Call Centre Glossaries
Please Select First Letter
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W-Z
Abandoned Call. Also
called a Lost Call. The caller hangs up before reaching an agent. This entry is sponsored by SER
Solutions.
Activity Codes. See Wrap-Up Codes.
Adherence To Schedule. A
general term that refers to how well agents adhere to their schedules.
Can include both a) how much time they were available to take calls during
their shifts, including the time spent handling calls and the time spent
waiting for calls to arrive (also called Availability), and b) when they
were available to take calls (also called Compliance or Adherence). See
Real-Time Adherence Software and Occupancy.
After-Call Work (ACW). All rights
reserved. Also called Wrap-up and Post Call Processing (PCP). Work that
is necessitated by and immediately follows an inbound transaction. Often
includes entering data, filling out forms and making outbound calls necessary
to complete the transaction. The agent is unavailable to receive another
inbound call while in this mode.
Agent. The person who handles incoming or outgoing calls. Also
referred to as customer service representative (CSR), telephone sales
or service representative (TSR), rep, associate, consultant, engineer,
operator, technician, account executive, team member, customer service
professional, staff member, attendant and specialist. Did we miss any?
Agents. See Average Number of Agents.
Agent Group. Also
called Split, Gate, Queue or Skills Group. A collection of agents that
share a common set of skills, such as being able to handle customer complaints.
Agent Out Call. An outbound call placed by an agent.
Agent Status. The mode an agent is in (Talk Time, After-Call
Work, Unavailable, etc.).
All Trunks Busy (ATB). When all trunks are busy in a specified
trunk group. Generally, reports indicate how many times all trunks were
busy, and how much total time all trunks were busy. What they don't reveal
is how many callers got busy signals when all trunks were busy.
Analog. Telephone transmission or switching that is not digital.
Signals are analogous to the original signal.
Announcement. A recorded verbal message played to callers.
Answer Supervision. The signal sent by the ACD or other device
to the local or long distance carrier to accept a call. That is when billing
for either the caller or the call center will begin, if long distance
charges apply.
Answered Call. When referring to an agent group, a call counted
as answered when it reaches an agent.
Application Based Routing and Reporting. The ACD capability
to route and track transactions by type of call, or application (e.g.,
sales, service, etc.), versus the traditional method of routing and tracking
by trunk group and agent group.
Architecture. The basic design of a system. Determines how
the components work together, system capacity, upgradeability, and the
ability to integrate with other systems.
Audiotex. A voice processing capability that enables callers
to automatically access pre-recorded announcements. See Voice
Processing.
Auto Available. An ACD
feature whereby the ACD is programmed to automatically put agents into
Available after they finish Talk Time and disconnect calls. If they need
to go into After-Call Work, they have to manually put themselves there.
See Auto Wrap-up.
Auto Greeting. Agent's pre-recorded greeting that plays automatically
when a call arrives.
Auto Wrap-up. An ACD feature
whereby the ACD is programmed to automatically put agents into After-Call
Work after they finish Talk Time and disconnect calls. When they have
completed any After-Call Work required, they put themselves back into
Available. See Auto Available.
Automated Attendant. A voice processing capability that automates
the attendant function. The system prompts callers to respond to choices
(e.g., press one for this, two for that?") and then coordinates with
the ACD to send callers to specific destinations. This function can reside
in an on-site system or in the network.
Automatic Call Distributor (ACD). The specialized telephone
system used in incoming call centers. It is a programmable device that
automatically answers calls, queues calls, distributes calls to agents,
plays delay announcements to callers and provides real-time and historical
reports on these activities. May be a stand-alone system, or ACD capability
built into a CO, network or PBX.
Automatic Call Sequencer (ACS). A simple system that is less
sophisticated than an ACD, but provides some ACD-like functionality.
Automatic Number Identification (ANI). A
telephone network feature that passes the number of the phone the caller
is using to the call center, real-time. ANI may arrive over the D channel
of an ISDN PRI circuit (out of band signaling), or before the first ring
on a single line (inband signaling). ANI is delivered from long distance
companies. Caller ID is the local phone company version of ANI, and is
delivered inband. ANI is a North American term, and Calling Line Identification
(CLI) is an alternative term used elsewhere.
Auxiliary Work State. An agent work state that is typically
not associated with handling telephone calls. When agents are in an auxiliary
mode, they will not receive inbound calls.
Availability. See Adherence to Schedule.
Available State. Agents who are signed on to the ACD and waiting
for calls to arrive.
