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New ASAPP Research Reveals Top 3 Reasons Why Contact Center Workers Have One of the Highest Turnover Rates in The Nation

Up to 1.2 million American Contact Center Agents Leave Their Job Each Year, Citing Lack of Training, Technology and Career Growth

NEW YORK, September 10, 2021—ASAPP, Inc., the artificial intelligence (AI) research-driven company, today published a new, first-of-its-kind report CX: The Human Factor. The report reveals the core challenges facing three million US contact center agents, an industry with one of the highest employee turnover rates; 40% leave their roles within 12 months. Three key themes of training/coaching, technology and career opportunities emerged from interviews and a survey with agents that illustrate a focus on short-term savings that ultimately increase the long-term costs for customer experience.

Improved Training, Coaching

Agents make up 2% of the US workforce with 74% of respondents viewing themselves as brand ambassadors for their company. Yet 51% of agents, who received poor training, report being pessimistic about their careers which can lead to poor performance and burnout. While companies often look at ways to reduce the time it takes to train agents, the report results suggest reduced training lowers the confidence and competence of agents, which can lead to higher absenteeism. 38% of agents stated that training and career growth opportunities would improve their jobs. The impact of training at the start of a job, and throughout an agent’s career, directly impacts their happiness. Ongoing coaching and support for agents has been inconsistent in the shift to work from home with 37% of respondents indicating it had been difficult to receive feedback during the pandemic.

Join ASAPP and Ernst & Young LLP for an executive session that will share insights from the research and delve into the impact agent experience is having on customer experience: https://ai.asapp.com/Webinar_The-Human-Factor-in-CX.html

Technology Gap and Metrics that Matter

45% of agents indicated that technological advancement in contact centers is behind the times. Self-serve technologies such as interactive voice response systems (IVRs) and chatbots are shifting agents to focus on more complex calls, while the majority (72%) of agents are motivated to solve simple customer problems. As contact centers look to align business objectives, they are turning to artificial intelligence to maximize human productivity, increase automation and enable a company to radically scale services. Yet, agents are still unaware of the value that an AI platform can offer them by automating the customer’s journey and supporting the agent through complex customer engagements:

  • 51% of agents said AI would solve repetitive customer problems.
  • 40% of agents recognize that AI will improve the customer experience.
  • 40% of agents fear AI will take away their jobs.

Career Growth

Although 53% of contact center agents expressed optimism about their jobs, overall agents expressed a desire for career growth above all other improvements. Allowing agents to experience a range of roles and growth provides empowerment and optimism for their careers. Beyond collecting a paycheck, agents expressed their motivations to help customers as their priority.

“74% of agents view themselves as company brand ambassadors and the voice of the brand they represent. When companies fail their agents with dysfunctional technology, training and coaching, they risk not only a frustrating employee experience, but a poor customer experience that will have consumers looking elsewhere,” said ASAPP Chief Experience Officer Michael Lawder. “Contact center agents want to be empowered and do their best to help consumers. They operate in a difficult environment with a frankenstack of poorly designed legacy systems that are difficult to use; policies and processes that prioritize cost and liability, over resolution and customer satisfaction—with a lack of ongoing coaching and training that does not help accelerate their progress.”

“Approximately 80% of B2C enterprise CX budgets is spent on labor. The industry has a culture of continuous improvement and focus on metrics, yet how we measure customer service and agent performance must evolve to identify the behaviors that drive customer loyalty and value for employees and customers. The environment we create for employees is the environment that customers experience,” said Barbara Porter, Managing Director, EY. “Agents want to serve people, but current industry metrics measure only a fraction of an agent’s overall performance. Metrics, processes and technology investments must work in concert to serve both the employee and the company to achieve the significant business outcomes required to serve consumers.”

For more information, and to download a copy of the report, visit: https://bit.ly/ASAPPCXM

About “CX: The Human Factor” Report

ASAPP in partnership with the University of San Francisco’s Master of Science in Marketing Intelligence program, worked with its graduate students to conduct in-depth interviews with contact center agents and surveyed another 506 agents across the United States of America to gain their perspective on the human factors that impact the $600 billion customer experience industry.

About ASAPP

ASAPP is a research-based artificial intelligence software provider that solves large, complex, data-rich problems with AI Native® technology. Large enterprises use ASAPP to make customer experience teams highly productive and effective by augmenting human activity and automating the world’s workflows. The company has offices in New York, Silicon Valley, Buenos Aires, London, and Bozeman. Visit http://www.asapp.com for more information.

Media Contact

John Gallagher
(415) 935-4457
[email protected]

Author Information

Clint Wheelock

Clint brings over 20 years of market research and consulting experience, focused on emerging technology markets. He was co-founder and CEO of Dash Network, an integrated research and digital media firm focused on the CX market, which was acquired by The Futurum Group in 2022. He previously founded Tractica with a focus on human interaction with technology, including coverage of AI, user interface technologies, advanced computing, and other emerging sectors. Acquired by Informa Group, Clint served as Chief Research Officer for Informa’s research division, Omdia, with management and content strategy responsibility, formed by the combination of Tractica, Ovum, IHS Markit Technology, and Heavy Reading.
Clint was previously the founder and President of Pike Research, a leading market intelligence firm focused on the global clean technology industry, which was acquired by Navigant Consulting where he was Managing Director of the Navigant Research business.

Prior to Pike Research, Clint was Chief Research Officer at ABI Research, a New York-based industry analyst firm concentrating on the impact of emerging technologies on global consumer and business markets.

Clint holds a Master of Business Administration in Telecommunications Management from the University of Dallas and a Bachelor of Arts in History from Washington & Lee University.

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