the scoring and evaluation process. It is recommended that call centers calibrate a minimum of one call per week.
Reporting enables you to communicate, monitor, and track progress by spotting trends, identifying areas of importance, highlighting top performers, and more. Out-of-the-box standard reports and user-friendly custom reports deliver a comprehensive view of the interactions happening across the call center.
Many organizations create a Best Practices Call Library by tagging specific calls for training. This allows agents to replay calls to better understand what makes a good customer interaction. It can also be helpful to let agents score several of their own calls each week and calibrate with other peers or a coach.
Call centers have many different tools at their disposal to monitor quality. However, each one comes with unique advantages and drawbacks that can make some approaches more insightful than others. Here are a few of the most common approaches used to monitor quality in the call center, including some helpful tips to identify the right quality monitoring solution for your call center environment.
Many contact center leaders rely on random sample monitoring to measure agent performance and ensure quality customer service. But this approach is limited in its ability to tell you about the overall state of your contact center.
In traditional quality assurance programs, interactions are selected for review based on certain qualities—such as the longest or shortest call—or based on a random sample. However, more often than not, these samples will be clean and won’t offer any insights to improve contact center operations.
In addition to random sampling, targeted monitoring offers a closer look at high value calls—such as those with key customers or associated with a high dollar value. A call center might also choose to target calls where a customer is following up on a customer issue or those that are related to key business initiatives including cancellations, low survey scores, renewals, and more.
Monitoring these types of interactions will provide more relevant information and help your call center improve its processes, finding the specific areas where agents are succeeding or where they might need additional coaching and training.
This fully automated approach enables the call center to supplement your quality program with powerful analytics tools like speech, desktop and text analytics. Additionally, you can automatically categorize interactions, regardless of channel, and run predictive scoring on 100% of customer conversations—instead of the traditional 2%.
Analytics-fueled quality management provides insight into the calls, chats or emails that have the greatest impact, enabling supervisors and managers to spend more time on targeted coaching to improve performance. Over time, it helps drive a comprehensive quality program that targets business issues and processes, turning interactions into valuable data and giving you visibility into key trends.
Call center technology is evolving rapidly. With each advancement, emerging strategies promise to push QM to the next level—delivering new value to the call center and across the entire enterprise. Here are five trends that are changing the way QM is delivered and revealing new ways organizations can capitalize to create better outcomes—both for their customers and for the business.
Automation makes the contact center and quality program more efficient by using technology to collect, analyze and provide insight into customer interactions. It follows an “if this, then that” (IFTTT) approach to processes to help evaluators identify, focus and take action on the interactions that matter most. For example, automation takes the guesswork out of call evaluation by evaluating 100% of interactions and flagging those that need further review.
Customers want to communicate with brands in their preferred channels—and sometimes across multiple channels over the course of one problem resolution. While calls remain the most common way that customers contact companies, more customers are turning to other channels for these interactions. This means that brands must be ready and available with a multichannel strategy.
Multichannel Quality Management is the process of capturing and evaluating customer interactions regardless of channel—call, chat, email, social media, etc. This ensures complete visibility into the quality of a contact center’s performance. A common practice is to have different evaluation forms for each channel, including the standards and requirements that are applicable for each specific channel.
There is simply too much valuable customer information to be captured, processed and turned into knowledge for any company to remain competitive without modern analytics tools. That’s why modern QM is moving away from manual, transactional QM to automated, predictive, analytics-fueled QM. Analytics-fueled QM allows contact centers to unlock the insights buried within the enormous amount of multichannel interaction data streaming in every day—spotting trends and directing quality efforts to the areas where will have the most impact.
Outcomes-based quality management looks beyond measuring a single engagement and its efficiency and instead takes into account the long-term customer experience outcome. It looks beyond agent performance and behaviors and focuses more holistically on the outcomes or goals of the business. In outcomes-based quality management, emphasis is placed on the conversations that agents are having with customers to help move interactions toward improved customer satisfaction, problem resolution and, ultimately, customer loyalty.
Enterprise Quality Management extends QM beyond the contact center by connecting it to the goals of the business. For example, if providing excellent customer experience is a key goal or mission for your organization, everyone involved from hiring, training, supporting, processing, and delivering must understand why it matters and embrace the opportunity. In this case, HR would need to understand and align around these criteria in order to hire the right agents. Similarly, training would need to know what systems, scripts and processes the agents will be using so they can properly train agents.
Enterprise Quality Management creates a comprehensive program that focuses on both performance management & process improvement.
If agents receive frequent, constructive feedback, they better are equipped to reach positive resolutions.
