Factor Affecting Customer Contact Center Performance in Bank Industry in Case of Commercial Bank of Ethiopia
Factor Affecting Customer Contact Center Performance in Bank Industry in Case of Commercial Bank of Ethiopia
Factor Affecting Customer Contact Center Performance in Bank Industry in Case of Commercial Bank of Ethiopia
A Research proposal for the Requirements of the Master’s Degree in Master of Business
Administration (MBA)
By
GeremewMelise Edo
(ID 0195/18)
MBA Program
May 2020
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Contents
1. Introduction.........................................................................................................................................1
1.1. Background of the study...................................................................................................................1
1.2 Statement of the Problem.............................................................................................................4
1.3 Purpose of the Study.....................................................................................................................6
1.4 Objective of the Study...................................................................................................................6
1.4.1 General Objective.......................................................................................................................6
1.4.2 Specific Objectives......................................................................................................................6
1.5. Research Questions..........................................................................................................................6
1.6 Significance of the Study....................................................................................................................7
1.7. Scope of the Study............................................................................................................................7
1.8 Organization of the study..................................................................................................................7
Chapter Two: Literature Review..................................................................................................................8
2. Introduction.............................................................................................................................................8
2.1 Definition of call/contact centre........................................................................................................8
2.2 The Function of Customer Contact Centres in Customer Satisfaction...............................................9
2.2.1 Customer Service Theory..........................................................................................................10
2.2.2 Competitive Advantage Theory....................................................................................................11
2.2.3 Customer Retention..................................................................................................................12
2.2.4 Performance Measurement for Customer Satisfaction................................................................12
2.3 Effects of Technology on Customer Contact Center Performance...................................................16
2.3.1 Absence of Individualized Services...........................................................................................16
2.3.2 Process Improvement...................................................................................................................17
2.3.3 Maximizing on Technological Advances to Improve CCC Performance........................................18
2.3.4 Applying Technology to Reduce Impact of Staff Turnover............................................................19
2.4.Personality and employee service performance..............................................................................20
2.4.1 The role of burnout in the call centre environment.....................................................................20
Chapter Three: Methodology....................................................................................................................22
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3. Research Design....................................................................................................................................22
3.2 Data Type and Source......................................................................................................................22
3.3 Population and Sample size.............................................................................................................22
3.3.1. Sample size..................................................................................................................................23
3.3.2. Sampling technique.....................................................................................................................23
3.3.3 Techniques of Data Analysis.........................................................................................................23
Time and Budget Schedule........................................................................................................................24
Cost budget...............................................................................................................................................25
Cost Budget...............................................................................................................................................25
Reference..................................................................................................................................................26
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1. Introduction
Customer Contact centers in banking are continuing to grow in complexity as they shift from
handling mainly transactional interactions, such as informational calls, to addressing more
complex of issues, including sales and purchase-related activities. Service delivery can be a
source of significant differentiation between call centers of various financial institutions (TARP,
2017). Each service interaction forms the basis of consumer’s perceptions of the overall quality
of an organization. How well a business is able to manage and implement the service delivery
process has a direct effect on retention of existing clients, and can have a significant impact on
acquiring new business.
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The businesses environment evolved over time, making it imperative for all business
organizations to continually reinvent themselves and adapt their products, services and business
processes in order to remain competitive in the dynamic environment (Edward Ingman, 2017).
Ultimately their strategies focused on their customers and their emerging changes and needs.
Central to this was the call center which aided in efficiently meeting customer needs while
minimizing costs (Cleveland 2013). The financial industry operates in the same business
environment and therefore the banks acclimatized by setting up in-house call centers to meet
basic fundamental organizational needs. These were to support retail customers’ needs which are
fairly basic like bank account enquiries, overall product and service enquiries and giving
feedback, either positive or negative. Managing funds transfer processes through various
channels like Mobile banking and internet banking, credit card operations and support that
includes balance inquiries, disputes, online monitoring and authorization. Bank Call centers also
support insurance processes which basically include claims processing and authorization of
transactions in hospitals or other service outlets (Helber, 2005).