Available Time. The total time that an agent or agent group
waited for calls to arrive, for a given time period.
Average Delay. See Average Speed of Answer.
Average Delay of Delayed
Calls. The average delay of calls that are delayed. It is the
total Delay for all calls divided by the number of calls that had to wait
in queue. See Average Speed of Answer.
Average Handle Time (AHT). The sum of Average Talk Time and
Average After-Call Work for a specified time period.
Average Holding Time on Trunks
(AHT). The average time inbound transactions occupy the trunks.
It is: (Talk Time + Delay Time)/Calls Received. AHT is also an acronym
for Average Handling Time, which has a different meaning.
Average Number of Agents. The
average number of agents logged into a group for a specified time period.
Average Speed of Answer (ASA). Also
called Average Delay. The average delay of all calls. It is total Delay
divided by total number of calls. See Average
Delay of Delayed Calls.
Average Talk Time (ATT). Normally expressed in seconds, this measures the time spent speaking with a customer. It does not include the time a customer spent on hold or any after call work (ACW) by the agent
Average Time to Abandonment. The average time that callers wait in queue before abandoning. The calculation considers only the calls that abandon.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top / Send
to a friend-----------------------------------------------
Base Staff. Also called
Seated Agents. The minimum number of agents required to achieve service
level and response time objectives for given period of time. Seated agent
calculations assume that agents will be in their seats for the entire
period of time. Therefore, schedules need to add in extra people to accommodate
breaks, absenteeism and other factors that will keep agents from the phones.
See Rostered Staff Factor.
Basic Rate Interface (BRI). One
of two basic levels of ISDN service. A BRI line provides two bearer channels
for voice and data and one channel for signaling (commonly expressed as
2B+D). See Primary Rate Interface (PRI) and Integrated
Services Digital Network.
Beep Tone. An audible notification
that a call has arrived (also called Zip Tone). Beep tone can also refer
to the audible notification that a call is being monitored.
Benchmark. Historically, a term referred to as a standardized
task to test the capabilities of devices against each other. In quality
terms, benchmarking is comparing products, services and processes with
those of other organizations, to identify new ideas and improvement opportunities.
Best in Class. A benchmarking term to identify organizations
that outperform all others in a specified category. This
entry is sponsored by SER
Solutions.
Blockage. Callers blocked from entering a queue. See Blocked
Call.
Blocked Call. A call that
cannot be connected immediately because A) no circuit is available at
the time the call arrives, or B) the ACD is programmed to block calls
from entering the queue when the queue backs up beyond a defined threshold.
Busy Hour. A telephone traffic engineering term, referring
to the hour of time in which a trunk group carries the most traffic during
the day. The average busy hour reflects the average over a period of days,
such as two weeks. Busy Hour has little use for incoming call centers,
which require more specific resource calculation methodologies.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top ---------------------------------------------
Call. Also called Transaction
and Customer Contact. A term referring to telephone calls, video calls,
Web calls and other types of contacts.
Call Blending. Combining traditionally separate inbound and
outbound agent groups into one group of agents responsible for handling
both inbound and outbound contacts. A system that is capable of call blending
automatically puts agents who are making outbound calls into the inbound
mode and vice versa, as necessitated by the incoming call load.
This entry is sponsored by SER
Solutions.
Call By Call Routing. The
process of routing each call to the optimum destination according to real-time
conditions. See Percent Allocation and Network Inter-flow.
Call Center. An umbrella term that generally refers to reservations
centers, help desks, information lines or customer service centers, regardless
of how they are organized or what types of transactions they handle. The
term is being challenged by many, because calls are just one type of transaction
and the word center doesn't accurately depict the many multi-site environments.
Call Control Variables. The set of criteria the ACD uses to
process calls. Examples include routing criteria, overflow parameters,
recorded announcements and timing thresholds.
Call Detail Recording. Data on each call, captured and stored
by the ACD. Can include trunk used, time in queue, call duration, agent
who handled the call, number dialed (for outgoing), and other information.
Call Forcing. An ACD feature that automatically delivers calls
to agents who are available and ready to take calls. They hear a notification
that the call has arrived (e.g. a beep tone), but do not have to press
a button to answer the call.
Call Load. Also referred to as Work Load. Call Load is the
product of (Average
Talk Time + Average After-Call Work) X Call Volume, for a given
period.
Caller ID. See Automatic Number Identification.
Caller-Entered Digits (CED). Digits callers enter using their
telephone keypads. The ACD, VRU, or network can prompt for CEDs.
Calling Line Identity (CLI). See Automatic Number
Identification.
