CRM - April 2008 - (Page 32) THE 2008 SERVICE leaders AWARDS OUTSOURCING Convergys EDS West REPUTATION FOR CUSTOMER SATISFACTION 1 2 3 4 5 REPUTATION FOR DEPTH OF SERVICES 1 2 3 4 5 REPUTATION FOR COMPANY DIRECTION 1 2 3 4 5 TOP 3 VERTICALS CONSUMER PRODUCTS/RETAIL, MANUFACTURING, FINANCIAL SERVICES MANUFACTURING, RETAIL, FINANCIAL SERVICES WIRELESS TELECOMMUNICATIONS, FINANCIAL SERVICES, IT THE MARKET Customer service outsourcing comes down to comfort: assurance that quality, security, and customer satisfaction won’t be sacrificed. Some firms are providing comfort through work-at-home agents (WAHAs), who tend to have more customer care experience, says Michael DeSalles, strategic analyst at Frost & Sullivan. WAHAs tend to be more comfortable, which tends to make customer interactions more satisfying. Moreover, with rising “green” awareness, the elimination of commuting costs and air pollution achieved by having a WAHA doing the job is a win-win. Going global is another way outsourcers are keeping ahead. Transatlantic vendors are starting to dominate, rather than players just focused on North America, says Suvradeep Bhattacharjee, principal analyst in the United Kingdom–based offices of analyst firm NelsonHall. A trend toward softwareas-a-service (SaaS) within customer service outsourcing has also emerged. The fundamental value proposition of SaaS is that it should be easy to deploy and maintain, says Jeff Kaplan, managing director of consultancy THINKstrategies. THE LEADERS Convergys has a solid reputation for customer satisfaction, scoring a 4.5, but has been slow to adapt to market changes. O N E S T O WAT C H Outsourcing Still, analysts say the company is in talks with financial services firms seeking to offshore jobs to maximize cost savings, and blue-chip clients such as Starbucks and Johnson & Johnson continue to express high satisfaction. Analysts also laud company efforts to explore opportunities in Spanish-speaking markets. EDS sustained its position as a leader by not resting on its laurels, transitioning from business process outsourcing to customer management services. EDS is also aggressively building industry-specific offerings, especially for large financial, retail, manufacturing, and high-tech firms. EDS has institutionalized key service offerings by process experts—providing, for example, a support agent specializing in a particular consumer electronic product. The result has been a stellar reputation for depth of services (a score of 4.5). THE WINNER Cultivating its customer contact solution with educated WAHAs and expanding its global reach, West has catapulted from a 2007 One to Watch to become the market winner in 2008. “West has been a very smart company,” Bhattacharjee says, recently announcing that its WAHA service had been changed from a contractor model to an employee model. The move was triggered by clients’ need for strong agent management, including continual coaching, feedback, and extensive quality monitoring. That precision focus on customer service, coupled with West’s advanced, agentless outbound-notification services, has propelled a reputation for depth of services. “Consumers can choose their touch point in terms of how they want to be contacted,” DeSalles says. “Notifications can come across as a text message [or] cellphone automated message, and can connect to a live agent.” West’s willingness to invest in technology and optimized customer care solutions has led to excellent customer service ratings, a differentiator in a competitive field, DeSalles says, and a strong outbound-calling service lets West market new services to potential customers on behalf of clients. Additionally, West attempts to personalize and integrate its service suite into clients’ operations, making it costly for them to leave. Though 32 percent of revenue comes from its 10 largest customers, those clients are loyal: They’ve been with the company, on average, for eight years. Moreover, the diversity of West’s client base across numerous industries should shield the company from market volatility. —David Jastrow service OUTSOURCING Sitel expanded its market reach via its merger with ClientLogic, which closed last February, and generated a 4.4 rating in company direction for its ability to improve upon clients’ customer satisfaction and reduce defections. The vendor landed the 2007 Frost & Sullivan Award for Global Excellence in Customer Care Outsourcing by virtue of its global reach, customer contact solutions portfolio, and growth initiatives, DeSalles notes. “The merger brought them tremendous depth in international markets, and their customer-retention levels are very good,” he says. With contact centers in 45 countries servicing more than 75 markets, Teleperformance continues to build local-market leadership in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Latin America through global acquisitions— one reason for its category-leading company direction score of 4.7. By emphasizing intelligent customer contact supported by custom analytics and complex mathematical models, Teleperformance has turned the corner when it comes to customer needs—and yet the company missed the leaderboard thanks to a hit in its rating for customer satisfaction (a 4.0 score), primarily due to a high-profile contract with the United States Postal Service that was wrestled away by rival Convergys. —D.J. 32 CUSTOMER RELATIONSHIP MANAGEMENT | APRIL 2008 www.destinationCRM.com http://www.destinationCRM.