QM monitoring can evaluate 100% of interactions, giving full visibility to agent performance.
The evaluation process gathers data to advise where additional training may be needed so agents succeed.
Creating a positive call center experience for customers drives brand loyalty and brings customers back.
Comprehensive QM programs keep agents engaged with regular training and coaching sessions.
QM can establish better hiring criteria and agent training protocols based on past agent hiring successes.
The tools and technologies available to call centers for quality management have rapidly expanded in recent years. But not every new tool on the market is worth the investment. Here are the core technologies your call center needs to execute an accurate and comprehensive QM program—without getting distracted by unnecessary bells and whistles:
The most common call recording solutions automatically capture 100% of your interactions. The system securely records and stores your interactions for quality and compliance purposes—with the ability to search and play these recordings as needed. Call recording solutions can also include audio and screen recording capabilities. Be sure to look for a call recording solution that supports PCI compliance and other regulatory requirements you may have.
The tech-savvy customer of today wants to have multiple ways to contact a company. In other words, they want a consistent, seamless experience whether they use web, chat, email, or a combination of communication channels. To ensure the best customer experience, a contact center needs to be able to capture and evaluate contacts, regardless of the channel.
Analytics-enabled refers to the integration of AI-driven automation and analytics tools within the QM solution. It moves quality beyond the specific agent and transaction and starts to build a comprehensive quality program that connects with key business issues. With analytics-fueled QM, companies have full insight into their interactions, enabling them to evaluate 100% of their contacts. Evaluating all interactions, regardless of channel, streamlines the quality process and ensures it is representative and fair for agents.
Desktop monitoring is primarily used to understand agent effectiveness and drive agent productivity by determining which resources agents use and which of their activities are productive vs. unproductive. Each agent’s desktop activity is monitored through an application that resides on the device. When combined with other metrics that gauge agent effectiveness—such as average quality evaluation score, the number of positive sentiment calls received, agent adherence rates, etc.—desktop monitoring and analytics provides a powerful new dimension on QM.
Desktop monitoring can include real-time monitoring of both the audio and screen activity of an agent. For example, a supervisor might decide to monitor a newer agent while they’re on a call to see if their new-hire training is effective, and that the agent is following processes and adhering to scripts. A manager might also live-monitor an agent that’s struggling with an irate caller and provide real-time coaching and training.
Speech analytics unlocks the voice of the customer, turning the raw customer interaction data into relevant and readily usable insights. With speech analytics, a contact center can automate the quality process, ensuring that 100% of calls are analyzed and identified as the most relevant calls for quality assurance purposes. Speech analytics technology can be based on phonetics or speech-to-text.
Sentiment Analysis leverages speech analytics to provide greater insights into customer calls that can be used by supervisors, managers and others throughout the enterprise. Sentiment analysis is an automated process that doesn’t require human intervention. Instead, it determines customer sentiment by utterance and looks at those utterances in the context of the words around them. Sentiment analysis can be run on both the agent voice and the caller voice to uncover deeper insights about the full customer experience.
Metadata is additional information (data) about an interaction that gets automatically attached to the call and is available for playback as soon as the recording is complete. Companies will often integrate and attach third-party metadata sources, such as customer data from Salesforce and third-party post-interaction surveys, to store all in one place with the full call recording and transcription.
Survey responses can provide valuable information about your customers’ interaction experiences and insight into their general perceptions about your organization. It can also help you target contacts for evaluation. When combined with agent self-evaluations, post-call survey data provides a 360-degree view of the interaction.
Experiencing This?
Try This:
This only happens if you haven’t done your homework and due diligence when putting together your quality program. If you are thinking of the customer first when building out your quality program and pulling in the right business units and stakeholders, this shouldn’t be a challenge—especially in today’s world where customer experience is so important.
Re-evaluating your program, ensuring you have buy-in all the way up from executive-level management.
Ensuring that your quality goals are closely aligned to the goals of the company.
With so much data being generated from many different systems, it can be overwhelming. Sometimes contact centers gather data from many different systems due to structural issues or because organizational growth has resulted in multiple systems. Often, these systems are siloed and don’t talk to each other, forcing the analyst to manually compile the information.
Automating the reporting process
Making reports accessible to all, ensuring that data is driving, not hindering productivity
It’s incredibly important to have consistency in how you monitor your agents. It’s also important to remember that quality isn’t a one-and-done process. A Quality Assurance (QA) team should continually evaluate the program and make changes when appropriate.