The importance of call centers in the economy has grown dramatically since 1878, when the Bell
Telephone Company began using operators to connect calls. The National American Call Center
Summit (NACCS) estimates that the percentage of the U.S. working population currently
employed in call centers is around 3%9(Michael Pinedo&Sridhar Seshadri, 2014). According to
SeraphineMwikaliMuthoka(2017) the call center had a positive impact on service delivery in the
bank, and it had played a key role in customer retention. The call center had made a considerable
impact on the business growth of the bank, and the banks’ clients appreciated the services
offered by the call center
The strategic mission of CBE is committed for best realizing stake holders’ values through
enhanced financial intermediation globally and supporting national development priorities, by
deploying highly motivated, skilled and disciplined employees as well as state of the art
technology, strongly believe that winning public confidence is the best of the success.
Commercial bank of Ethiopia (CBE) initiated for operational excellence for satisfying customers
by introducing customer contact center. The Customer Contact center of CBE is one of the
operational organs which are responsible for managing inbound and outbound calls of internal
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and external customers of the bank. Inbound and outbound calls areperformed using internet
protocol contact center (IPCC). Inbound calls are calls that the contactcenter is receiving through
951, and 8879 telephone lines from customers of commercial bank ofEthiopia, employees, and
the society at large. Toll-free numbers 951 and 8879 have been usedfor external & internal
customers for providing information on the products the CBE offering,their account status, on
their letter of credit (LC), loan status, card status, ATM machines & POSterminals status, and
receiving complaints & suggestions. Outbound calls are initiated from thecontact center to
external or internal customers that have a business relationship with the bankthrough various
electronic media (via telephone, e-mails, SMS).
The customer contact center of CBE started at project level in 2014. The project implemented
asoperational head office organs with collaborated with Ethio telecom premises in December
2014.
The completed CCC operational services started in 2016 and its full structural alignment
underthe vice president (VP) of banking operation with its parent CBE at its building in October
2017.
The Customer contact center (CCC) is very new and still developing in the commercial bank
ofEthiopia and the banking industry in Ethiopia. Currently, this Contact Centre mainly is
providingfirst line support through phone besides its advisory services with the help of its major
unitesnamely: Internal Help Desk, External Customer advisory, and Quality assurance units.
Internal help desk receives calls of incident at the customer contact center from
internalcustomers from 15 districts and 1,600of branches, or head office organs on line 8879 for
technicalhelp and business application for providing all application support needs. The technical
teamassists one or more of the following tasks will be performed.
- Remote test at the time of connection failure
- Solving internal incidents remotely
- Supporting district system administrators & users
- Escalation of Ethio telecom cases
- Logging incidents to incident management system
- Following the incidents on the system until solved
- Updating of changes on the system and re-escalation of unsolved incidents.
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And the business application support team of internal help desk of CCC in CBE supports
ATMwith dispenser problem, ATM with card reader problem, ATM with out of service problem,
POSis not working, the POS problem is hardware problem, , card holder account is locked,T24
credit support, creation of new arrangements, registering collateral property
documentinformation on the system.
External Customer advisory receives calls of incidents at the customer contact center from
theinternal or external customers on line 951 managing various supports such as balance
inquires,
ATM card black list services, reset or unlock of personal identification number (PIN) of the CBE
Birr, Et-switch for other bank ATM service incidence, ATM machines & POS terminals status,
POS machine transaction status, voice authorization, preauthorization support, preauthorization
completion support,mobile and internet banking information, and receiving complaints &
suggestions. This isperformed using the technological systems of T24, B24, ACI Issuer, CBE
Birr Interface,BI, CRMsystems and APTRA Vision respectively. And receiving complaints and
suggestions forresolving by its advisory service and escalated for further investigating by senior
and executive. Therefore, the role of call centers in cbe cannot be undervalued
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According to the National Bank of Ethiopia report (September 2018) the banking industry
inEthiopia is classified into three levels. These levels are: the first level is the largest bank; the
second level is medium bank; and the third level is the small size banks depending upon the
bank’s assets base and their customer bases. The largest bank is only one that is the Commercial
Bank of Ethiopia (CBE). CBE is the largest state bank that has above 1,600 branches in all
around the countries. The second level is medium banks include six banks: Awash Bank, Dashen
Bank, United Bank, Abyssinia Bank, Nib Bank and Wegagen Bank. The third level is small
banks include ten banks: Oromiya International Bank, Oromiya Cooperative Bank, Buna Bank,
Enat Bank, Zemen Bank, Abay Bank, Addis International Bank, Berhan International Bank,
Debube Global Bank and Lion International Bank.
