- Corporate and contact center foundation – culture, vision, goals, ecosystem, customer types
- Products, Processes, and Policies – processes/workflows, products/services offered, P&P, et cetera
- Technical Systems – ACD, WFM, QM, communication/collaboration, core systems, KM, CRM, HR applications, etc.
- Contact Center 101 – KPIs, quality processes, coaching processes, individual role in center’s success, etc.
- Contact Handling and Soft Skills – opening, identifying needs, solving problems, closing; active listening, controlling the conversation, empathy and calming/diffusing anger, etc.
Super Agents Needs Super Training: Create and develop highly trained and skilled agents
March 26, 2020
Every contact center leader climbs a steep hill when trying to meet performance goals within budget. It doesn’t help that it’s hard to find, train, and retain qualified agents. Leaders face markets with historically low unemployment and plenty of competition that offers attractive compensation (e.g., Amazon). Even when they get folks to sign on, training takes too long, and time to proficiency can be even longer… if the agents stay long enough to get there! As our latest survey shows, attrition is the #1 challenge contact centers face in 2020.Unfortunately, the training challenge will only intensify. The nature of the products and services that agents support has become increasingly complex. And, while centers can pat themselves on the back for their success in promoting self-service, mobile apps, websites, and IVR siphon off all the “easy” transitions, leaving agents with the tough stuff. Moreover, we have yet to see the impact of bots, which hold the promise to intercept much more of the contacts than IVRs ever did.So, with all these odds against you, how do you create the “super agents” you need to handle complexity in a world where even minimally qualified agents may be hard to find?To create super agents, you need super training – up-front and ongoing. But I’m not talking about using the same old delivery model with longer training periods or more enthusiastic instructors. You need a new approach based on what is possible today. Here are four principles to pursue your quest for super agents:ONE: Build critical skills right from the onset. You’ll still need to cover the “basics,” particularly if you hire folks who are new to this environment. Good onboarding training covers five foundational areas: