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Tag Archives: outsourcing

Is it time to bring offshore call-centres back home?

25 Thursday Jun 2020

Posted by Malcolm Auld in Customer Service, Marketing, Marketing Automation

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

call centre, customer service, marketing, outsourcing

Before I start this post dear reader, I declare I only speak one language – Australian. I respect anyone who can speak multiple languages. But because someone can speak a language doesn’t mean they can communicate in the language they speak.

I assume my international colleagues experience similar frustrations as we Aussies do, when you call a local company’s “customer service centre” that is located in a country where English isn’t the first language. This outsourcing of alleged service has been one of the great cons of modern capitalism.

Firstly, the service is worse, it’s never better. Secondly, the income earned by the call-centre staff doesn’t benefit our local economy. Thirdly, the poor service really pisses-off customers, the people who pay the salaries of the call-centre staff.

One of the worst experiences is when the call-centre representative gets into a circular loop reading from a script, usually because they don’t understand the language or its nuances, and are unable to solve the problem at hand. The conversation ends up as “I understand your situation…” Of course they have no idea or understanding of the situation. But some call-centre psychiatrist, or human capital expert, has convinced management that this phrase helps diffuse the customer’s frustration, when in reality it makes matters worse.

“I have no idea how to solve your problem, but it says here I should say…”

So, given the COVID-Crisis and the massive unemployment it is creating, isn’t it time we returned call-centres to Australia?

Qantas is an example. Today it announced it is sacking around 6,000 staff in order to survive. Why not relocate the Qantas call-centres to Australia and employ some of those staff, where the income will benefit the local economy? It will also improve the customer service.

Telstra is another one. I’ve yet to speak with a customer service person without “I beg you pardon” being the most common phrase I use. Even worse is the Voice Recognition software that doesn’t work. Here’s a typical day in the life of a customer. You call the Telstra hotline. A computer answers and asks you to state why you’re calling. After stating your reason to the computer, it replies with something such as “I’m sorry, I didn’t understand you, please repeat the reason for your call.”

This goes on until the computer forwards you to a human in another country. You go on hold until an English-as-a-second-language representative starts talking to you, usually to advise you’ve been put through to the wrong department, so “please hold while I transfer you“. Then the line goes dead, or if you’re lucky you get through to a queue to wait to speak to another representative, blah, blah.

“What do you mean, how do I spell Kim?”

It may be naive, but I believe we should use this opportunity to create jobs in our local economy – we have the talent pool. It’s the largest since the Great Depression. Let’s bring our call-centres home!

Gotta go, I’m having internet problems and have to call Telstra – aaaggghhhh!!!

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Is the Marketing Manager now redundant in small and medium companies?

02 Tuesday Jun 2015

Posted by Malcolm Auld in Advertising, Digital, Digital marketing, Direct Marketing, Marketing

≈ 15 Comments

Tags

digital marketing, direct marketing, marketing, marketing manager, outsourcing

Most SMEs don’t have marketing departments. They may have a marketing manager, sometimes supported by a marketing assistant. The reason is simple – these companies don’t have the marketing budget to warrant a marketing department.

This causes three problems for the business:

1. High churn rate of marketing staff

2. Lack of skills to undertake marketing effectively

3. Lousy results from marketing activity

Apparently marketing managers in SMEs turn over at a rate of about three every two years. The typical tenure is 6 to 9 months. In large marketing departments it’s more like 18 months, which is another problem but not for today’s discussion.

churn_v2

The high churn rate is due to the fact marketers tend to be social creatures. But their job involves them working in a back office on their own, or with an assistant, with small budgets on small brands. Not a very inspiring environment.

Management often doesn’t understand marketing – let alone fathom why the marketing manager isn’t a copywriter, graphic designer, website developer and PR expert all rolled into one. After all they’re a marketer aren’t they – the human Swiss Army knives of executive row?

human swiss army knife

These marketing managers don’t appear to do anything but contract external suppliers. But management doesn’t understand why they hire a marketing manager who then hires suppliers – and the circle of frustration between marketing and management continues to go around and around.

The second issue is the problem of skill. Despite what some digi-spruikers claim, there is no such thing as a Marketing Superman. Yes, those aged 50+ most of whom have 20+years of online experience running parallel with 30+ years of analogue experience – might squeeze into some tights and a cape.

It wouldn’t be a pretty site, however they do know how to use more channels than anyone else, particularly those half their age. But they don’t want these jobs and aren’t even considered for them because of the ageism in the market.

marketing-superhero

The digital world is changing so rapidly, very few can legitimately claim to be an expert in all channels. So a young marketing manager is on a hiding to nothing, as they have no analogue experience and very limited digital experience. They cannot do their job effectively because they just don’t have the skills, or the budget to hire additional specialist staff, nor to hire specialist agencies.

Consequently the work they produce is ordinary and struggles to pay for itself. The management starts asking questions, while the marketing manager starts looking for a new job.

Outsource the whole marketing department

So the role of marketing within SMEs – particularly mid-size companies – is changing. It’s now more cost effective to outsource your marketing function to an agency that provides all the marketing skill sets under one roof. After all, if you’re paying between $100,000 and $200,000 in marketing salaries and still outsourcing your marketing budget to suppliers, why not pay a marketing agency a retainer of say $10,000 to $25,000 per month instead?

You cut out the middle man. The agency has specialist marketers, media planners, website designers, copywriters, App developers, SEO skills, social media managers, content creators, et al, who can manage all your marketing, while you save on the overhead cost of a full time marketing manager/team. Assuming of course your management understands marketing.

I’m aware of a number of companies in manufacturing, retail, motor parts, direct wine sales and financial services – ranging from small to large businesses (some turning over more than $100 million) – that have outsourced their marketing department. I’ve even helped them find the right marketing agency – note I said marketing agency, not advertising agency.

SuperMan-Marketing-tactic

to outsource your marketing department…

This probably wouldn’t work in large marketing departments of blue chip brands. But for small and medium size growing companies, the outsourcing of marketing management can be a more cost-effective way to spend your total marketing budget – salaries and media/production.

Although come to think of it, I do know some very large marketing departments where the marketing managers have outsourced so much of their marketing activities, they spend their whole day just managing the outsourced suppliers. Their work-life involves exciting things like attending meetings, pouring over WIP spread sheets, approving purchase orders, haggling with lawyers for copy approval, attending shoots or mindless focus groups and other such meaty marketing marvels.

Come to think of it, I might advise my kids to avoid marketing as a career path…

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