The present invention relates generally to call centers, and more specifically to an automated technique for setting a wage for call center personnel.
Call centers are well known today to handle a variety of requests or problems. For example, some call centers in the form of “help desks” assist customers with problems with their computer hardware or software or other products. Other call centers assist customers with purchasing products or services or in billing matters or provide information about products or services. A large call center typically employs many personnel to assist the caller, to help fix a problem, answer the callers' questions or transact business. A large call center may employ personnel with different skills to match the service requested by the caller. There are many known techniques to route a call to a qualified call center personnel such as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,192,122 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,763,104. U.S. Pat. No. 5,509,055 determines a need for additional call center personnel based on the number of dropped calls, i.e. a call that is not answered fast enough to satisfy the customer where the caller hangs up before the call is answered. U.S. Pat. No. 6,188,673 determines staffing requirements for a call center based on predicted call volume. JP2003-150891A sets wages of call center personnel based on their skill level.
While the foregoing techniques improve call center operation, they do not set the wage for call center personnel in an optimum manner.
Accordingly, an object of the present invention is to optimize the wages for call center personnel.
The present invention resides in a system, method and program product for dynamically setting a wage offered to a multiplicity of inactive call center personnel. First program instructions automatically estimate a wait time for calls to a call center. The calls are handled by a plurality of active call center personnel. Second program instructions automatically determine and set a wage, based in part on the estimated wait time, offered to inactive call center personnel to induce them to become active call center personnel to handle calls. Third program instructions, responsive to a request by an inactive call center person to become active at said wage, automatically designate the requesting inactive call center person as active at the wage and assign a call to the requesting inactive call center personnel that was designated as active.
According to a feature of the present invention, the second program instructions are responsive to the estimated wait time being greater than an upper threshold to determine and set the wage offered to inactive call center personnel to be higher than a wage offered to inactive call center personnel during an immediately prior interval.
According to another feature of the present invention, the second program instructions are responsive to the estimated wait time being less than a lower threshold to determine and set the wage offered to inactive call center personnel to be lower than a wage offered to inactive call center personnel during an immediately prior interval.
The present invention also resides in a system, method and computer program product for dynamically setting a wage offered to a multiplicity of active-status call center personnel. First program instructions automatically estimate a wait time for calls to a call center. The calls are handled by a plurality of active-status call center personnel. Second program instructions automatically determine and set a renewal wage, based in part on the estimated wait time, offered to the active-status call center personnel to renew their active status and thereby continue to handle calls after expiration of respective lock-in periods for the active-status call center personnel in which wages paid to the active call center personnel are fixed. Third program instructions are responsive to expiration of the respective lock-in periods and explicit or implicit indications by the respective active-status call center personnel to renew their active-status at the expiration of respective lock-in periods, to automatically set a wage for the renewing active-status call center personnel at the renewal wage and assign calls to the renewing active-status call center personnel.
The present invention will now be described in detail with reference to the figures.
In accordance with the present invention, computer 20 includes a wage-setting server program 48 to dynamically determine and set the wage for call center personnel based on demand for new call center personnel, i.e. the need for additional or fewer call center personnel to handle the current rate of calls. There is an existing pool of enrolled and active call center personnel 80a-l (with telephones 88a-l and workstations 60a-l), as well as an existing pool of enrolled but inactive call center personnel 80m-z (with telephones 88m-z and workstations 60m-z). All of enrolled personnel 80a-z have passed hiring criteria by the owner of the call center and classified by skill type. In one embodiment of the present invention, all of the enrolled call center personnel are entitled to join the pool at any time or exit the pool at any time (after they complete their current call) based on the applicable wage. (In another embodiment of the present invention, if the current call volume is low and can readily be handled by the existing pool of active call center personnel with a minimum wait time, then wage-setting program 48 prevents any enrolled inactive call center personnel from joining the pool.) If the rate of calls substantially exceeds the rate of calls at which the current number and type of active call center personnel can handle in a timely manner, then program 48 will increase the wage (such as an hourly wage or per-call fee) to attract additional enrolled but currently inactive call center personnel of appropriate skill type to join the pool of existing active call center personnel. Conversely, if the rate of calls is substantially less than the rate of calls at which the current number and type of call center personnel can handle in a timely manner, then program 48 will decrease the wage (such as the hourly wage or per-call fee) to induce some of the existing active call center personnel of the appropriate skill type to exit the pool and become inactive and dissuade other, inactive call center personnel from joining the pool.