CBE operates under the same external environment and are affected by the same economic
situations. The banks continually reinvent themselves in order to have sustainable competitive
advantage. One of the strategies is by introducing customer contact centre to serve
variouspurposes. The CBE is pioneer to introduce customer contact centre in banking industry
and play catalytic role in bringing technology to the county and economic progress.
Robinson and Pearce (2011) pointed out that the significance of call centres in banks cannot be
undervalued. This is because most banks have in-house call centres for various purposes and
roles. The management assumes that by having a call centre with up to date technology and
continuous processes leads to efficiency and optimal results hence ultimately customer
satisfaction which leads to retention hence affecting an organizations bottom line (Aliyu,
Abdullateef, Sany&Rushami, 2011).
The primary objective of customer contact centre operations is customer care and achievement of
high levels of customer satisfaction. Customer contact centre’s increasingly playing a crucial role
in customer relationship management to give sustainable competitive advantage (Chanhoo,
Sunhee&Euehun, 2012). However, this has been contradicted by Rodney et al. (2009) in his
study where he states that various call centres have failed in achieving this key objective.
Customer’s sometime fear contacting customers contact centre’s because they feel that their
questions will not sufficiently be addressed.
CCC automation is an essential step for greater employee efficiency, optimal customer
satisfaction, and improved operational profitability (Muthoka, 2017). The technology is meant to
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improve the working environment for customer contact center advisors who need to navigate
through multiple systems while handling client queries (Laietal, 2012). However, this has
beencontradicted by various scholars like Aliyu et al. (2011) and Teirlinck and Spithoven,(2013)
whopointed out that technology increasingly turns the customer contact centre advisors into
machines and leads to frustrated customers. These studies did not focus on the banking industry
but the customer contact centre industry at large. Therefore, whether technology negatively or
positively influences the success of CCC in the CBE the aspect investigated in this study.There is
no evidence of a study conducted to investigate the factors affecting the success of customer
contact centers in the CBE. Therefore, this study aimed to address that gap in the Call Centers in
the CBE.
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How does agents’ skillinfluence performance of CCC in the CBE?
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Chapter Two: Literature Review
2. Introduction
This chapter revises research papers done by various scholars to be in contact with different
aspects of customer contact centres. Theoretical literature review delves general theories that
influence the performance of customer contact centre in an organization while empirical
literature review looks at studies done relating to the topic of research. Research gaps are
established from the literature review.
According to Frederick F. Reichheld and W. Earl Sasser, (2007) “A Call Centre is a location or a
place where customer telephone calls are answered by experienced and highly trained Customer
Care Agents (CCA) using a sophisticated computer based software application, which helps the
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CCA in answering the customer queries.”Another definition that is somewhat complex, yet a
complete one:-
“A Call Centre is a central contact point or a contact source for alltypes of customer interactions
like telephone contacts, email based contacts, IVRS (Interactive Voice based Response System),
etc, which aid a customer in receiving information regarding a product / service and even in
resolving his problems on the same(Jane Paul and Ursula Huws,2008). Jane Paul and Ursula
Huws in addition to the above definition from the customer point of view, they also defined call
centrein the same article from the organization point of view as the following:-
“A Call Centre or a Contact Centre is a part of any organization’s CRM (Customer Relationship
Management) Strategy, whereby the organization manages its customer interactions.”Customer
interactions can be categorized as any of the following activities:
1. Customer Queries
2. Customer Complaints
3. Customer Help Desks like Banking Accounts
4. Direct Sales via Telephone / E-Mails
5. Online customer transactions via websites
6. Cross Selling to customers who use the organization’s other products or services
The above definition shows that call centres are an integral part of any organization’s marketing
strategy. Therefore Call Centres are of three main formats via: Outbound Call Centres, Inbound
Voice Calls and Web Based / E-Mail based Call Centres
The call centre dictionary produced by Stolletz (2012) defines a call centre as a place in which
high volumes of calls are placed or received for sales, marketing, customer service,
telemarketing, or technical support purposes or for other specialized business activities.
