Keeping reps engaged is always a top priority for call centers. But during the pandemic, it has become a lot more challenging, forcing site supervisors to rethink how they motivate their people.
Normally, supervisors spend their days walking the call center floor, listening to reps interact with customers, and encouraging positive behavior through leader boards and informal moments of coaching. But now that most reps are working from home, this culture of reactive, face-to-face performance management isn’t possible. And that’s a problem.
Turnover in call centers already averages 33%, in large part due to lack of engagement and insufficient training. The isolation of remote work threatens to increase these risks, while simultaneously making it difficult for leaders to determine who’s thriving and who needs additional support.
Fortunately, supervisors can circumvent these risks and increase remote engagement by leveraging the data tracking, and coaching tools available in their performance management platform. But to do that they need to rethink how they engage and train these workers, and how they track their results.
Industry leaders know that behavior drives outcomes. The more call center reps are trained on those desired behaviors, the more successful they will be. This is true whether reps are sitting in a call center or at their own dining room table.
But now that reps are remote, call centers need to be more intentional in their coaching techniques.
While many supervisors still rely on an ad hoc approach to coaching – offering advice when they see a rep struggling or a team missing its goals -- the most successful supervisors take a data-driven approach to coaching. They establish a formal schedule for one-on-one sessions, and use trend reports to identify individual coaching needs, using key performance indicators (KPIs) to set coaching agendas and to track progress over time.
By attaching trend data, structure, and KPIs to every coaching engagement, supervisors gain visibility over the performance of every team member, and reps know exactly what’s expected of them and what they need to improve.
This approach was a best practice before the pandemic, but now it’s critical if call centers want to keep their remote people motivated and on track.
For supervisors who are trying to find their coaching cadence in a remote work environment, our experts compiled these tips.
Even when this pandemic ends, remote work will likely be a permanent part of the call center environment. Figuring out how to engage and coach these remote workers will help you lower turnover and foster behaviors that deliver better results.
To learn how TouchPoint One’s Acuity performance management platform and Sidekick supervisor coaching system can help you improve your coaching techniques, please contact me at jgardner@touchpointone.com.