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of CRM - April 2008 CRM - April 2008 Contents Front Office Reality Check Customer Centricity The Tipping Point A Tenancy of One’s Own The Rebirth of Taxes destinationCRM Dashboard Labor Disputes Reach The Contract Center The Plight of the Wirelines Required Reading The 2008 Service Awards The 2008 Service Leader Awards Customer Self-Service Microsoft Genesys Oracle eGain Astute Solutions The 2008 Rising Stars The 2008 Service Elite Awar Re:Tooling Scouting Report Pint of View CRM - April 2008 CRM - April 2008 - CRM - April 2008 (Page Cover1) CRM - April 2008 - CRM - April 2008 (Page Cover2) CRM - April 2008 - Contents (Page 3) CRM - April 2008 - Contents (Page 4) CRM - April 2008 - Contents (Page 5) CRM - April 2008 - Contents (Page 6) CRM - April 2008 - Contents (Page 7) CRM - April 2008 - Front Office (Page 8) CRM - April 2008 - Front Office (Page 9) CRM - April 2008 - Reality Check (Page 10) CRM - April 2008 - Reality Check (Page 11) CRM - April 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 12) CRM - April 2008 - Customer Centricity (Page 13) CRM - April 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 14) CRM - April 2008 - The Tipping Point (Page 15) CRM - April 2008 - A Tenancy of One’s Own (Page 16) CRM - April 2008 - The Rebirth of Taxes (Page 17) CRM - April 2008 - destinationCRM Dashboard (Page 18) CRM - April 2008 - Labor Disputes Reach The Contract Center (Page 19) CRM - April 2008 - The Plight of the Wirelines (Page 20) CRM - April 2008 - Required Reading (Page 21) CRM - April 2008 - Required Reading (Page 22) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Service Awards (Page 23) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Service Leader Awards (Page 24) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Service Leader Awards (Page 25) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Service Leader Awards (Page 26) CRM - April 2008 - Customer Self-Service (Page C1) CRM - April 2008 - Customer Self-Service (Page C2) CRM - April 2008 - Microsoft (Page C3) CRM - April 2008 - Microsoft (Page C4) CRM - April 2008 - Microsoft (Page C5) CRM - April 2008 - Microsoft (Page C6) CRM - April 2008 - Genesys (Page C7) CRM - April 2008 - Genesys (Page C8) CRM - April 2008 - Genesys (Page C9) CRM - April 2008 - Oracle (Page C10) CRM - April 2008 - Oracle (Page C11) CRM - April 2008 - Oracle (Page C12) CRM - April 2008 - eGain (Page C13) CRM - April 2008 - Astute Solutions (Page C14) CRM - April 2008 - Astute Solutions (Page C15) CRM - April 2008 - Astute Solutions (Page C16) CRM - April 2008 - Astute Solutions (Page 27) CRM - April 2008 - Astute Solutions (Page 28) CRM - April 2008 - Astute Solutions (Page 29) CRM - April 2008 - Astute Solutions (Page 30) CRM - April 2008 - Astute Solutions (Page 31) CRM - April 2008 - Astute Solutions (Page 32) CRM - April 2008 - Astute Solutions (Page 33) CRM - April 2008 - Astute Solutions (Page 34) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Rising Stars (Page 35) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Rising Stars (Page 36) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Rising Stars (Page 37) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Rising Stars (Page 38) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Rising Stars (Page 39) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Rising Stars (Page 40) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Service Elite Awar (Page 41) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Service Elite Awar (Page 42) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Service Elite Awar (Page 43) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Service Elite Awar (Page 44) CRM - April 2008 - The 2008 Service Elite Awar (Page 45) CRM - April 2008 - Re:Tooling (Page 46) CRM - April 2008 - Re:Tooling (Page 47) CRM - April 2008 - Scouting Report (Page 48) CRM - April 2008 - Scouting Report (Page 49) CRM - April 2008 - Pint of View (Page 50) CRM - April 2008 - Pint of View (Page Cover3) CRM - April 2008 - Pint of View (Page Cover4)
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