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However, it seems that customer satisfaction is not traditionally associated with customer contact
centre interactions or, at least, academic attention has not been devoted to this topic. Although
customer contact centres have been designed as a customer relationship management tool (CRM)
in order to assist and support customers, it seems that the study of customer satisfaction in this
context has not received much academic attention. Thus, the aim of this study is to explore
performance in customer contact centre industry and its effect. This is an important topic because
nowadays, the success of a company may depend on their customer contact centre operations, as
it is the main communication place with the consumers (Aksin et al., 2007; Anton, 1997; Cheong
et al., 2008).
Companies believe that customer access after the sale adds value to the transaction. Customer
contact centres have emerged as a leading weapon on this customer satisfaction battle front;
CCCenables organizations to build, maintain and manage customer relationships by solving
problems and resolving complaints quickly, having information, answering questions and being
available usually 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days of the year. Clients now expect
and demand telephone free access to line service to the bank. Corporations that include CCC as a
focus for their customer satisfaction strategy appear to care more, differentiate themselves from
the competition, and thus are in a better competitive position than a business only available at a
store between usual operating hours (Harney& Jordan, 2008).
Process optimization can positively influence the bottom line directly; they sometimes have
diminutive impact on a client's experience and therefore may not create the desired positive
experience that customer service is meant to generate. Therefore, successful customer contact
centres need to continually reengage and re-evaluate to ascertain how customer centric their
processes are (Michel et al., 2013).
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The facts that the market place is governed by very competitive dynamics, organizations are
forced to treat their customers with respect and meet their ever changing needs. This then leads
to repeat business from delighted and satisfied customers hence impacting the organizations
bottom line positively (Antony, 2008).
According to Rodney et al. (2009) recommends some steps that enhance customer experience
hence create an excellent customer service experience. The customer should always be greeted
with a smile and a friendly but firm handshake. The issues raised should not be generalized but
addressed as if they are unique in nature to make the customer appreciated. The service provider
should use the customer’s name in order to make the customer feel important and that they are
not a statistic. When winding up the process, the service provider should ask the customer if all
their needs have been met and addressed satisfactorily. This experience will lead to repeat
business and eventually customer loyalty.
So, you can see how customer service flows from the most general needs toward the most
specific. Customer issues ensure the whole organization is focused on delivering excellent
customer service. Rodney et al. (2009) further stated that about 92% of United States (US)
customers form images of the company depending on the interactions with their customer
contact centre.
Organizations focused on efficiency measures which in the long run might be counterproductive
to achievement of customer satisfaction. CCC operations and ultimate goals to make profits may
create a high level of customer dissatisfaction. The study viewed the service industry as a whole
without mentioning the impact of customer contact centres in the banking industry hence some
critical areas were not addressed (Aksin 2006, Armony 2006 &Mehrotra, 2006). CCC can
influence on offering the best customer service experience since they are the first points of
contact. They create lasting impacts which then determines if a potential customer will choose
their bank over the competitors or if existing customers will remain with the bank.
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2.2.2 Competitive Advantage Theory14
Competitive Advantage theory suggests that everyone is better off if decisions are made based on
the competitive advantage at all levels – national, corporate, local, and individual. Simply stated,
it is nothing more than asking for optimal utilization of resources and the globalization of
manufacturing and services across the world as if we lived in a borderless world.
The pursuit of competitive advantage is arguably the central theme of the academic field of
strategic management (Furrer 2008).
A common paradigm that has emerged from the TQM movement is that the ultimate path to
retaining customers is to satisfy their needs. The theory holds that by identifying what customers
expect, and then meeting and exceeding these expectations, customers will be far less likely to
seek the services of competitors.
