Archive for the ‘contact blend’ Category

Telefocus – finalists at Contact Centre Innovations Awards

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

Telefocus Limited, an outsourced call centre provider of high performance inbound and outbound campaigns, was a finalist at The Contact Centre Innovation Awards 2011. Telefocus utilises the rostrvm CallDirector ACD inbound call handling software and outbound dialler service from Rostrvm Solutions.

The Contact Centre Innovation Awards were held at the Hilton Metropole in Birmingham’s NEC, as part of the Customer Conference Planning 2011 conference, organised by the Professional Planning Forum.

Telefocus tailors its services to provide cost-effective marketing solutions. In the last two years alone, it has achieved over 1,000,000 sales of client products and services.

The Contact Centre Innovation Awards are a showcase for organisations that are leading the way in making their contact centre operations great places to work and to contact. This includes innovations that put the customer at the heart of call handling and back office operations.

During the Telefocus presentation at the Professional Planning Forum conference the benefits of using rostrvm software were highlighted including being able to use blending between inbound and outbound campaigns, quality improvements, more fulfilled staff, reduced inbound abandon rates, smaller average customer queue times, less system training time required and 50% more calls handled using the same resource as before.

Ken Reid of Rostrvm Solutions commented, “We are delighted that Telefocus was a finalist for this prestigious award and congratulate them on their achievements. Innovation often triumphs through being flexible and we are pleased that the Rostrvm software, together with Rostrvm’s pay-for-use service, has helped Telefocus achieve its goals and more.”

For further information please get in touch via our contact us page.

Contact centre excellence – imagine it, achieve it

Wednesday, December 8th, 2010

Customer contact services have experienced a significant change in what their customers expect and the way that they want to do things over the last few years. Whilst economic pressures mean contact centres are forced to ‘do more with less’, customers are more prepared to complain, negotiate and demand. Added to this is the growing familiarity with the internet and other social media – creating a need for investment in a much wider range of communications channels to remove the walls between business and customer.

Contact centres must not fail. Their performance has a massive impact on customer perception and the reputation of a company. They have to meet customer expectations or they risk being instantly complained about on every social network from blogs to tweets.

Managers of contact centres grapple with planning strategies and the financial implications and it’s not all down to the IT department anymore. They are looking for smart contact centre technology which will give them flexibility and functionality and they know staff must be trained to get the best out of the equipment they use, to better support and manage customer calls.

Contact centres not only need the technology to be able to interact with customers using their preferred method, but also the tools to analyse those interactions: capturing real-time customer information enables agents to resolve issues without repeat contact; they can call a customer by their preferred name; know when to upsell existing products or call a customer with promotional offers…

Yet getting all this technology can seem impossible when sat alongside the ‘doing more with less’ agenda – if considered within the restraints of traditional telephony communications.

Andy Willson of UK-owned and based contact centre software developer, Rostrvm Solutions, says, “The obstacles only get knocked down when you introduce flexibility of interfacing ability. Contact centres need products that work with whatever infrastructure they have but still provide them with the functionality they need to evolve. It is important to get a product that is flexible and insulates the core business from the rest of the IT infrastructure.”

The issue of wanting to maintain tight financial control can be addressed with the right technology. Software provides functionality and future-proofs the business because it doesn’t require major capital expenditure. Apart from robust technology, contact centres need suppliers who know what they are doing and who commit to understanding the business.

Peter Brown of Rostrvm Solutions says, “There is a lot at stake in contact centre communications, because it is so business critical. Contact centres are looking for that ‘diamond in the dust’ – robust technology that will keep up with – and surpass – their customers’ needs, be user-friendly and make them substantial profits rather than cost them a fortune. They need flexibility in the way they work with suppliers – they may find hosted environments help because it reduces costs, or they might need a choice of payment method like a subscription-based arrangement where you only pay when you use the product.”

Times have truly changed but the real walls seem to be our imaginations; the technology has already burst through the glass ceiling and is ready and waiting.

For further information please contact Rostrvm Solutions on 0800 6122 192 or visit www.rostrvm.com

Telefocus outsourced call centre case study

Saturday, September 25th, 2010

Telefocus, part of the Hertfordshire Ltd Group of companies, delivers call centre services to clients in sectors including consumer credit, financial services and the mail order market.

Telefocus reviewed its contact management technology in the context of continued business growth and recognising the need for technology that is cost-effective and flexible enough to support organic development and delivering new client services.

The Telefocus implementation combines multiple rostrvm modules. Read the full case study here.

Happy new year

Friday, January 1st, 2010

As we slide gently into a new decade we thoguth we would spend our first few posts of the year looking at what has happened in the past year and our view of the key issues in 2010.

Looking back…

2009 was an extraordinary year, against the backdrop of recession, the contact centre industry has had to face a stronger shift in customer expectations. They are demanding higher standards, a faster service and better value for money. Alongside this, contact centres are having to comply with tighter regulations relating to customer service, such as those dealing with abandoned, or silent, calls.

Customer expectations have risen and trying to meet them requires investment. Recession has meant that contact centres need to deliver more for less at a time when they are also having to deal with the impact of the growth of the internet and other electronic communications. 

In our next post we’ll give you our view of what 2010 holds for call centres, supporting business processes and technologies such as ACDs, Predictive Diallers, Task & Media Blending…