71498 FETC Contact Centre Operations
Transcription
71498 FETC Contact Centre Operations
Learner Guide 71498 FETC Contact Centre Operations Learner Guide: SLA & Staff Management LU 4 Learner Guide Table of Contents Table of Contents ............................................................................................................. 2 A. Introduction .............................................................................................................. 5 1. About the Programme ................................................................................................................5 2. About Learning Unit 4 .................................................................................................................5 Learning Unit Quarter 4: Staff Management ..............................................................................5 Learning Map ................................................................................................................... 7 Module 1: Management Information Systems .................................................................. 8 1. Introduction ................................................................................................................................8 2. Using Software Packages ............................................................................................................9 1. 3. Management Information Systems............................................................................................9 3.1 Defining Information Management....................................................................................9 3.2 IT Model Design ................................................................................................................10 3.3 Challenges in MIS ..............................................................................................................11 3.4 Aligning Business Goals and IT Metrics.............................................................................11 3.5 Access vs. Security.............................................................................................................15 2. 4. Group Activity: Computer Literacy .............................................................................9 Individual Activity: MIS Access..................................................................................15 Conclusion.................................................................................................................................16 Module 2: SLA Management........................................................................................... 18 1. Introduction to Service Level Agreements ...............................................................................19 1.1 Definition of a Service Level Agreement (SLA) .................................................................19 1.2 Purpose of Service Level Agreements...............................................................................20 1.3 Structure of Service Level Agreements.............................................................................21 1.4 Types of Service Level Agreements ..................................................................................22 3. 2. Group Activity: SLA Indicators...................................................................................24 Monitoring Service Level Agreements .....................................................................................24 2.1 Why Service Metrics Fail...................................................................................................25 4. Individual Activity: Using Metrics in Management ................................................... 27 2.2 Steps for creating better Service Metrics .........................................................................27 2.3 Company Specific Service Levels.......................................................................................30 5. Group Activity: Company Specific Service Levels......................................................30 2 Learner Guide 2.4 Monitoring Implementation.............................................................................................30 2.4.1 Pressure Points in Monitoring ..................................................................................31 2.4.2 Call Centre Process Flow ...........................................................................................31 Importance of Metrics ......................................................................................................................32 2.5 Using Metrics to Monitor Performance............................................................................33 6. 2.6 Alternative Monitoring Strategy .......................................................................................38 7. 3. Group Activity: Monitoring Plan ...............................................................................37 Group Activity: Alternative Monitoring Methods..................................................... 40 Conclusion.................................................................................................................................40 Module 3: Staff Development......................................................................................... 41 1. Purpose of this Module ............................................................................................................42 2. Working with Adults .................................................................................................................42 3. 2.1 Adult Learning Principles ..................................................................................................42 2.2 Learning Styles ..................................................................................................................43 The Skills Development Platform .............................................................................................44 3.1 Understanding the NQF ....................................................................................................44 3.2 The NQF Level Descriptors ...............................................................................................45 8. 3.3 Achieving Applied Competence ........................................................................................49 3.4 An Outcomes Based Model...............................................................................................50 9. 