One of the important outcomes is that many dissatisfied clients do not air them complains
(Aksinet al., 2006). These customers are at a greater risk of looking for alternate service
providers. The fact that clients form their opinions about an organization based on interactions
with customer contact centres further highlighted the importance of customer contact centres in
any organization. This concept was supported by Antom and Gunderson (2004) who stated that
customers continually interact with competing organizations hence offering them a wide variety
to choose from. The organization that has the biggest positive and pleasant impact on the
customer will ultimately develop a long term relationship with him. This in turn affects the
organizations market share due to repeat business and referrals from the happy clients.
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should concentrate on four key areas: Telephone benchmarks; Efficiency benchmarks; Human
resource benchmarks and Service benchmarks.
Telephone bench marks has three metric areas. The first metric is service level this service level
is a percentage of calls received by the centre that are answered by a human agent within a
certain time frame. The global metric is 80% of calls answered in 20 seconds. This is the most
common benchmark to measure the level of service a contact centre provides its customers. The
second metric is average speed to answer although related to the service level, this benchmark
also takes into account all of the calls that are not answered within 20 seconds. This results in an
average overall. The global metric is 28 seconds. The third metric is abandoned rate is the
number of calls that are abandoned while the customer is waiting for a human agent. This value
is expressed as a percentage of all calls received. The global metric is 5% to 8%.
Efficiency benchmarks are in which it has about five metric areas. Call duration is the amount of
time spent speaking to customers on the telephone. Calls may be longer initially as agents are
still new to the product and systems. Encourage slightly longer first calls to reach resolution as
this is more efficient than repeat calls. The global metric is 4 minutes per call. The call wrap up
time is the time that an advisor takes after the call has finished to complete the case. This time
may include updating the system, completing forms, and any other activities associated with the
call. The global metric is 6 minutes. However, this metric is very industry specific.
Accuracy of call forecasting if there are fewer calls than forecast, then advisors will be under-
utilized. Call forecasts need to be constantly reassessed and measured. The global metric is a 5%
variance.
Adherence to schedule this benchmark measures whether agents are on time for their shifts,
whether they go to lunch and take breaks according to the schedule. The global metric is 95%.
Occupancy measures the average percent of time an individual agent or all agents are actively
occupied on a call. This includes talk time and wrap up time. Occupancy does not include ready
time. The global metric is between 60-80%.
Human resource benchmarks include absenteeism and attrition. Absenteeism tracks the average
number of advisor days lost per year through illness and unauthorized absences as a percentage
of contracted days. This is a key indicator of underlying motivation and stress issues, and affects
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productivity and potential revenue. It is important to measure advisor absenteeism separately
from that of the managers and team leaders as there is usually quite a difference. The global
metric is 5%. Attrition is a measure of staff turnover annually, expressed as a percentage. It is
calculated by taking the number of employee that have left the contact centre in a given year, for
whatever reason, as a percentage of the total number of staff. It is important to use actual head
count, rather than full time equivalents as the impact of attrition is the cost of re-recruitment and
re-training of replacements, which is a per head basis. The global metric is 15%.
Service benchmarks include customer satisfaction, first call resolution, and quality assurance.
Customer satisfaction is a critical benchmark. A three pronged approach is recommended that
combines quarterly customer surveys conducted by team leaders with independent third party
analysis, and quality assurance measurements. The global metric for customer satisfaction is
90%. First call resolution rate measures the percentage of all calls that are resolved on the first
attempt, without the advisor needing to refer the customer to a colleague, their manager, or
calling the customer back. This measure should improve as advisors become more confident with
the product and systems. The global metric is 70-75%. Quality assurance measures quality of
calls and is based on a set of criteria which the advisor must cover during the call. Including, but
not limited to: How the agent answers the call, how they navigate the caller to a resolution, how
they end the call.
The challenge of customer service organizations need to clearly identify which actions they can
take to maximize the customer experience without breaking their budget or wasting time. As a
solution, the J.D. Power Benchmarking Customer Satisfaction Research Program SM provides
comprehensive measurement of customer satisfaction and operational performance with an
organization’s phone, interactive voice response (IVR), and Web self-service channels, as
applicable.