Calls In Queue. A real-time report that refers to the number
of calls received by the ACD system but not yet connected to an agent.
Carrier. A company that provides telecommunications circuits.
Carriers include both local telephone companies and long distance providers.
Cause-and-Effect Diagram. A tool to assist in root cause identification,
developed by Dr. Kaoru Ishikawa.
CD-ROM. Compact Disc Read Only Memory. These discs hold as
much as 660+ megabytes of memory.
Central Office (CO). Can refer to either a telephone company
switching center or the type of telephone switch used in a telephone company
switching center. The local central office receives calls from within
the local area and either routes them locally or passes them to an inter-exchange
carrier (IXC). On the receiving end, the local central office receives
calls that originated in other areas, from the IXC.
Centum Call Seconds (CCS). 100 call seconds, a unit of telephone
traffic measurement. The first C is the Roman numeral for 100. 1 hour
= 1 Erlang = 60 minutes = 36 CCS.
Chief Information Officer (CIO). A typical title for the highest
ranking executive responsible for an organization's information systems.
Circuit. A transmission path between two points in a network.
Client/Server Architecture. All rights reserved. A network
of computers that share capabilities and devices.
Collateral Duties. Non-phone tasks (e.g., data entry) that
are flexible, and can be scheduled for periods when call load is slow.
See also IOT.
Common Causes. Causes
of variation that are inherent to a process over time. They cause the
rhythmic, common variations in the system of causes, and they affect every
outcome of the process and everyone working in the process. See Special
Causes.
Compliance. See Adherence to Schedule.
Computer Simulation. A computer technique to predict the outcome
of various events in the future, given many variables. When there are
many variables, simulation is often the only way to reasonably predict
the outcome.
Computer Telephony Integration (CTI). The software, hardware
and programming necessary to integrate computers and telephones so they
can work together seamlessly and intelligently.
Conditional Routing. The capability of the ACD to route calls
based on current conditions. It is based on "if-then" programming
statements. For example, "if the number of calls in agent group 1
exceeds 10 and there are at least 2 available agents in group two, then
route the calls to group two."
Continuous Improvement. The ongoing improvement of processes.
Control Chart. A control chart sifts out (identifies) two types
of variation in a process, common causes and special causes. See Common
Causes and Special Causes.
Controlled Busies. The capability of the ACD to generate busy
signals when the queue backs up beyond a programmable threshold.
Cost Center. An accounting
term that refers to a department or function in the organization that
does not generate profit. See Profit Center.
Cost of Delay. The money you pay to queue callers, assuming
you have toll-free service.
Cost Per Call. Total costs (fixed and variable) divided by
total calls for a given period of time.
Customer Contact. See Call.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top ----------------------------------------------
Database Call Handling. A
CTI application, whereby the ACD works in sync with the database computer
to process calls, based on information in the database. For example, a
caller inputs digits into a voice processing system, the database retrieves
information on that customer and then issues instructions to the ACD on
how to handle the call (e.g., where to route the call, what priority the
call should be given in queue, the announcements to play, etc.).
Day of Week Routing. A network service that routes calls to
alternate locations, based on the day of week. There are also options
for day of year and time of day routing.
DDI, Direct Dial Inward, A direct inbound number to the switch.
Delay Announcements. Recorded
announcements that encourage callers to wait for an agent to become available,
remind them to have their account number ready, and provide information
on access alternatives. In some systems, delay announcements are provided
through recorded announcement routes (RANs).
Delay. Also called Queue Time. The time a caller spends in
queue, waiting for an agent to become available. Average Delay is the
same thing as Average Speed of Answer. Also see Average Delay of Delayed Calls.
Delayed Call. A call which cannot be answered immediately and
is placed in queue.
Dialed Number (DN). The number that the caller dialed to initiate
the call.
Dialed Number Identification Service (DNIS). A string of digits
that the telephone network passes to the ACD, VRU or other devise, to
indicate which number the caller dialed. The ACD can then process and
report on that type of call according to user-defined criteria. One trunk
group can have many DNIS numbers.
Digital. The use of a binary code Ü 1s and 0s Ü to represent
information.
Direct Call Processing. See Talk Time.
Dual-Tone Multifrequency (DTMF). All
rights reserved. A signaling system that sends pairs of audio frequencies
to represent digits on a telephone keypad. It is often used interchangeably
with the term Touch-tone (an AT&T trademark).
