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The country is witnessing rapid growth in the ITES sector, especially in the
call-center business. This growth presents a plethora of opportunities for the
channel to explore. Be it as suppliers or users of call-center technologies to
improve services; the channel partners has the business cut out for them.
A lot has been said about India being a hot spot for offering IT-Enabled
Services (ITES). Indeed! ITES, especially call-centers, are a huge opportunity
for Indian companies to make a mark at the global level. Every time industry
analysts talk about the growth potential that lies in this industry, all those
involved in this segment get excited. However, the channel community is yet to
fully explore the business potential in this segment.
There are two major ways in which partners could cash on the increased
call-center activity. The first, channel partners acting as a suppliers to the
call-center business, and the second, as users of various call-center
technologies to make service and business processes more efficient.
OPPORTUNITIES UNEXPLORED
ITES industry which grossed Rs 2,400 crore in 1999-2000, touched Rs 7,100
crore in 2001-02. And the figure is expected to touch Rs 20,000 crore by
2007-08, as per a study conducted by Nasscom. Estimates show that employment in
the ITES sector has gone up from 45,000 employees in 1999-2000 to 1,07,200
employees in 2001-02. It is further estimated that by 2008, this segment will
create employment for 2,70,000 people. Currently, over 750 ITES companies
operate in India and industry experts hopes that this market will grow at a CAGR
of 45 percent for the next five year.
What all these figures also indicate is a gradual increase in the ITES-related
infrastructural requirements. This essentially translates into a huge business
opportunity for channel partners to fulfill these requirements. These are
essentially in terms of supply of servers, ACDs, EPABX, LAN/WAN, routers, IVR
systems, Fax-on-demand systems, clients/desktops, headsets, application
software, database software, storage, and desktop agents among others as well as
their integration.
A simple calculation for desktop PC requirement can be done by estimating the
number of employees who will work in this industry because every user will have
a PC on his desk. Besides, every ITES company will require a large number of
servers (for CTI, IVR, e-mail, voice mail, Web, database, CRM, etc), with an
equal number of machines for every equipment as backup. Backup machines at the
server level become a must because this industry operates 24x7 and cannot afford
to be down even for a minute.
WHAT GOES IN
Let us start with how a typical call-center operates. (figure 1). There are
three components associated with a typical call-center infrastructure: Hardware,
software and service components. All of these present business opportunities for
different channel segments and more specifically for systems integrators.
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INFRASTRUCTURAL
REQUIREMENT |
FULFILLER |
| Consultancy |
Individuals, companies |
| Telecom |
ISP, Telcos |
| Servers |
Systems integrators |
| Databases |
Resellers |
| Applications |
Resellers |
| LAN/WAN |
Network integrators |
| Desktops/clients |
Resellers, SIs |
| Processes |
Individuals |
| CTI/IVR |
Systems integrators |
| MIS |
Consultants |
| Manpower |
Recruitment agencies |
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But it is not as easy as pushing boxes, like many channel partners do. The
role of channel partner as a supplier for ITES infrastructure requires a lot of
expertise because it involves systems integration on a large scale. High level
of expertise becomes a must for channel partners interested in exploring the
business prospects.
Feedback from various ITES companies indicates that they prefer a single
systems integrator to provide the complete solution rather than many SIs setting
up the infrastructure in bits and pieces. However, there are very few companies
in India with such capabilities, and hence ITES companies invariably end up
taking the help of more than one SI.
According to experts, the cost involved by a typical call-center can vary
between Rs 1 lakh to Rs 7 lakh for a single seat. The setup can include just an
EPABX and an ACD (Automatic Call Distribution unit), or even a very
sophisticated setup with EPABX + ACD + IVR (Interactive Voice Response) + CTI
(Computer Telephony Integration) + CRM (Customer Relationship Management) as the
main components. Let’s take a brief look at different components required
towards setting up of a full fledged call-center:
CONSULTANTS:
When a company decides to set up a call-center, the first thing it does is
to get in touch with a consultant to get opinions and direction on the
nitty-gritties of setting up the business. Which means, as a supplier, to be in
the good books of consultants surely pays. Alternatively, channel partners may
also choose to become a consultant by acquiring the required expertise.
TELECOM INFRASTRUCTURE:
A good telecom infrastructure is the backbone of an efficient call-center.
An important component of which is a leased line and/or a VSAT connection.
EPABX: All calls are received by the EPABX system and sent to the ACD
system.
