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LeadershipAssessment Tools: What They Do and Why You Should Harness Their PowerTwo dominant – and highly visible – problems that hinder a call center’s operation are (1) agent turnover and (2) suboptimal agent productivity. In most cases, the root causes of such challenges result from poor job fit or a lack of skills that are critical success factors for specific agent positions. Selection assessments and screening tools can help address this by providing vital information about applicants that directly relates to employee productivity and retention. These tools typically do so by measuring three different kinds of candidate data:
In regard to what applicants can do, assessments are designed to measure stable characteristics associated with job applicants’ personalities and natural abilities. For example, some jobs may be more suitable for individuals who are extroverted and less risk-averse, while others may require that an employee be highly detail-oriented and task-focused. The unique benefit to these types of assessments is that predictions can be made about future behavior in roles in which the applicant has no previous experience. In regard to what applicants have done, assessments are designed to measure applicants’ previous experiences, past behavior, education or training, and accomplishments. Examples include resume scoring for education, relevant work history and skills training, in addition to the use of behaviorally-oriented interview questions that focus on how an applicant handled a specific situation in the past, and job-specific knowledge or skills tests. These types of assessments are based on the principle that future performance is best predicted by past performance. Finally, in regard to what applicants want to do, assessments are designed to measure differences in applicants’ motives, aspirations, preferences, and interests. These types of tools are less effective for predicting productivity but are well-suited to predicting job/culture fit, employee satisfaction, and retention. Realistic Job Previews also fall into this category, as candidates can take a ‘sneak peek’ into the actual organization and job and opt out of the selection process if something looks particularly undesirable to or ill-suited with their interests and expectations. Although a wide body of evidence demonstrates how powerful and accurate well-designed assessments can be, there are, unfortunately, many poorly-crafted, inappropriately-applied assessments on the market. In addition to reviewing relevant job analysis reports and test validation manuals, test administrators need to confirm that assessments are effective within their organization by analytically evaluating the impact on performance outcomes. Because previous experience is less critical in most hourly jobs, a call center selection system should typically focus more on screening for behaviors (“can do”) and motivation levels (“likes to do”) and less on cognitive abilities and technical skills (“has done”). No single, “perfect” solution exists for every selection challenge, but a well-thought out, well-designed process that leverages selection science and incorporates multiple components can dramatically improve the quality of hiring decisions. As a result, organizations that choose to invest the time and resources into evolving their selection processes will see a significant improvement in productivity and retention, while reducing the burden on their hiring professionals. David Ostberg, Ph.D., is an Industrial and Organizational Psychologist with 10+ years experience designing and evaluating selection systems for companies in service industries. A member of the American Psychological Association and Society for Industrial & Organizational Psychology, Dr. Ostberg is currently the Vice President of Selection Science for Evolv On-Demand. For more information go to: www.evolvondemand.com. Posted: September 24th, 2008 under Leadership, Operations, People. You are the Customer Advocate for the Company!A Bean Counters World:During times of cutbacks its an accountants world a bean counters world. Bottom line rules when revenues are shrinking. We all have watched many companies make substantial cuts to the employee count as a means of controlling cost. Controlling costs often comes with a hidden cost. In the effort to head-off serious problems the bean counters demand (even enforce) cuts. A bean counter doesnt always look at the largercustomer picture. That isnt their perspective. Why? They are not paid todo that. You are.
You are the Customer Advocate for your company!
Posted: January 28th, 2007 under Leadership. CallCentreOps Forum: share advice, get answers from peers. Call Center Tales from the Ball DiamondIt is estimated that up to 4% of the U.S. workforce is employed in call centers. With the growth in the number of call centers this isn’t surprising. We hear people talking about call centers with more frequency and understanding. The branding of the term “call center” has taken time but it is now a more commonplace term. We can hardly wait for the first Hollywood screen play that is about ‘call centers’. It shouldn’t have come as a surprise that with the growth in call centers, sooner or later we would hear call center tales at the ball diamond. We heard it and we were still surprised.
Read more » Posted: January 27th, 2007 under Leadership. Call Center Managers: A Call to Be Left and Right BrainedCall center managers to be both left brained and right brained. A quick refresher: left-brain is the logical side – the technology-processes-procedures and budget side. The right brain is the imaginative and emotional side. We will illistrate this point using a “cut the call center budget: scenerio.
Read more » Posted: January 27th, 2007 under Leadership. Leadership in the Call CenterWhat are the essential leadership characteristics needed to run a call center? Call centers, if run well, demand excellent leadership skills. A demanding call center environment will test every leadership skill a manager has. Posted: January 27th, 2007 under Leadership. |
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