Dynamic Answer. An ACD feature that automatically reconfigures
the number of rings before the system answers calls, based on real-time
queue information. Since costs don't begin until the ACD answers calls,
this feature can save callers or the call center money when long distance
charges apply.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top -----------------------------------------------
Electronic
Mail (e-mail) - Electronic text mail.
Envelope Strategy. A strategy whereby
enough agents are scheduled for the day or week to handle both the inbound
call load and other types of work. Priorities are based on the inbound
call load. When call load is heavy, all agents handle calls, but when
it is light, some agents are reassigned to work that is not as time-sensitive.
Erlang B. A formula developed
by A.K. Erlang, widely used to determine the number of trunks required
to handle a known calling load during a one hour period. The formula assumes
that if callers get busy signals, they go away forever, never to retry
(lost calls cleared). Since some callers retry, Erlang B can underestimate
trunks required. However, Erlang B is generally accurate in situations
with few busy signals.
Erlang C. Calculates predicted
waiting times (delay) based on three things: the number of servers (reps);
the number of people waiting to be served (callers); and the average amount
of time it takes to serve each person. It can also predict the resources
required to keep waiting times within targeted limits. Erlang C assumes
no lost calls or busy signals, so it has a tendency to overestimate staff
required.
Erlang, A.K. A Danish engineer who worked for the Copenhagen
Telephone Company in the early 1900s and developed Erlang B, Erlang C,
and other telephone traffic engineering formulas.
Erlang. One hour of telephone traffic in an hour of time. For
example, if circuits carry 120 minutes of traffic in an hour, that's two
Erlangs.
Error Rate. Either the number of defective transactions or
the number of defective steps in a transaction.
Escalation Plan. A plan that specifies actions to be taken
when the queue begins to build beyond acceptable levels.
Exchange Line. See Trunk.
Executive Summary. A brief summary of the key points of a more
detailed report or study.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top / Send
to a friend-----------------------------------------------
Facsimile (FAX). Technology that
scans a document, encodes it, transmits it over a telecommunications circuit,
and reproduces it in original form at the receiving end.
Fast Clear Down. A caller who hangs up immediately when they
hear a delay announcement.
Fax on Demand. A system that enables callers to request documents,
using their telephone keypads. The selected documents are delivered to
the fax numbers they specify.
Flowchart. A step by step diagram of a process.
Flushing Out the Queue. Changing system thresholds so that
calls waiting for an agent group are redirected to another group with
a shorter queue or available agents.
Full-Time Equivalent (FTE). All rights reserved. A term used
in scheduling and budgeting, whereby the number of scheduled hours is
divided by the hours in a full work week. The hours of several part time
agents may add up to one FTE.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top / Send
to a friend-----------------------------------------------
Gate. See Agent
Group.
Gateway. A server dedicated to providing access to a network.
Grade of Service. The probability that a call will not be connected
to a system because all trunks are busy. Grade of service is often expressed
as "p.01" meaning 1% of calls will be "blocked." Sometimes,
grade of service is used interchangeably with service level, but the two
terms have different meanings. See Service Level.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top ----------------------------------------------
Handled Calls. The number
of calls received and handled by agents or peripheral equipment. Handled
calls does not include calls that abandon or receive busy signals.
Handling Time. The time an agent spends in Talk Time and After-Call
Work, handling a transaction. Handling Time can also refer to the time
it takes for a machine to process a transaction. Help Desk. A
term that generally refers to a call center set up to handle queries about
product installation, usage or problems. The term is most often used in
the context of computer software and hardware support centers.
Historical Reports. Reports that track call center and agent
performance over a period of time. Historical reports are generated by
ACDs, third party ACD software packages, and peripherals such as VRUs
and Call Detail Recording Systems. The amount of history that a system
can store varies by system.
Holding Time. See Average Holding Time
on Trunks.
Home Agent. See Telecommuting
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top -----------------------------------------------
Imaging. A process whereby
documents are scanned into a system and stored electronically.
Immutable Law. A law of nature that is fundamental, and not
changeable (e.g., the law of gravity). In an inbound call center, the
fact that occupancy goes up when service level goes down, is an immutable
law.
Incoming Call Center Management. The art of having the right
number of skilled people and supporting resources in place at the right
times to handle an accurately forecasted workload, at service level and
with quality
Incremental Revenue (Value) Analysis. A methodology that estimates
the value (cost and revenue) of adding or subtracting an agent.
Index Factor. In forecasting, a proportion used as a multiplier
to adjust another number.
IOT. Indirect Operational Time.
Time allowed within the FTE forecast for meetings, training etc...
Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN). A
set of international standards for telephone transmission. ISDN provides
an end-to-end digital network, out-of-band signaling, and greater bandwidth
than older telephone services. The two standard levels of ISDN are Basic
Rate Interface (BRI) and Primary Rate Interface (PRI). See Basic
Rate Interface and Primary Rate Interface.
Inter Exchange Carrier (IXC). A long-distance telephone company.
Interactive Voice Response (IVR). See Voice
Response Unit.
Interflow. See Overflow.
Internal Help Desk. A group that supports other internal agent
groups, e.g. for complex or escalated calls.
Internal Response Time. The time it takes an agent group that
supports other internal groups (e.g., for complex or escalated tasks)
to respond to transactions that do not have to be handled when they arrive
(e.g., correspondence or e-mail). See Response
Time and Service Level.
Internet "Call Me" Transaction. A transaction that
allows a user to request a callback from the call center, while exploring
a Web page. Requires interconnection of the ACD system and the Internet
by means of an Internet Gateway.
Internet "Call Through" Transaction. The ability
for callers to click a button on a Web site and be directly connected
to an agent while viewing the site. Standards and technologies that provide
this capability are in development.
Internet Phone. Technology that enables users of the Internet
World Wide Web to place voice telephone calls through the Internet, thus
by-passing the long distance network.
Intraflow. See
overflow. An invisible queue. When callers do
not know how long the queue is or how fast it is moving. See Visible
Queue.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top ----------------------------------------------
Judgmental Forecasting. Goes
beyond purely statistical techniques and encompasses what people believe
is going to happen. It is in the realm of intuition, interdepartmental
committees, market research and executive opinion.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top ----------------------------------------------
No K Entries at Present
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top ----------------------------------------------
Law of Diminishing Returns. The
declining marginal improvements in service level that can be attributed
to each additional agent, as successive agents are added.
Link Line (UK). Non-Geographic
0800, 0845, 0870 number charged at various rates, normally directed to
a DDI Number
Load Balancing. Balancing traffic between two or more destinations.
Local Area Network (LAN). The connection
of multiple computers within a building, so that they can share information,
applications and peripherals. See Wide Area Network.
Local Exchange Carrier (LEC). Telephone companies responsible
for providing local connections and services.
Logged On. A state in which agents have signed on to a system
(made their presence known), but may or may not be ready to receive calls.
Long Call. For staffing calculations and traffic engineering
purposes, calls that approach or exceed thirty minutes.
Longest Available Agent. A
method of distributing calls to the agent who has been sitting idle the
longest. With a queue, Longest Available Agent becomes Next
Available Agent.
Longest Delay (Oldest Call). The longest time a caller has
waited in queue, before abandoning or reaching an agent.
Look Ahead Queuing. The ability for a system or network to
examine a secondary queue and evaluate the conditions, before overflowing
calls from the primary queue.
Look Back Queuing. The ability for a system or network to look
back to the primary queue after the call has been overflowed to a secondary
queue, and evaluate the conditions. If the congestion clears, the call
can be sent back to the initial queue.
Lost Call. See Abandoned Call.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top -----------------------------------------------
Mailsort UK Specific discount
bulk mail service provided by the Royal Mail. Mailsort3 guarantees delivery
within 10 working days, Mailsort2 within 3 working days, and Mailsort1
on a given day.
Middleware. Software that mediates between different types
of hardware and software on a network, so that they can function together.
Modem. A contraction of the terms Modulator/Demodulator. A
Modem converts analog signals to digital and vice versa.
Monitoring. Also called
Position Monitoring or Service Observing. The process of listening to
agents' telephone calls for the purpose of maintaining quality. Monitoring
can be: A) silent, where agents don't know when they are being monitored,
B) side by side, where the person monitoring sits next to the agent and
observes calls or C) record and review, where calls are recorded and then
later played back and assessed.
Multilingual Agents. Agents that are fluent in more than one
language.
Multimedia. Combining multiple forms of media in the communication
of information. (E.g., a traditional phone call is "mono media,"
and a video call is "multimedia.")
Murphy's Law. If anything can go wrong, it will. Not a good
perspective to live by, but worth considering when designing agent groups,
routing configurations and disaster recovery plans.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top ----------------------------------------------
Network Control Center. Also called
Traffic Control Center. In a networked call center environment, where
people and equipment monitor real-time conditions across sites, change
routing thresholds as necessary, and coordinate events that will impact
base staffing levels.
