As a small business grows, a rising tide of customers is good news — until each and every one wants to talk to you. That kind of chore you can farm out to a call center, leaving your team to focus on new business. Call centers can help you:
Here are the first steps toward understanding and using call centers:
The best contacts and resources to help you get it done
First, try call center robots
If what you need is to get a grip on incoming appointments, say, for a medical practice or car repair shop, an automated, Internet-based system might be enough — and cheaper than call center outsourcing.
I recommend: Timetrade is inbound call center software that allows your customers to make an appointment online or via the telephone.
Go private label call center
Setting up call centers takes serious investment. Unless your business is built around this channel exclusively or primarily, its likely better to outsource the work until it grows to a significant portion of revenues.
I recommend: PSFweb,
Americall,
Quscient and
Xact are some of the many companies that provide outsourced call centers.
Try overseas call center outsourcing
Inbound call centers often work from foreign shores using English (or Spanish) speaking reps to handle your company's needs. Increasingly, too, even big companies like insurance providers and airlines hire in-country, native speakers through home-based systems that rely on part-timers, usually U.S. citizens looking for flexible work schedules.
I recommend: Teleplaza lists international sources for call center outsourcing to
multilingual providers.
LiveOps,
PAI,
Caleris and
Willow offer access to home-based operators in this fast-growing segment. Find a directory of international call centers at
Business.com.
Build in-house call center solutions
Besides phones, computers and space, a call center in your own office implies a significant investment in software to manage those contacts, often Web-based.
I recommend: Contactual,
UCN and
Angel offer Web-driven inbound call center software that integrates with customer-relationship management programs, including
NetSuite and
Salesforce.com. If you have the money to invest, top providers of high-end call center software include
Avaya,
Nortel and
Cisco. Find vendors of
call center software and
call center equipment in directories at Business.com.
Keep up with the law on call centers — privacy matters!
As companies have come to rely on telemarketing, politicians have responded in kind with do-not-call legislation. Running afoul of one angry customer can cost you thousands.
I recommend: The U.S. Federal Trade Commission maintains a page for businesses that explains the
do-not-call registry and its rules.