Welcome | Sign In
CRMBuyer.com
Outsourcing

Home-Based Customer Care Market Set to Soar

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Home-Based Customer Care Market Set to Soar

Home-based agents are quickly becoming an accepted part of outsourcing, now that there is general recognition that they can reduce the cost of a contact center's workforce -- the most expensive item in its budget -- and technology is up to speed. Ironically, they may even rehabilitate the practice's tarnished reputation, as it becomes a source of job gains instead of losses.


eMarketer Whitepaper: Optimizing the E-Commerce Experience
From the Web to the Contact Center, are you prepared to proactively engage and keep your savvy customers? Read how e-commerce leaders are optimizing their sites with ratings, reviews, live help, Web analytics, mobile and more.

The home-based customer Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse care market -- a small but quickly growing niche of the contact center industry -- could triple by 2010 to 300,000, according to a new report by IDC.

"Current estimates put the number of home-based agents at 112,000, so that is a strong growth rate," Stephen Loynd, senior analyst for IDC's CRM and Customer Care BPO service, told CRM Buyer.

The study, "Home-Based Agent 2005-2010 Forecast and Analysis: Converging Economic Forces to Drive the Expansion of Homeshoring in the United States," marks the first time IDC has quantified the market. In its previous look at the sector, the research firm examined the business case for using home agents.

The Case for Home-Based

Though still in its nascent stages, it has been clear for some time that home-based customer care could change the business case for the contact center , Loynd said. "There are a number of situations in which using a home-based agent model is more appropriate than outsourcing customer care to a center staffed by agents," he noted.

Briefly, these include lower overhead costs for the contact center, greater flexibility in filling peak call times, the ability to attract a more qualified workforce and less turnover.

"These factors are even more important now with the higher energy costs," Loynd said. "Having to drive long distances to work is definitely a drawback."

The Tech Factor

Avaya Proactive Contact 3.0, a predictive dialing software application released in September, can support home-based agents, for instance.

LiveOps provides another example. Its on-demand contact center application offers companies a hosted tech platform that supports distributed agents. One of its strong selling points is that it can integrate with existing systems, such as scheduling or workforce management, CEO Bill Trenchard told CRM Buyer.

"We have integrated not just the telephony components but the entire suite of applications to manage an agent network remotely," he explained.

The growing trend among contact centers to use home-based agents is fueling the company's growth, Trenchard said. Launched in 2001, it has doubled its headcount and size every year since.

New Associations

Home-based agents are quickly becoming an accepted part of outsourcing, Loynd said, now that there is general recognition that they can reduce the cost of a contact center's workforce -- the most expensive item in its budget -- and technology is up to speed. Ironically, they may even rehabilitate the practice's tarnished reputation, as it becomes a source of job gains instead of losses.

Five9, a provider of on-demand call center applications, points to its contract with the Military Order of the Purple Heart (MOPH) Service Foundation, a veterans organization dedicated to combat-wounded veterans, as an example. Late last year, Five9 announced that MOPH selected its Virtual Contact Center to train veterans to work from their homes as help desk advocates, service coordinators and customer research technicians.

"We wanted the virtual training experience to be as realistic as possible and to mirror the pace and volume that veterans can expect from any call center organization," said said Ken Smith, Program Manager, MOPH Service Foundation. "We needed a call center solution with predictive dialing technology that we could use for these virtual home-based agents."

Other vendors or providers active in this space include Alpine Access, Aspect Software, Intellicare, LiveOps, VIP Desk and Willow.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Erika Morphy


More by Erika Morphy

Windows 7 Flies Off the Shelves
November 06, 2009
Early sales figures on Windows 7 boxed software suggest a high level of consumer enthusiasm for the OS. Unit sales were a whopping 234 percent higher than Vista's out of the gate. The revenue haul was not as impressive, as Microsoft offered sharp discounts to spur presales. Also, sales of PCs with Windows 7 preinstalled have been lackluster -- but October is historically a weak month for PC sales.
Southwest Doesn't Fool Around
November 06, 2009
Either Southwest Airlines had better deals for my favorite route than its competitors or its superior Web site tools made it easier for me to ferret them out. Either way, kudos to Southwest. In the not-so-hot department were the airline's long list of what passengers weren't allowed to do and its very short list of what Southwest was obliged to do for them. Left me feeling a little chilly.
Commerce Search Puts Google Inside Retailers' Catalogs
November 05, 2009
Google has launched a new cloud-based search tool targeting enterprise-level e-commerce operations, just in time for the 2009 holiday selling season. Commerce Search provides a set of features designed to improve the relevance of results for consumers searching a retailer's own product catalog, while boosting cross-selling opportunities.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network