Based on McAdam, Davies, Keogh and Finnegan (2009) reviewed customer contact
centreperformance measurement from a six sigma perspective. A six sigma is a set of techniques
used for improving processes developed by Motorola in 1986. The six sigma concept has a total
quality approach which has the customer at the centre of the process. It encompasses concept
development that is focused on consumer specifications, technological abilities, and economic
actualities. Design optimization is also considered which seeks to minimize variation impact
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hence have a standardized product. This drives organizations towards attaining measurable
monetary earnings from any Six Sigma project. This in turn leads to continuous leadership and
supports the six sigma hypotheses that customer contact centers are not only service centers but
are data centric. This is because they maintain data for a long time. The data can be used for
successful business improvement methods that have already been deployed in other business
sectors. Six sigma approaches then steers customer contact centresto apply the full range of six
sigma concepts and its adaption to addressing strategic and operational issues (Sun et al., 2006).
Customer contact centres by effectively using Six Sigma principles. Instead of focusing on
individual people, take a holistic approach to the entire centre. Both Six Sigma and Lean are
heavily invested in teamwork, after all, which is essential to maintaining good results for critical-
to-customer characteristics. These days, a lot of centres incorporate some aspects of Six Sigma,
using quality programs to evaluate their calls per customer calling patterns and align them to
customer feedback.
According to Rodney et al. (2009) the application of six sigma concepts guarantees improved
operation efficiency by eliminating waste. The concept mainly focuses on how customer contact
centres can deliver excellent customer service while reducing operational costs and achieving a
holistic improvement. These approaches were based on manufacturing industries; they did not
delve into the service industry, specifically the banking industry. This claim was supported
further by Antony (2008) who stated that service industries will only fully achieve the benefits of
six stigmas’ if they apply the key methodology in six stigmas’ which is Define, Measure,
Based on Brooks Mitchell (2009) the biggest problem with Six Sigma in a human customer
contact centre process is that the goal is practically impossible to achieve and nobody really
takes it seriously. This leads to customer contact centre management mistrust, apathy and even
subtle resistance. At best, Six Sigma programs in the customer contact centres are a waste of
time and money. And, at worst, Six Sigma will instigate problems and counterproductive results.
A rapid growth in customer contact centre industry globally has created a very competitive
environment for organizations, some concerns continually emerge (Alison, 2002).The need to
closely monitor and control the environment provided a stressful environment for the customer
contact centre advisors which may be counterproductive in the long run leading to high rates of
employee turnover.This means that the staff at customer contact centres cannot be customer
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focused hence leading to customer dissatisfaction and eventually customers terminate the
relationship with the organization.
This research project is turn around on the effect assessment of customer contact centre
performance in the CBE occurred by the customer contact centre management because of
emerging technologies and behavioural responses by both customers and advisors. It did not
enter through into the banking industry and the role that customer contact centres play in
influencing consumer preference in the banking industries.
Especially in the areas of customer contact centres, Mcphail (2002) says the customer contact
centres are typically locations of intense use of technology, highly monitored and highly
interconnected (networked). Kefi and Kalika (2005) say that technology, beginning in the 1980s,
started being considered strategic and an enabler in order to obtain competitive advantages.
Customer contact centre technologies include speech recognition software to allow computers to
handle first level of customer support, text mining and natural language processing to allow
better customer handling, agent training by automatic mining of best practices from past
interactions, support automation and many other technologies to improve advisor productivity
and customer satisfaction (Wallenburg et al., 2011). This has been supported by Lai et al. (2013)
by pointing out that telephone calls are easily monitored and the close monitoring of CCC staff is
widespread. However there has been criticism to CCC systems arguing that it leads to lack of
personalized services, complaints that departments of companies do not engage in
communication with one another and automated queuing systems that delay delivery of services.
