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Call center agent training differs from that of sales and marketing. Agents are under tremendous performance pressure given inbound call loads and new interaction models (e-mail, chat, co-browsing) that are added to traditional customer support technologies (telephone calls). Call center agents require two contexts of e-learning application: initial training and ongoing training. Initial training can help train agents within the context of the actual performance aspects of the jobs (e.g., learning Siebel via e-learning while actually using Siebel). Ongoing training is the ability to deliver just-in-time training through the agent's queue, in short bursts, enabling agents to pull down content during "slow" times or breaks. CIC-focused e-learning technologies include asynchronous learning, community and collaborative tools to provide training on a just-in-time basis, content-authoring tools to create proprietary content, e-coaching tools, and co-browsing capabilities.
Business impact: E-learning integration with CRM can reduce customer service cycle times and cost of service, and better align the knowledge of sales and marketing personnel with profitable customer opportunities. Bottom line: E-learning will evolve as a standard component of CRM solutions, particularly as part of assisted customer service delivery channels, to optimize customer-facing processes.
E-learning and CRM: Who's the teacher and who's the student? By Jennifer Vollmer and Timothy Hickernell First published by Meta Group on April 18, 2002
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