Flexible working delivers business benefits
in many different shapes and forms. For small, specialist
businesses, the benefits may be very specific. For major blue
chips, the benefits can be extensive.BT, one of the most
advanced companies in the UK in terms of its adoption of
flexible working, has put figures to many of these benefits. It
estimates that, since adopting flexible working in various parts
of its organisation, productivity has increased 31% and customer
satisfaction 8%.
It further claims that property costs have fallen by £180m,
absenteeism by 63%, fuel costs by £10m and that 99% of BT
employees now return following maternity leave. A happier
workforce means employee satisfaction has increased by 14% and
staff attrition amongst flexible workers is at a lowly 3-4% per
annum.
Providing seamless communications within flexible
organisations means getting the telephony right. So here are Ten
Top Tips for organisations looking to deliver effective and
appropriate telephony solutions for flexible workers:
- Give flexible workers a single contact number:
There’s nothing more frustrating than trying to contact
someone when you don’t know whether they’re in the office, at
home, in a meeting, or in the car. At the heart of good
communications in a flexible working environment is the single
number – ensuring calls always reach workers, wherever they
are
- Deliver calls to landlines whenever possible: An
estimated 30% of mobile calls are received by office workers
as they sit at their desks. It wastes money, and call quality
can be impaired in areas of poor mobile reception. If it’s
possible to deliver a call to a flexible worker on a
traditional landline, or across an IP connection, then that
should always be the preferred option
- Pick an appropriate call tariff: Should a ‘single
number’ carry an 0800 number, an 0844 number, an 0845 or a
regional number (such as an 0207) tariff? The answer often
depends on what role individuals perform within your
organisation. Premium Customer Care Advisors, for example,
will often be given an 0800 number; while an 0844 or 0845
tariff maybe more appropriate for a sales executive that
travels extensively.
Your ‘single number’ doesn’t need to turn into another
business expense. Using a service such as BT SmartNumbers on
the low cost 0844 tariff, for example, means free call
delivery to any UK landline - or delivery to most UK mobiles
for just 10p per minute
- Group flexible workers into functional teams: With
modern flexible working solutions, organisations can group
flexible workers into functional teams so that calls can be
answered by other team members if individuals are unavailable.
Virtual Contact Centres are a prime example. With Virtual
Contact Centres, calls can be intelligently routed to
appropriately-skilled customer service advisors, wherever they
are located, and receive a premier level of service
- Enable flexible workers to change settings on-the-fly:
Enable flexible workers to make changes to their call and
presence settings instantly, wherever they are, and using
whatever device they have to hand. The flexible worker
shouldn’t have to switch on a computer, or load a complicated
software program to change settings. Changing settings should
be as easy as using an automated telephone (i.e. IVR)
interface or using a device that supports a web interface –
and shouldn’t disrupt other daily business processes.
- Consider your business continuity options: If your
technology resources are tied into a single location, then if
that location fails (for example in the event of a terrorist
act or a power failure), then your technology services will
fail too.
By using ‘hosted’ technology services, this problem can be
overcome. Hosted telephony and flexible working services, are
delivered using technology resources embedded in the public
network – not within a customer’s own premises. Such services
present customers with the reassurance that services are
available 24/7, even in the event of a location failing.
- Centralise presence and directory entries: There’s
nothing more frustrating than having to switch between
databases and directories in order to identify the right
contact person and their contact details. Modern flexible
working solutions support centralised directories for
publishing presence information (i.e. who is available and
where), contact details etc. ensuring that individuals can be
contacted wherever they are – and if they’re unavailable, that
colleagues’ details are provided as a back-up
- Provide a single set of business rules across your
entire organisation: Just because your workforce is
geographically dispersed and not in one central location
doesn’t mean that the way you do business should change.
Flexible working telephony solutions should support a single
set of business rules across your entire organisation,
ensuring that customers phoning for customer service or
specialist services receive a consistent experience
- Build business agility into your business processes:
Business agility is all about finding better ways to connect
people, processes, applications and information within your
organisation. Giving employees the ability to access all their
phone and email messages from a single inbox (unified
messaging) is a good example.
Using technology more intelligently is absolutely key to
creating a modern, agile business – and telephony is still the
most important business communications tool of all. It is
therefore the key to business agility
- Aim to deliver consistent service, however callers
connect: Callers shouldn’t have to put up with
inconsistent telephony quality dependent on how they connect.
Look for solutions that are system agnostic and network
agnostic – and can therefore deliver the same high level of
functionality regardless of what type of phone your employees
use.
|
Getting the most from the old "dog and bone"
With all the focus on new technologies such as email, instant
messaging, videoconferencing and remote access, it's easy for
organisations to forget just how important the telephone is.
With flexible workers in remote locations using a mixture of
landlines and mobile phones, there's a lot of scope for
inefficiency and confusion. How can this be avoided, and how
can 21st century telephony be used to integrate flexible workers
and business processes?
Here James Gardiner, Director of Marketing Communications at
Teamphone,
provides his "Ten Top Telephony Tips" for the modern flexible
organisation, saying that "telephony is still the most important
business communications tool of all".
James can be contacted on +44 207 306 7450, or email
marketing@
btsmartnumbers.com
|
|