BPO Industry: the ride from cost to innovation;
What's return on innovation?
Evolution from cost to quality has been the key characteristic of
the BPO industry in the early 2000s. This is the phase when BPO players
started to adopt quality standards like COPC 2000 and ISO 9001:2000. A
key stipulation of this phase we the ability to meet stringent SLAs,
whereby each transaction is tracked and measured to ensure that SLAs are
being achieved and breakdowns are being projected before they occur.
Entrenched BPO hubs like India, Philippines, Canada, Ireland,
China, etc., increased their market share dramatically during the
90s' and early 2000s', however the mid 2000s' manifested
another phase of the BPO industry. As the foreign offshore market was
poised to expand into new geographies across the globe that included
regions like North Africa and Eastern Europe, new value propositions
started to come on board. The key drivers behind the industry's
expansion in this stage, in addition to lower costs and quality metrics,
are the multilingual skills, and geographical and cultural affinities.
These factors have gained their buzz and significance allowing new
players like Egypt to emerge and grab a piece of the BPO pie, where all
the necessary factors for a successful BPO venture have been check
marked against, in this rising BPO region.
Yet, the pace of development is still escalating in the BPO
industry whereby customers soar into new levels of requirements. Vendors
that deploy a mirror reflection of the client's resources and
processes are deemed to be not adding enough value to clients. This
marks the need for innovation and sets the stage for a new phase of BPO
development. A 2007 study by Frost & Sullivan, identifies innovation
as one of the key factors to consider in due diligence when selecting an
offshore outsourcing provider. A 2005 IDC survey among BPO clients in
the U.S. reinforces also the importance of innovation, reporting that 35
percent of the respondents look for BPO providers to drive innovation.
Innovative vendors must evaluate their client's existing
business models and enhance them to meet the desired outcomes of
improving client stratification and long term profitability. According
to Xceed, one of the fast growing global providers of quality,
multilingual Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) Services, innovation can
be achieved through deploying technology/technical solutions to any of
the following areas:
* Business Processes
* Type of Services
* Service Delivery
Xceed has successfully enhanced the contact center services it
provides to one of its key Telecommunication Clients with a customer
base of more than 11 million, through deploying a GIS system. That was
done through mapping the different cities, towns and neighborhoods
measuring the client-sold product against the socio-economic data and
features of each region. That allowed more targeted sales efforts toward
the regions where the socio-economic data are similar but with less
recorded sales of the same product. An innovative approach of that kind
achieved great sales figures to Xceed's client, and righteously
deserved to be called a genuine added value.
Another successful innovative solution that Xceed offered to one of
its Fortune 500 clients is the deployment of an automated readout during
call handling process, resulting in a 15 percent reduction in
operational costs to the client. It is a fact that it did also harm the
revenues of Xceed in the short term, but that was fully compensated by
more business from the same client, and that is the secret behind the
ROI, which what we call at Xceed the return on Innovation.
RELATED ARTICLE: To Be innovative you Need Quality People
By Brendan B. Read, Senior Contributing Editor, Customer
Interaction Solutions
To devise and deliver innovative and value-added services, which
clients increasingly demand requires BPO firms--especially those located
offshore--to focus on recruiting, training, motivating, and retaining
the best people.
There have been many well-publicized reports of companies bringing
their programs backhome because their customers experienced poor service
from offshore agents. With customer service becoming the only key
differentiator between clients, BPO companies must get it right if they
are to retain these clients.
Xceed has long understood the need for quality staff. The location
of this BPO firm, Cairo, Egypt, is one of the top educational centers in
the Middle East, giving it access to a large pool of university
graduates.
Xceed has capitalized on this quality resource by putting into
place recruitment, training, performance management, and a staff
motivation strategies that have made it an employer of choice. As a
result it witnessed an impressive record of employees' growth: 25
percents of its agents are promoted annually and five percent are
promoted to managerial positions. Among the successful tactics it has
deployed is establishing a dedicated staff growth and development unit.
All Xceed agents complete an extensive coretraining program. It
combines exposure to Xceed's philosophy and values and experience
with techniques on how to engage and empathize with clients'
customers.
Xceed's program has not gone unnoticed. It recently won the
Best Career and Skill Paths Award from INSIGHTS, which provides contact
center training services in the Middle East.
"In no other service organization as the contact center is the
relationship between employee satisfaction and efficiency so salient,
therefore it is of significant value to foster our strategies around
developing the skills and the commitment of our employees," points
out Xceed Senior Vice President Ahmed Refky.
Innovative Solutions from the BPO Experts
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