Workstations 60a-z of the enrolled call center personnel 80a-z, respectively, include known CPUs 61a-z, operating systems 62a-z, RAM 63a-z and ROM 64a-z on common busses 65a-z, and storage 66a-z, respectively. Workstations 60a-z of the enrolled call center personnel 80a-z, respectively, also include respective wage-reviewing client programs 75a-z, according to the present invention. Programs 75a-z initiate display on the respective workstations 60a-z of respective web pages or other screens listing the current wage offered to enrolled, inactive call center personnel and a “lock-in” time, i.e. a time that an enrolled, inactive call center personnel will be paid the current wage if he or she joins the pool of active call center personnel. For example, the “lock-in” time can be one hour. With this information and using the web page or other screen, an enrolled but inactive call center personnel can join the pool and become active to receive and handle calls. Also, when the lock-in period ends for an enrolled, active call center personnel, he or she will see the current wage being offered to him or her as a renewal. In this embodiment of the present invention, at the end of the lock-in period for each active call center person, program 48 will reset the wage paid to such enrolled, active call center personnel to the wage offered to enrolled, inactive call center personnel (assuming the active employee remains active). Also, programs 75a-z will display a running tally of wages earned by the respective call center personnel during the day, an itemization of the hourly wages paid to the respective call center personnel during the day and a graph of the wages available to enrolled but inactive call center personnel as a function of time during the course of the day. The enrolled call-center personnel can also configure their respective programs 75a-z to provide an audible notification, e-mail, telephone call or page if the current wage offered to enrolled, inactive call center personnel equals or exceeds an amount configured by the respective enrolled inactive call-center personnel.
As each call arrives at call center server 20, call routing program 28 places the call on a queue 31 of waiting calls, determines the type of skill required to handle the call based on telephone prompts or computer queries to the caller, and then routes the call to a qualified, enrolled, active call center personnel who is available based on a known call routing algorithm. For example, the oldest call on the queue for each skill type is routed to the longest waiting call center personnel with the appropriate skill to handle the call.
The following is an example of the function and operation of program 48 for calls requiring one skill type. (Similar steps will occur for calls requiring other skill types.) At initial startup of program 48 at 9:00 AM, program 48 sets the current wage to the initial wage of $10/hour for the skill type and thirty enrolled call center personnel having this skill type opt to become active. Their wage is set to $10/hour for a lock-in period of one hour. The wage increment interval is one minute. From 9:01 AM to 9:09 AM, the estimated call wait time is two minutes which is below the upper threshold of four minutes and above the lower threshold of 10 seconds, so program 48 does not adjust the current wage offered to enrolled, inactive call center personnel. At 9:10, the estimated call wait time is six minutes which is above the upper threshold of four minutes. In response, program 48 increases the current wage offered to enrolled, inactive call center personnel of the requisite skill by the configured wage increment of $0.25/hour to $10.25/hour. In response, three additional enrolled, inactive call center personnel having the requisite skill opt to join the pool and become active, and program 48 sets their wage at $10.25/hour for the next hour. The wage of the first thirty call center personnel remains at $10.00/hour. From 9:11 AM to 9:19 AM the estimated wait time is three minutes which is below the upper threshold of four minutes and above the lower threshold of 10 seconds, so program 48 does not adjust the current wage offered to enrolled, inactive call center personnel. At 9:20 AM, the estimated call wait time is five minutes which is above the upper threshold, so program 48 increases the current wage offered to enrolled, inactive call center personnel by the configured wage increment of $0.25/hour. Thus, program 48 increases the current wage offered to enrolled, inactive call center personnel of the appropriate skill type to $10.50/hour. In response, two additional enrolled but inactive call center personnel having the requisite skill opt to join the pool, and their wage is set at $10.50/hour for the next hour. The wage of the first thirty call center personnel remains at $10.00/hour, and the wage for the next three call center personnel which joined the pool at time 9:10 AM remains at $10.25/hour. From 9:21 AM to 9:54 AM, the estimated wait time is two minutes which is below the upper threshold of four minutes and above the lower threshold of 10 seconds, so program 48 does not adjust the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel. At 9:55 AM the estimated wait time is five seconds which is below the lower threshold of ten seconds, so program 48 decreases the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel by the configured wage decrement of $0.25/hour. Thus, program 48 decreases the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel to $10.25/hour. In response, two enrolled but inactive call center personnel opt to become active and one enrolled active call-taker, who became active at 9:00 AM, decides to end his or her current session and signs off of the system, thereby becoming inactive. This call-taker's wage for this session is calculated as the sum of the hours logged into the system at the respective lock-in rates. Since this call-taker logged in at 9:00 AM at an offered wage of $10.00/hour, his or her wage is calculated as 0.92 hours×$10.00=$9.20. Program 48 designates the two, newly enrolled call-takers as active at $10.25/hour. At 9:56 AM the estimated wait time is four seconds which is below the lower threshold of ten seconds, so program 48 decreases the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel by the configured wage decrement of $0.25/hour. Thus, program 48 decreases the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel to $10.00/hour. In response, two more enrolled but inactive call center personnel opt to become active. Program 48 designates them as active at $10.00/hour. At 9:57 AM the estimated wait time is two seconds which is below the lower threshold of ten seconds, so program 48 decreases the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel by the configured wage decrement of $0.25/hour. Thus, program 48 decreases the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel to $9.75/hour. In response, one enrolled but inactive call center personnel opts to become active. In one embodiment of the present invention, program 48 designates him or her as active at $9.75/hour. At 9:58 AM the estimated wait time is two seconds which is below the lower threshold of ten seconds, so program 48 decreases the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel by the configured wage decrement of $0.25/hour. Thus, program 48 decreases the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel to $9.50/hour. In response, zero enrolled but inactive call center personnel opt to become active at this time. At 9:59 AM the estimated wait time is two seconds which is below the lower threshold of ten seconds, so program 48 decreases the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel by the configured wage decrement of $0.25/hour. Thus, program 48 decreases the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel to $9.25/hour. In response, zero enrolled but inactive call center personnel opt to become active at this time. At 10:00 AM the estimated wait time is two seconds which is below the lower threshold of ten seconds, so program 48 decreases the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel by the configured wage decrement of $0.25/hour. Thus, program 48 decreases the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel to $9.00/hour. In response, zero enrolled but inactive call center personnel opt to become active at this time. Also, at this time, program 48 adjusts the wage paid to enrolled, active call center personnel who became active at 9:00 AM and whose lock-in period has just ended. In response, eight of such enrolled, active call center personnel opt to become inactive. At 10:01 AM, the estimated wait time is twenty seconds which is below the upper threshold of four minutes and above the lower threshold of 10 seconds, so program 48 does not adjust the current wage offered to enrolled but inactive call center personnel. The foregoing corrective process continues as needed to keep the estimated wait time between the upper and lower thresholds.
Wage-setting program 48 can be loaded into call center server 20 from a computer readable media 70 such as magnetic tape or disk, optical media, DVD, semiconductor memory, memory stick, etc. or downloaded from the Internet via TCP/IP adapter card 72.
Call routing program 28 can be loaded into call center server 20 from computer readable media 70 such as magnetic tape or disk, optical media, DVD, semiconductor memory, memory stick, etc. or downloaded from the Internet via TCP/IP adapter card 72.
Wage-reviewing client programs 75a-z can be loaded into respective client workstations 60a-z from respective computer readable media 90a-z such as magnetic tape or disk, optical media, DVD, semiconductor memory, memory stick, etc. or downloaded from the Internet via respective TCP/IP adapter cards 92a-z.
Based on the foregoing, a computer system, method and program product for dynamically setting a wage for call center personnel have been disclosed. However, numerous modifications and substitutions can be made without deviating from the scope of the present invention. For example, program 48 can be modified to automatically adjust the wage of active call center personnel to the higher of the wage in effect at the start of each of their lock-in periods and the current wage offered to inactive call center personnel. Also, program 48 can be modified to automatically adjust the wage of active call center personnel to the lower of the wage in effect at the start of each of their lock-in periods and the current wage offered to inactive call center personnel. Also, program 48 can be modified to automatically adjust the wage of active call center personnel to the wage offered to inactive call center personnel during each