4. Group Activity: Developing a Outcomes Based Approach........................................51 Conducting a Needs Analysis ....................................................................................................51 4.1 The Training Needs Analysis .............................................................................................51 4.2 The Gap Analysis ...............................................................................................................53 10. 5. Group Activity: NQF Level Descriptors......................................................................48 Group Activity: Training Needs Analysis ...............................................................54 Coaching....................................................................................................................................55 5.1 Defining Coaching .............................................................................................................55 5.2 GROW - a Coaching Model................................................................................................56 11. 5.3 Process of Coaching ..........................................................................................................58 12. 5.4 Group Activity: Team Leader Wheel .....................................................................61 Decision to Coach..............................................................................................................61 14. 5.6 Group Activity: Coaching.......................................................................................58 Skills to Coach ...................................................................................................................60 13. 5.5 Individual Activity: Coaching Models ....................................................................58 Case Study: Coaching – or Not? ............................................................................63 Using Coaching Plans & Sheets .........................................................................................65 15. Individual Activity: Coaching Plan .........................................................................66 3 Learner Guide 5.7 6. Formal vs. Informal Coaching Methodologies .................................................................66 Conducting the Coaching Activity .............................................................................................70 6.1 Communication.................................................................................................................70 6.2 A Communications Model.................................................................................................70 16. 6.3 Providing Feedback ...........................................................................................................73 6.4 A Feedback Model.............................................................................................................75 17. 7. Group Activity: Conducting a Coaching Session....................................................76 Preparing Coaching Reports .....................................................................................................77 7.1 Statistical Analysis.............................................................................................................78 18. 7.2 8. Individual Activity: Coaching Language.................................................................71 Individual Activity: Coaching Needs......................................................................79 Individual Reporting..........................................................................................................79 Conclusion.................................................................................................................................81 Formative Activities........................................................................................................ 83 Administration ............................................................................................................... 85 1. Learner Evaluation Form...........................................................................................................85 Copy Right This document was created for Club Leisure Training and Development Department. Club Leisure holds copyright on this document and it may not be reproduced in any form without permission. However, the SAQA qualification outline and the unit standards are public property and Services SETA is the official certification body for the qualification. Please contact Club leisure Training and development Department if you are in any doubt about what may or may not be copied and/or reproduced. This tool is only for use by registered assessors for the 71489 Contact Centre Operations qualification on their registered assessment scope. 4 Learner Guide A. Introduction 1. About the Programme Welcome to Learning Unit 4 of the Further Education and Training Certificate in Contact Centre Operations. This is an NQF registered qualification (SAQA Reg. No 71489) Level 4. 2. About Learning Unit 4 Learner Tip: This Learning Unit covers exit level outcomes 1 & 5: • Understand and implement service levels and their monitoring in Contact Centres. • Coach others in Contact Centres. The table below contains the unit standards that will be covered in this Learning Unit. Learning Unit Quarter 4: Staff Management This Learning Unit has six related unit standards, offered as 2 separate programme units: Unit 1: Staff Management ELO 1&5 US Type Core NLRD 10313 Core 10327 US Title Comply with service levels as set out in a Contact Centre Operation Provide coaching to personnel within a Contact Centre Level Level 4 Credits 10 Level 4 10 Unit 2: Fundamental Literacy (2nd Language) ELO 1&5 US Type Fundamental NLRD 119472 Fundamental 119457 Fundamental 119467 US Title Accommodate audience and context needs in oral/signed communication Interpret and use information from texts Use language and communication in occupational learning programmes Level NQF Level 03 Credits 5 NQF Level 03 5 NQF Level 03 5 5 Learner Guide ELO US Type Fundamental NLRD 119465 US Title Write/present/sign texts for a range of communicative contexts Level NQF Level 03 Credits 5 This Learning Guide contains the learning material for Unit 1: Staff Management only. You are ready to continue your Contact Centre Learning Experience in SLA & Coaching Management – Good Luck!! 6 Learner Guide Learning Map Module 1: Management Information Systems Module 2: SLA Management Module 3: Staff Development • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Information Management IT Model Design, Challenges