Network Inter-flow. All
rights reserved. A technology used in multi-site call center environments
to create a more efficient distribution of calls between sites. Through
integration of sites using network circuits (such as T1 circuits) and
ACD software, calls routed to one site may be queued simultaneously for
agent groups in remote sites. See Call by Call Routing
and Percent Allocation.
Next Available Agent. A
call distribution method that sends calls to the next agent who becomes
available. The method seeks to maintain an equal load across skill groups
or services. When there is no queue, Next Available Agent reverts to Longest
Available Agent.
Noise Canceling Headset. Headsets equipped with technology
that reduces background noise.
Non ACD In Calls. Inbound calls which are directed to an agent's
extension, rather than to a general group. These may be personal calls
or calls from customers who dial the agents' extension numbers.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top -----------------------------------------------
Occupancy. Also referred
to as agent utilization. The percentage of time agents handle calls versus
wait for calls to arrive. For a half-hour, the calculation is: (call volume
x average handling time in seconds) / (number of agents x 1800 seconds).
See Adherence to Schedule.
Off The Shelf. Hardware or software programs that are commercially
available and ready for use "as is."
Offered Calls. All of the attempts callers make to reach the
call center. There are three possibilities for offered calls: 1) they
can get busy signals, 2) they can be answered by the system, but hang
up before reaching a rep, 3) they can be answered by a rep. Offered call
reports in ACDs usually refer only to the calls that the system receives.
Off-Peak. All rights reserved. Periods of time other than the
call center's busiest periods. Also a term to describe periods of time
when long distance carriers provide lower rates.
Open Ticket. A customer contact (transaction) that has not
yet been completed or resolved (closed).
Outsourcing. Contracting some or all call center services to
an outside company.
Overflow. Calls that flow
from one group or site to another. More specifically, Intraflow happens
when calls flow between agent groups and Interflow is when calls flow
out of the ACD to another site.
Overlay. See Rostered Staff Factor.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top ----------------------------------------------
Pareto Chart. A bar chart
that arranges events in order of frequency. Named after 19th century economist
Vilfredo Pareto.
PBX/ACD. All rights reserved. A PBX that is equipped with ACD
functionality.
Peaked Call Arrival. A
surge of traffic beyond random variation. It is a spike within a short
period of time.
Percent Allocation. A
call routing strategy sometimes used in multi-site call center environments.
Calls received in the network are allocated across sites based on user-defined
percentages. See Call by Call Routing and Network Inter-flow.
Percent Utilization. See Occupancy.
Poisson. A formula sometimes
used for calculating trunks. Assumes that if callers get busy signals,
they keep trying until they successfully get through. Since some callers
won't keep retrying, Poisson can overestimate trunks required. See Erlang B and Retrial
Tables.
Pooling Principle. The Pooling Principle states: Any movement
in the direction of consolidation of resources will result in improved
traffic-carrying efficiency. Conversely, any movement away from consolidation
of resources will result in reduced traffic-carrying efficiency.
Position Monitoring. See Monitoring.
Post Call Processing. See After-Call Work.
Predictive Dialing. A system that automatically places outbound
calls and delivers answered calls to agents. When the dialer detects busy
signals, answering machines or ring no answer, it puts the number back
in queue. This entry is sponsored
by SER
Solutions.
Primary Rate Interface (PRI). One
of two levels of ISDN service. In North America, PRI typically provides
23 bearer channels for voice and data and one channel for signaling information
(commonly expressed as 23B+D). In Europe, PRI typically provides 30 bearer
lines (30B+D). See Basic Rate Interface and Integrated
Services Digital Network.
Private Automatic Branch Exchange (PABX). See Private
Branch Exchange.
Private Branch Exchange (PBX). A
telephone system located at a customer's site that handles incoming and
outgoing calls. ACD software can provide PBXs with ACD functionality.
Also called private automatic branch exchange (PABX).
Private Network. A network made up of circuits for the exclusive
use of an organization or group of affiliated organizations. Can be regional,
national or international in scope and are common in large organizations.
Process. A system of causes.
Profit Center. An
accounting term that refers to a department or function in the organization
that does not generate profit. See Cost Center.
Public Switched Network (PSN). The public telephone network
which provides the capability of interconnecting any home or office with
any other.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top -----------------------------------------------
Quantitative Forecasting. Using
statistical techniques to forecast future events. The major categories
of quantitative forecasting include Time Series and Explanatory approaches.
Time Series techniques use past trends to forecast future events. Explanatory
techniques attempt to reveal linkages between two or more variables. See
Judgmental Forecasting.
Queue. Holds callers until an agent becomes available. Queue
can also refer to a line or list of items in a system waiting to be processed
(e.g., e-mail messages).