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2.3.1 Absence of Individualized Services
According to Adrienne (2008) shows that customer contact centres have evolved over time to
emphasize on customer service and cost cutting. The use of technological tools used in the
management of calls associated with the interactive voice responders (IVR) as a first option to
interact with users, certainly represent a reduction in costs for CCCs. Adrienne (2008) further
points out that the search for cheap labor in developing countries led to geographical expansion
of the CCC industry for numerous big corporations the early 2000. The shift brought about a
unique set of challenges like poor services, accents and intonations leading to a decline in this
kind of ventures (Taylor, Baldry, Bain & Ellis, 2003). Positive outcome expected on consumers
and employees for improved service delivery, customer contact centre operations concentrated
on front-line staff empowerment.
This view was contradicting mainly because some researches often showed customer contact
centre advisors as mechanized people who strictly follow routine and are indifferent to
customers’ needs while other studies show that they are much empowered workers who enjoy
their interactions with customers (Curry & Penman, 2004). Application of emotional intelligence
is importance for customer contact centre employees. This aspect is however affected by the
triangle relationship between customers, customer contact centre employees and the management
of an organization. This means that organizations must understand that the success of their
customer contact centre is dependent on the support it is given by other departments and
functions (Lai et al., 2012).
Commercial Bank of Ethiopia that does not choose to outsource is also affected by this aspect of
absence of individualized services. This is mainly because outsourcing firms manage many
accounts and any firms’ activities at the same time hence will not give the highest concentration
to that as bank would primarily give its customers. These two ideas joined with the fact that the
customer contact centre technologies are presumed to be impersonal creates a unique set of
challenge. This worldwide idea is witnessed in the CBE as well as the Ethiopian banking
industry as like any other banks found anywhere (Lai et al., 2013).
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deliver a compelling customer experience. Add the economy into the equation and bank CCCs
are facing even tougher hurdles to satisfy their customers. When events occur that spike the
volume of inbound calls, the ability to effectively respond is reliant on the underlying processes
that support customer interactions. .
For managing a customer contact centre, we probably have to deal with a lot of unhappy
customers. Usually, the problems in a customer contact centre are process-related, and one-offs
are not that common. If we improve our customer contact centre, we could significantly improve
customer satisfaction and create loyal customers by strengthening the manner in which our
advisors operate and serve customers (Gautam, 2018).
According to Gautam (2018) possibly the best way to start with customer contact centre
improvement is by knowing our audience, and how our business helps satisfy their most
important needs. If we don’t know our audience well enough, our advisors won’t know the
best way to solve our customer’s problem.
Initially customer contact centers leaned towards labor-intensive manufacturing processes but
that has expanded in the recent past to include knowledge-intensive professional services such as
research and development, accounting and legal support (Handley et al., 2012).
Banks and organizations globally have been moving beyond cost motives alone to use customer
contact centres as a means of accessing local and skilled labour pools and reduce development
times in knowledge-intensive services (Teirlinck and Spithoven, 2013). The motivations have
evolved from a primary focus on cost reduction via lower vendor production costs to an
increasing emphasis on performance transformation in areas such as quality, functionality and
service (Malik &Blumenfeld, 2012).
According to Chris Lukasiak (2018) executives and sales leaders agree that efficient
and effective customer contact centres are critical to the acquisition, retention and satisfaction of
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customers; too few are exploring or implementing the latest technology to improve and optimize
customer contact centre operations. Recent research from well-known analyst firm Forrester
confirmed that voice is still the most widely used customer service channel, with 73% of
customers calling into customer contact centres to address concerns, rather than using other
communication methods.
Increased competition has led to increased network capacity, improved quality and lower costs
for both domestic and international traffic. Technology is cheaper, more reliable and increasingly
sophisticated. Customer contact centre managers are increasingly expected to deliver both low
operating costs and high service quality (Trkman, 2013). To meet these potentially conflicting
objectives, customer contact centre managers are challenged with deploying the right number of
staff members with the right skills to the right schedules in order to meet an uncertain, time
varying demand for service. Traditionally, meeting this challenge has required customer contact
centre managers to wrestle with classical operations management decisions about forecasting
traffic, acquiring capacity, deploying resources, and managing service delivery (Reed &Storrud,
2009).
