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Analysis of the Impact of Team-Based Organizations in Call Center Management
Author(s) -
Oualid Jouini,
Yves Dallery,
Rabie Nait-Abdallah
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
management science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.954
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1526-5501
pISSN - 0025-1909
DOI - 10.1287/mnsc.1070.0822
Subject(s) - pooling , computer science , portfolio , quality (philosophy) , queueing theory , project portfolio management , simple (philosophy) , operations research , business , knowledge management , artificial intelligence , economics , project management , management , computer network , philosophy , finance , epistemology , engineering
We investigate the benefits of migrating from a call center, where all agents are pooled and customers are treated indifferently by any agent, toward a call center where customers are grouped into clusters with dedicated teams of agents. Each cluster is referred to as a portfolio. Customers of the same portfolio are always served by an agent of the corresponding team. There is no specialization involved in this organization in the sense that all customer portfolios as well as all agent teams have (statistically) identical behaviors. The reason for moving to this organization is that dealing with teams of limited size allows a much better workforce management than the situation usually encountered in large call centers. The purpose of this paper is to examine how the benefits of moving to this new organization can outweigh the drawbacks. The drawbacks come from the fact that there is less of a pooling effect in the new organization than in the original one. The benefits come from the better human resource management that results in a higher efficiency of the agents, both in terms of speed and quality of the answers they provide to customers. Our analysis is supported by the use of some simple queueing models and provides some interesting insights. In particular, it appears that for some reasonable ranges of parameters, the new organization can outperform the original organization. We then extend the analysis to the case where, in addition to the identified customer portfolios, there is an additional flow of calls called out-portfolio flow. It is shown that this feature makes the new organization even more efficient.call center management, quality of service, pooling, human resource management, customer portfolio management, team-based organization, queueing models

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