Queue Display. See Readerboard.
Queue Time. See Delay.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top -----------------------------------------------
Random Call Arrival. The normal,
random variation in how incoming calls arrive. See Peaked
Call Arrival.
Readerboards. Also
called display boards or wall displays. A visual display, usually mounted
on the wall or ceiling, that provides real-time and historical information
on queue conditions, agent status and call center performance.
Real-Time Adherence Software. All
rights reserved. Software that tracks how closely agents conform to their
schedules. See Adherence to Schedule.
Real-Time Data. All
rights reserved. Information on current conditions. Some "real-time"
information is real-time in the strictest sense (e.g., calls in queue
and current longest wait). Some real-time reports require some history
(e.g. the last x calls or x minutes) in order to make a calculation (e.g.
service level and average speed of answer). See Screen
Refresh.
Real-Time Management. All rights reserved. Making adjustments
to staffing and thresholds in the systems and network, in response to
current queue conditions.
Received Calls. A call detected and seized by a trunk. Received
calls will either abandon or be answered by an agent.
Record and Review Monitoring. See Monitoring.
Recorded Announcement Route (RAN). See Delay
Announcement.
Re-engineering. A term popularized by management consultant
Michael Hammer, which refers to radically redesigning processes to improve
efficiency and service.
Response Time. The
time it takes the call center to respond to transactions that do not have
to be handled when they arrive (e.g., correspondence or e-mail). See Service Level.
Retrial Tables. Sometimes
used to calculate trunks and other system resources required. They assume
that some callers will make additional attempts to reach the call center
if they get busy signals. See Erlang B and Poisson.
Retrial. A caller who "retries" when they get a busy
signal.
Rostered Staff Factor (RSF). Alternatively
called an Overlay, Shrink Factor or Shrinkage. RSF is a numerical factor
that leads to the minimum staff needed on schedule over and above base
staff required to achieve your service level and response time objectives.
It is calculated after base staffing is determined and before schedules
are organized, and accounts for things like breaks, absenteeism and ongoing
training.
Round Robin Distribution. A method of distributing calls to
agents according to a predetermined list. See Next
Available Agent and Longest Waiting Agent.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top -----------------------------------------------
Scatter Diagram. A chart
that graphically depicts the relationship between two variables.
Schedule Compliance. See Adherence
to Schedule.
Scheduling Exception. When an agent is involved in an activity
outside of the normal, planned schedule.
Screen Monitoring. A system capability that enables a supervisor
or manager to remotely monitor the activity on agents' computer terminals.
Screen Pop. A CTI capability. Callers' records are automatically
retrieved (based on ANI or digits entered into the VRU) and delivered
to agents, along with the calls.
Screen Refresh. The
rate at which real-time information is updated on a display (e.g. every
5 to 15 seconds). Note, screen refresh does not correlate with the time-frame
used for real-time calculations. See Real-Time
Data.
Seated Agents. See Base Staff.
Service Bureau. A company that handles inbound or outbound
calls for another organization.
Service Level Agreement. Performance objectives reached by
consensus between the user and the provider of a service, or between an
outsourcer and an organization. A service level agreement specifies a
variety of performance standards that may or may not include "service
level." See Service Level.
Service Level. Also
called Telephone Service Factor, or TSF. The percentage of incoming calls
that are answered within a specified threshold: "X% of calls answered
in Y seconds." See Response Time.
Service Observing. See Monitoring.
Shrink Factor. See Rostered Staff Factor.
Silent Monitoring. See Monitoring.
Skill Group. See Agent Group.
Skill-Based Routing. All rights reserved. An ACD capability
that matches a caller's specific needs with an agent that has the skills
to handle that call, on a real-time basis.
Smooth Call Arrival. Calls that arrive evenly across a period
of time. Virtually non-existent in incoming environments.
Special Causes. Variation
in a process caused by special circumstances. See Common
Causes.
Speech Recognition. The capability of a voice processing system
to decipher spoken words and phrases.
Split. See Agent Group.
Supervisor Monitor. Computer monitors that enable supervisors
to monitor the call handling statistics of their supervisory groups or
teams.
Supervisor. The person who has front-line responsibility for
a group of agents. Typical ratios are one supervisor to every 10-15 agents.
However, help desks can have one supervisor for every 5 people, and some
reservations centers have one supervisor for every 30 or 40 agents. Generally,
supervisors are equipped with special telephones and computer terminals
that enable them to monitor agent activities.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top ----------------------------------------------
T1 Circuit. All rights reserved. A
high speed digital circuit used for voice, data or video, with a bandwidth
of 1.544 megabits per second. T1 circuits offer the equivalent of twenty-four
(24) analog voice trunks.
