Raising the At-Home Service Standard (For Best Results, Add Cloud Technology)

July 22, 2011
VP of Product Management

Sanjay Mathur, VP of Product Management

In a recent article in 1to1 Magazine, “Setting the At-Home Service Standard,” author Mila D’Antonio cites the higher overall quality of home agents as the critical reason why companies today are delivering better customer experiences as they transition customer service to a home-based workforce. But the real question is: Will better talent alone (aka better skilled agents)lead to the best results?

Let’s face it, talent is just the beginning. It’s having fuel without an engine.  Sure, it’s why many companies are discovering the advantages of an at-home workforce.  In reality the engine behind at-home success is the combination of cloud-based technology with cloud-based talent that is producing even better performance—the cloud is the difference to achieving better results faster and more consistently.

Moving to cloud-based technology means rethinking how you’re working with talent, in addition to identifying and sourcing talent. (I’ll save identifying, sourcing, and profiling for another blog.) Simply implementing the same traditional, on-premise approaches and tools doesn’t work when you’re striving to get the best out of a cloud workforce. Cloud-based talent requires new tools and new ways of managingremote workers to inspire performancethat is superior to an on-premise environment.

Take collaboration, for example. Home agents are already adept with online chat and forums to stay connected and access information. But there are times when real-time voice and face-to-face interactions can have a huge impact on the ability to more effectively communicate complex issues or deliver critical feedback.  Just look at the recent launch of group video chat via Skype on Facebook or the new Google+ “Hangouts” feature, and you can see how similar technology could be implemented to take collaboration to a whole new level in the cloud-based work environment. We are at the forefront of a consumer-inspired, collaboration technologies boom that will change how we work. Smart cloud application developers are positioning themselves now to take full advantage of this opportunity to enable the workforce to perform better, faster, and more consistently.

And let’s not forget how cloud-based applications can transform how agents assess and improve their own individual performance. At-home workers require greater connectedness and more visibility into how they are performing against their peers, and this concept of “reputation” can lead to new and powerful motivation tools and techniques. The use of gamification feeds into human nature to compete on the basis of performance and then be rewarded for doing well and

reaching new heights. Those agents who compete well in the “games” that defines their work also provide a higher standard of service.  Trust me, I’ve seen the proof.

The shift to higher quality home agents is well under way. With this shift is a new standard of excellence for customer service. If you haven’t moved to the cloud yet, what’s going to help you keep up with the new standard of customer service excellence?


When Your Customers Really Need to Talk to Someone

June 17, 2011
Matt Fisher, General Manager and EVP of Agent Division, LiveOps

Matt Fisher, General Manager and EVP of Agent Division

Forrester recently reported that 56% of 697 US online insurance owners who filed a claim in the last 12 months used the phone to initiate the claim with their insurance providers. And 33% of those same 697 insurance owners used a phone to initiate a claim with their insurance agent.

Think about that. That’s more than 85% of people who had to file a First Notice Of Loss (FNOL) claim preferred to talk to a person! They grabbed the phone. Not for texting. Not for tweeting. For calling and filing because they wanted to talk to a live person.

Filing insurance claims after a personal loss is not an easy call to make. Adding to that pain is that the call should be made very quickly after the tragedy strikes. People deserve to talk to a contact center agent who is experienced, knowledgeable, calming, and empathetic. Read the rest of this entry »


Five questions to ask when choosing a cloud-based contact center

May 10, 2011
Jeremy King, EVP of Technology and Products

Jeremy King, EVP of Technology and Products

“Truly tested” is a phrase I don’t throw around lightly. But LiveOps’ decade of experience in managing a cloud-based workforce amounts to a virtual lifetime in our increasingly digital world, making LiveOps’ platform one of the only “truly tested” cloud-based contact centers in the industry.

Sifting through the moving parts of a contact center can be daunting but we’ve weathered enough storms at LiveOps to know what to look for.  In an industry where needs change quickly, experience matters.

Here are five key questions to ask when deciding to migrate to a cloud contact center provider. Read the rest of this entry »


Harvard Business Review points to LiveOps’ leadership role in today’s work ‘anywhere’ environment

May 5, 2011
VP of Product Management

Sanjay Mathur, VP of Product Management

In a recent Harvard Business Review story by Emily Nagle Green, called “Leading Anywhere,” Greene examined the changing nature of our digital world. In an “anywhere” world, where smart phones and Wi-Fi abound, location becomes irrelevant, and our digital connections keep us plugged in from virtually any location on the planet.

The nature of work, she argues, will inevitably change as a result – and leadership tactics will need to change as well. Read the rest of this entry »


Clouds: A Brief Reflection on the Inflection Point

March 31, 2011
Keith McFarlane

Keith McFarlane

I remember looking up at clouds when I was a child, trying to discern the shapes; seeing the many things clouds could become — Big Bird, a dinosaur, a slice of cake – had the power to make me smile, giggle, or just stare for what would seem like hours. And it truly was the becoming, that slow drift from one shape into another, that made the whole experience so magical: Read the rest of this entry »


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