Employee turnover is something that every business with workers experiences. Even
Commercial Bank of Ethiopia experience employee turnover. Employees come and go. When
employees leave, it’s costly for our business. It takes time and money to find and train a
replacement. That’s why it’s best for businesses to reduce their turnover as much as possible
(Kappel, 2017).
Based on Reed and Storrud (2009) high involvement practices like selective hiring and extensive
training, job designs that include individual discretion and allow for on-going learning and
incentives such as training, security, high pay levels, trust building performance measurement
systems, characterize a commitment strategy. These are various alternative production models
for customer contact centres, driven by different market segments or internal needs and are
enabled by advanced technology (Handley et al., 2013). Employees of a customer contact
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centrefeel the tension between control and commitment in part through performance
measurement systems. CCCs monitor both quantitative and qualitative aspects of calls answered
by an employee (Handley et al., 2013).
Quantitative and qualitative targets may further more be conflicting thus creating additional
pressure on employees. This conflict combined with the intensity of monitoring is believed to lie
at the root of customer contact centre employee burnout leading to negative effects like turnover,
absenteeism, and quality problems. Providing efficient systems that lighten employee work load
enables them to enhance their skills and service performance hence a positive effect on their
wellbeing. Efficient and effective systems lead to other characteristics of commitment strategies
which have also been shown to lead to positive performance outcomes. Better systems lead to
higher sales and quality and lower quit rates (Alison, 2014). Teams that are able to create a
collaborative environment are shown to have better knowledge sharing capabilities thus leading
to better service (Alison, 2014).
The five factor model (FFM) is frequently used to describethe structure of personality. The FFM
has been used indifferent countries, in various organizational settings and across rating sources
(Digman, 2012). The FFM consists of five dimensions of personality, namely, conscientiousness,
agreeableness, emotional stability, extraversion, and, openness to new experience. The five
dimensions in the FFM have been defined using various characteristics of individuals:
conscientiousness refers to being hardworking, responsible, careful and persevering;
agreeableness refers tobeing cooperative, trusting, flexible and caring; emotional stability refers
to being relaxed, stable, tolerant of stress and secure; extraversion refers to being outgoing,
energetic, talkative, sociable and enthusiastic; and openness to new experience refers to being
broadminded, imaginative, intellectual and curious (Mount et al., 1998).
Agreeableness has been shown to relate positively to performance (Mount et al., 2016; Skyrme et
al., 2005). Call centre work involves dealing with customers who can frequently be demanding.
The characteristics such as tolerance, good nature and flexibility that are associated with
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agreeable individuals (Judge et al., 1999) are particularlysuited to the demands of the job in a call
centre environment.
Emotional exhaustion refers to mental and emotional fatigue and a feeling of being drained of
energy. Depersonalization refers to feelings of apathy and negative attitudes toward others to
whom one provides service. Lack of accomplishment
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Chapter Three: Methodology
3. Research Design
A research design is frameworks that will be create to find answers to research questions. It is the
set of methods and procedures used in collecting and analysing, measures of the variables
specified in the research project problem of research. According to Cooper and Schindler (2014)
research design as the overall plan and investigation structure to acquire answers to research
questions and manage variances in the process. For this study descriptive research will be
uses.Descriptive design uses statics that measures the cause and effect relationships between
variables. This method has an advantage of being cheap and effective where sample sizes are
applicable. Mugenda and Mugenda (2003) observed that this survey method is best for collecting
original data as it gives a certain degree of accuracy.
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Commercial Bank of Ethiopia. This study focused on customer contact centre in The CBE whose
total population is 275 will take from CCC in CBE.
The techniques for quantitative data analysis are frequency distribution and percentages.
Frequency and percentage used to assess the Socio-Demographic data and issues related with
training practice which is employee involvement, training process, training delivery and
employee performance.
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Time and Budget Schedule
Table 1: The Schedule of Work Activities
1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4
Data collection
Data entry
First report
Presentation
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Cost budget
Cost Budget
needed
Stationary
- pen
duplication
expense
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