ACD: ACD units are used to route the calls received from the EPABX to
the CTI server/IVR mechanism/Voice recorder/Fax-on-demand server. Some of the
latest call-centers have done away with the use of ACD, by replacing it with a
server using software that can handle distribution of calls.
IVR system: IVR looks at all the routine tasks like product
information, shipping information, customer information, order booking, or any
other basic information. A carefully categorized IVR can handle most of the
routine tasks very efficiently.
Voice recorder: Voice recorders are used to give customers an option
to leave a message or wait for a customer support agent to attend to his call.
Fax-on-Demand (FoD): Some call-centers give the caller an option to
receive information through FoD.
DESKTOPS:
If a caller chooses not to use either the IVR, voice recorder or FoD, the
call is diverted to the agents, where a trained staff attends to one’s
queries. The agents are equipped with robust desktops with multimedia
capabilities, headset, mic and alternatively a telephone. These desktops may not
have a hard disk drive, floppy disk drive or any other drives in it, but will
have all other hardware of best quality.
SERVERS:
CTI server: Apart from the above-mentioned devices, the CTI server
intergrates all desktops with an application and gives provisions for screen
pop-ups on the agent’s desktop terminals.
CRM/ERP server: For the screen pop-up to work in tandem with the
customer information already existing with the company, a CRM or an ERP
integrated in the network does a neat and efficient job.
Database server: Some companies link the entire call center network to
its client’s database server, which could be anywhere (either at the client’s
premise or at the call-center premise or even at a third location). These
databases are well integrated with the applications that run on the agents’
desktops.
NETWORKING:
Like all other networks, a call-center setup requires a LAN or a WAN, with
routers, switches, structured cabling and so on. Supply of all these equipments
and their consequent integration offers an attractive business proposition for
the network integrators.
SOFTWARE:
The software component that goes in to the making of a call-center starts
from the basic networking OS to CRM/ERP to the complete call-center application
suite. For channel partners there is also a scope for selling application tools,
which are software that design applications for the call-center setups.
There is a lot more that goes into the making of a call-center. But, briefly
the above explains it most. A call-center could have seats anywhere between two
to 1,000 or more. So, don’t be surprised when somebody tell you that he owns a
call-center! It could be true!
CHANNELS AS A USER
The other way partners can cash on the call-center activity is by using the
call-center technologies to make their own business processes more efficient. In
order to ensure cost-efficiencies, tier-1 and tier-2 partners need to automate
their business operations, which at present is done largely in a manual way.
Taking into consideration the cost of setting up a call-center, partners need
not own a full-fledged set-up of their own.
However, they can surely use appropriate call-center technology, say IVR or
FoD to their benefit. This one-time cost could be easily recovered in few months
with increased productivity and hence better revenues.
Worldwide, many vendors are looking at VARs for providing service on their
behalf. And effectively, many VARs have begun operating call-centers for their
principles. An effective call-center can help build better relationship with
customers despite the fact that half the job is handled by machines.
REGAIN LOST OPPORTUNITY
If the budget is a constraint and the volume of out-bound calls at partners’
end is not very huge, the call-center activity can be limited to an effective
IVR. According to a study conducted by Avhan Technologies, a company involved in
call-center applications and tool design, a call-center agent can handle up to
160 calls in eight hours while an IVR can handle nearly 2,560 calls in same
duration. Therefore, companies gain even without involving manpower. Manpower is
required only in non-routine tasks, where a machine may not do the work
effectively. For everything else an IVR or a voice messaging system can do the
job.
Channel partners as users of call-center technologies, can ensure that their
routine tasks are handled efficiently in an automated manner. Some of the
routine tasks that an effective setup can handle are: General customer
complaints, AMC-related issues, order booking, shipping information, product
information, order tracking, technical support, warranty support and so on.
Call center gives 24x7 service and can handle several transactions in a day.
Compare this with a human’s capacity to work and the advantages would be more
than obvious. Of course, the personalized touch may be missing, but there exist
ITES consultants who do their best to humanize technology by smart
implementation of the CTI applications.
Similarly, an IVR can do a lot more than an agent can do. Faster response
time, reduced employee cost, higher traffic-handling capacity, investment
recovery in about a month are just some of the benefits that partners can
receive by using an IVR system. "A Call center is meant for ensuring
increased customer satisfaction because it increases efficiency," says
Anand Awasthi, CEO, Avhan Technologies, giving the example of Dell’s success
worldwide, which employs around 1,20,000 agents through 16 call-centers in
comparison to the 75,000 seats that India employs for the entire ITES industry
put
together.
NELSON JOHNY
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