Hiring the right people and training them properly
Creating and maintaining a Quality Standards Definition Document (QSDD)
The simple fact is that most companies aren’t assessing enough of their calls for quality. In fact, most contact centers only evaluate 1-2% of the calls they receive—not nearly enough to give them a clear understanding of the breadth of challenges their professionals face.
Ensuring you’re evaluating enough calls each month to produce a statistically significant sample size
Using targeted evaluations and tools like analytics to automate the quality process and keep it focused on evaluating the most relevant contacts
Supervisors and managers know that consistent coaching has a direct impact on agent performance. Coaching and training are key to ensuring that agents stay motivated and engaged. Yet finding the time to proactively coach and train agents—while juggling all the normal day-to-day duties—is a challenge for most contact centers.
Utilizing real-time, in-the-moment coaching and feedback opportunities
Making time for agents to conduct self-coaching and training by allowing them to score several of their own calls each week and calibrate with their peers or a coach
Creating a best practice call library that agents can replay to better understand what makes a good customer interaction
Why do you need to calibrate quality scores?
Calibration keeps the quality team of evaluators and coaches coordinated. It helps ensure consistency and fairness and provides a way to critique internal processes. In addition, it helps maintain the integrity of your quality program.
Calibration can also help resolve agent evaluation disputes. If needed, you can assign an evaluator a calibration task that essentially gives them a chance to re-listen to the call and confirm or change their initial assessment. You can also have the agent perform a calibration, giving them a chance to listen to the call and do a self-assessment.
Who is responsible for quality assurance in the call center?
Each call center should have a dedicated quality team to create, review and update the quality program. For day-to-day evaluations, a Quality Evaluator, Specialist or Analyst can manage the evaluation process. This individual or team should be carefully chosen to conduct the evaluations and carry out the quality program with diligence and integrity.
Generally, it is important to evaluate as many interactions as possible. Ideally, you would evaluate a minimum of two customer exchanges per agent per week. But the more interactions that are evaluated, the better, as it will inform more accurate overall evaluation scores for each agent.
In addition, a well-designed call evaluation form can help streamline performance management and standardize the expectations for each customer interaction. Below is a guide to help create more impactful evaluations that drive improvements at the agent level—and throughout the call center.
What should you put on call monitoring evaluation forms?
Align the form to strategic goals: The evaluation form should support the QSDD.
Keep it simple: Simple questions allow managers and supervisors to investigate the root cause of an agent’s low score.
Break the form out into sections: Sections should follow the general flow of a typical call.
Consider using auto-fail: Auto-fail is typically reserved for egregious or detrimental behavior and will automatically set the overall evaluation or section to zero or fail.
Choose a scoring method: The most common method is points-based scoring, but some call centers also use percentage-based scoring.
Decide which response types to use: The most common responses are Yes/No and Scalable (1-5) answers. Using Yes/No answers whenever possible creates clearer, more concise evaluations and requires less documentation and collaboration efforts to get consistent evaluation measurements.
Focus on the customer experience: Don’t get distracted by the process and transaction steps.
Formalize a process for agent appeals: This can be a check box and comment section in the evaluation form itself.
Why do you need quality assurance and performance management?
Quality management plays a key role for both. The most common QM metrics—around quality, compliance and customer experience—are also among the primary KPIs used in performance management to measure agent and contact center performance. Metrics such as how well an agent adheres to policies and procedures, how well they comply with regulatory requirements, how they handle irate callers, how efficiently they handle the calls, and who are the top performers should be used to oversee agent and contact center performance.
Quality monitoring aligns closely with performance management. By identifying the best and worst calls, you can discover which agents need training and which best practices they should be trained on. Performance management is often more targeted than quality monitoring, focusing specifically on agent performance. But it can also be broader and address overall contact center performance.
There is no shortage of tools on the market that can help drive new QM efficiencies into the call center. But without the right strategy and a deep understanding of the business goals to be served by the program, these tools will often fall short of their intended objectives. Before a call center can achieve the QM program it envisions, it is important to first assess existing call center QM practices—taking careful note of the specific areas where it is excelling and where room for improvement still exists.
With the right tools in place—each one serving the overall QM strategy—call centers are empowered to deliver unparalleled support to customers in every interaction.
Calabrio is a trusted ally to leading brands. The digital foundation of a customer-centric contact center, the Calabrio ONE workforce performance suite helps enrich and understand human interactions, empowering your contact center as a brand guardian.
We maximize agent performance, exceed customer expectations, and boost workforce efficiency using connected data, AI-fueled analytics, automated workforce management and personalized coaching.
Only Calabrio ONE unites workforce optimization (WFO), agent engagement and business intelligence solutions into a true-cloud, fully integrated suite that adapts to your business.
For customers and partners.