Talk Time. The time an
agent spends with a caller during a transaction. Includes everything from
"hello" to "goodbye."
Telecommuting. Using
telecommunications to work form home or other locations instead of at
the organization's premises.
Telephone Service Factor. See Service
Level.
Telephony Applications Programming Interface (TAPI). CTI protocol
developed by Microsoft and Intel.
Telephony Services Application Programming Interface (TSAPI). CTI
protocol developed by Novell and AT&T.
Threshold. The point at which an action, change or process
takes place.
Tie line. A private circuit that connects two ACDs or PBXs
across a wide area.
Toll-Free Service. All rights reserved. Enables callers to
reach a call center out of the local calling area without incurring charges.
800 and 888 service is toll-free. In some countries, there are also other
variations of toll-free service. For example, with 0345 or 0645 services
in the United Kingdom, callers are charged local rates and the call center
pays for the long distance charges. See also Link
Line
Touchtone. A trademark of AT&T. See Dual-Tone
Multifrequency.
Traffic Control Center. See Network Control
Center
Transaction. See Call.
Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP). All
rights reserved. The protocols that govern the exchange of sequential
data. TCP/IP was designed by the U.S. Department of Defense to link dissimilar
computers across many kinds of networks. It has since become a common
standard for commercial equipment and applications.
True Calls Per Hour. Actual calls an individual or group handled
divided by occupancy for that period of time.
Trunk. Also called a Line, Exchange
Line or Circuit. A telephone circuit linking two switching systems.
Trunk Group. A collection of trunks associated with a single
peripheral and usually used for a common purpose.
Trunk Load. The load that trunks carry. Includes both Delay
and Talk Time.
Trunks Idle. The number of trunks in a trunk group that are
non-busy.
Trunks in Service. The number of trunks in the trunk group
that are functional.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top ---------------------------------------------
Unavailable Work State. An
agent work state used to identify a mode not associated with handling
telephone calls.
Uniform Call Distributor (UCD). A simple system that distributes
calls to a group of agents and provides some reports. A UCD is not as
sophisticated as an ACD.
Universal Agent. Refers to either A) An agent who can handle
all types of incoming calls or B) An agent who can handle both inbound
and outbound calls.
----------------------------------------------- Return to Top ---------------------------------------------
Virtual Call Center. A distributed
call center that acts as a single site for call handling and reporting
purposes.
Visible Queue. When callers
know how long the queue that they just entered is, and how fast it is
moving (e.g., they hear a system announcement that relays the expected
wait time). See Invisible Queue.
Voice
over IP (VoIP). Refers to a host of methods used to encode
voice and transmit it over an IP network, such as an internal Ethernet
or over the Internet. This entry is sponsored
by SER
Solutions.
Voice Processing. A
blanket term that refers to any combination of voice processing technologies,
including Voice Mail, Automated Attendant, Audiotex, Voice Response Unit
(VRU) and Fax back.
Voice Response Unit (VRU). Also
called Interactive Voice Response Unit (IVR) or Audio Response Unit (ARU).
A VRU responds to caller entered digits or speech recognition in much
the same way that a conventional computer responds to keystrokes or clicks
of a mouse. When the VRU is integrated with database computers, callers
can interact with databases to check current information (e.g., account
balances) and complete transactions (e.g. make transfers between accounts).
See Voice Processing.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top -----------------------------------------------
Wide Area Network (WAN). The connection
of multiple computers across a wide area, normally using digital data
circuits.
Workforce Management (WFM) Software. Software systems that, depending
on available modules, forecast call load, calculate staff requirements,
organize schedules and track real-time performance of individuals and
groups.
Workload. Often used interchangeably with Call Load. Work load
can also refer to non-call activities.
World-Wide Web (WWW). All rights reserved. The capability that
enables users to access information on the internet in a graphical environment.
Wrap-Up Codes. All rights
reserved. Codes agents enter into the ACD to identify the types of calls
they are handling. The ACD can then generate reports on call types, by
handling time, time of day, etc.
Wrap-up. All rights reserved. See After-Call
Work.
Zip Tone. See Beep Tone.
----------------------------------------------- Return
to Top -----------------------------------------------
CallCentreVoice v1.62.04 - The trusted source for your Call Centre
(C) 2008 Darryl Beckford Ltd - Privacy Policy