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Loss of Telecommunications – a Call Centre’s Worst Nightmare.

In last month’s article written for Call Centre Helper’s Newsletter, the first of a series of five that I have been asked to write on the subject of disaster recovery and/or business continuity planning for call centres, I endeavoured to explain why it is imperative that Call Centre operators give serious consideration to the adoption of both disaster recovery and business continuity plans. The final paragraph of that article touched on the question of what would happen if an inbound call centre lost its telecommunications suggesting that this would probably constitute a Call Centre Manager’s worst nightmare.

Why? Because every inbound and/or outbound call centre is heavily, if not totally reliant, upon receiving and/or making telephone calls! And while there is a gradual migration towards the adoption of Contact Centres where a call centre’s customers can also contact the Agent via email, SMS Text and the like (media which, it should be remembered, also use the telephone network, either fixed line or mobile for their transmission), the vast majority of contacts made into/from a call centre rely on voice calls – using the telephone.

So just stop and think for a moment and, using the “Five Key Questions” attached to this article, consider what would happen if your Call Centre was unable to receive calls from, and/or make calls to, your customer base or, perhaps your customer’s customer base (if you are operating an outsourced call centre) as a result of a cut telephone cable, ACD/PBX failure of loss of your call centre building for any one of a number of reasons highlighted in my previous article. In this increasingly competitive world the ramifications of adverse effects on brand and reputation of lost communications will be huge, with outsourced call centres defaulting on of their closely monitored Service Level Agreements (SLAs) and Performance Targets.

So what can be done to mitigate the risks of a failed telecommunications infrastructure or loss of a building? There will be those of you that will argue that because you have another one/two/three/four etc call centres within your organisation you can simply re-route your incoming calls to those call centres to have the calls answered as seamlessly as they were before. However, I rarely see call centres operating at 50%/33%25% capacity on the off chance that spare capacity may be required to take calls from a failed call centre. In fact most, if not all, Call Centres work at as close to capacity as they can – and sometimes at even greater than 100% using call queuing and Agent “call back” software to generate even greater efficiencies. The simple answer is that even if you did have multiple call centres – and most call centre businesses to not – it would be wise to plan to recover the failed call centre without also severely disrupting other call centres in the group.

Another solution might be to retain the services of a Recovery Site Provider, reserving space, on either a dedicated or syndicated/shared basis in one of their fully equipped buildings. This is certainly an option – but one that will be extremely expensive if you intend re-locating any more than a limited number (invariably 25-40%) of your Agents to continue to business operations following the outage, which begs the question, what will the other 60-75% of you Agents be doing until normal service is resumed in a day? a few days? a week? longer?

However, if you are going to consider the adoption of a recovery site for, say, 25% of your Agents, and simply plan to maintain a basic service should you suffer an outage, you need to give very careful thought to how you might implement this option as whilst there are a growing number of recovery sites becoming available, they are invariably located near to the major conurbations – and do involve a certain amount of additional travelling to and from the nearest/selected recovery site. Accordingly not all Agents will be able to relocate to an alternative call centre environment. Prior family commitments of collecting the children from school, looking after ageing parents, or simply requiring a flexible working environment is not conducive to working in an alternative location some distance away from their normal place of work.

There is also an argument that the use of Non-Geographic numbers (0800s; 0870s; 0845s) enables call centre operators to quickly, and relatively easily, re-route incoming calls directed to specific 08XX “service numbers” to alternative specific geographic numbers anywhere (contrary to popular belief, it is simply not possible to re-route a non-geographic number to another non-geographic number as the Network Operators currently do not allow this). So…. on the face of it, we have a solution. But, in reality, call centre Agents rarely work in only one service. Using “full skills based routing” functionality with in the ACD/PBX, Agents are able to take calls from multiple services based upon different priorities and skills require to answer the specific call – which really cancels out the benefits of being able to re-route these service numbers anywhere as the call centre Agent, allocated to answer incoming calls to these respective services can only be in one location at anyone time – but where will that Agent have re-located to.

So what is the answer to the problem of delivering “always on” telecommunications to our mission critical call centres?

In the era of 365x24x7 call centres, call queuing, power diallers and the like, where ever greater efficiencies are being sought to maximise call centre profitability, where brand protection and deliverance of stringent SLAs is paramount, what is really needed, in order to provide the ultimate in business continuity planning, is a solution which delivers a more flexible way of working on an “all day - every day” basis enabling call centre Agents to work literally at any time and from anywhere.

The philosophy surrounding remote/homeworking is certainly not new. In fact one of the great exponents of flexible/home working, David Speakman of Travel Councellors, an on-line travel agency, established such a “virtual call centre” as far back as 1998. Now, some eight year later, the concept is now well proven, allowing Call Centre Agents to work just as seamlessly from home, or at the very least, closer to home, than from within a conventional call centre.

How flexible home/remote working can be used to, not only provide a comprehensive disaster recovery and/or business continuity solution, as well as grow your call centre business will be addressed in next month’s article.

Five Key Questions to ask yourself when considering the need for telecoms continuity.


What would happen to our Call Centre business if our existing customers or, more importantly potential new customers could not contact us over the telephone?

How much money would our business lose if our customers, or our customer’s customers could not talk to call us for an hour?... half a day?...a day?... or even a whole week?

What impact would the loss of our incoming calls from our customers, or our customer’s customers have on our brand and perception of our company in the market place?


If our customers, or customer’s customers, could not speak to us on the telephone, would they approach our competitors and place orders with them? And if they did….would they return to our company once our telecommunications infrastructure had been restored?


Have we really thought through the implications to our business of any or all of the above adversely effecting our company?

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