in IT Business Goals & IT Metrics Access & Security Introduction to Service Level Agreements Definition, purpose, structure & types Monitoring Service Level Agreements Metrics, real time Monitoring Using metrics in monitoring Alternative monitoring Adult Learning principles & Learning Styles The Skills Development Platform and the NQF Training Needs Analysis & Gap Analysis Coaching Communication Reporting on Coaching 7 Learner Guide Module 1: Management Information Systems Learning Outcomes: The essential embedded knowledge of the following unit standard is covered in this module: • 10313 Comply with service levels as set out in a Contact Centre Operation (Level 4 – 10 credits) The following learning outcomes will be covered in this module: US Area EEK1 EEK4 CCFO2 CCFO3 1. Learning Outcome Demonstrate an understanding of Windows, Word and Excel operating systems. Understand reading and interpreting management information systems. Organise and manage oneself and activities responsibly and effectively in responding to and achieving service level requirements Collect, analyse, organise and critically evaluate information pertaining to the compliance of service levels. Introduction Working in a Call Centre environment requires a fairly high level of computer literacy, and is normally an entry requirement in applying for a Call centre Agent’s position. This module will therefore not provide basic training in computer literacy – you have already been through the Induction programme and Learning Unit 3, which deals extensively with computer literacy. Mentored Discussion: Information System Your Facilitator will lead a discussion on the following: • • Software used in your Contact Centre Information System Application of additional software used, such as Windows 8 Learner Guide 2. Using Software Packages Mentored Discussion: Software Use Your Facilitator will lead a discussion on the following topics: • Which software packages are used in your Call Centre environment (apart from IRIS)? • Which functions are you required to perform on these software packages – for example MSWord or MS Excel? 1. Group Activity: Computer Literacy In your groups, you are required to prepare a presentation of a computer skill in either MSWord or MS Excel. In your presentation, you must cover the following: • • • What the skills is (for example mail merge, using Smart Art Graphics) What is the purpose / advantages of the skill A “how to” demonstration on how it is done Dear Sir, I am…… 3. Management Information Systems 3.1 Defining Information Management Information management is a general term that refers to managing any kind of information. This information that is managed varies according to the industry. Document management is also considered as information management since you are managing the information that is contained in the documents.1 Database management systems are programs that are written to store, update, and retrieve information from a database. There are many databases available in the market. 1 http://www.management-hub.com/informationmanagement-it39.html 9 Learner Guide Learner Tip: The most popular are the Oracle and SQL Server. The Oracle database is from the Oracle Corporation and the SQL Server is from the Microsoft Corporation. There are freely available database like MySQL. These are open source databases. Database Management Systems are available for personal computers and for huge systems like mainframes. Mentored Discussion: Organizational Database • • 3.2 Do you know which type of Database your organization is using for client management purposes? Where are your servers located, and back-up of data done? IT Model Design Technology is only worthwhile if it helps you achieve your business objectives. Business Process Management technology is fast gaining the reputation of being one of the most valuable IT investments you can make because it helps you achieve your most critical business objectives:2 • Increased Productivity • Better Customer Service • Greater Competitive Advantage • Stronger Financial Performance • Regulatory Compliance MIS support consists of designing, developing, implementing, operating, and maintaining IT systems, databases, and Web sites that meet the needs of project management and project control for all size of projects. It also includes implementing IT security requirements and providing user support. 2 www.buzzle.com 10 Learner Guide 3.3 Challenges in MIS What are the biggest challenges in MIS Systems? Every business has its own set of unique challenges. Here are some challenges that can touch any IT organization: • • • • • 3.4 Managing costs: This is always the No. 1 concern. To ensure that investments will bring the best return, assess the current state of your organization and its ability to deliver value. Changing metrics: All too often in IT, when you finally find a pattern, there is a change and your current metrics become obsolete. Be prepared to adjust mid-cycle, as it is inevitable. Understanding requirements: Ensure that you fully understand internal customers’ needs and the requirements to ease their pain as well as meet the business’s goals. Leadership support: Major infrastructure changes and enhancements are significant investments. Senior management may not always see the big picture and often have varying opinions about how to spend budget dollars. Showing direct correlation between IT initiatives and business goals can help earn IT funds. Poor prioritization: IT project wish lists do not get shorter. Poorly prioritized projects can end up costing additional money and time. Consider time, capital and outcomes when prioritizing projects. Aligning Business Goals and IT Metrics What metrics are typically used when aligning IT and business objectives? One of the most important ways to monitor your success is to evaluate your work and show tangible results. Although it is recommended that you develop metrics significant to your organization’s success, there are some standard metrics that can work well for any organization. • • • Percentage uptime: How long are your applications staying up? Consider the times when the applications are down and how they affect the function of that application and the cost per employee during downtime. Functionality: What purpose is the application serving, and what process is it improving? Determine whether the project is meeting a purpose for the business. Problem resolution: Are user issues being addressed in an efficient way? Is there one central location for users to go to for the application? What is the time to repair for problem resolution? 11 Learner Guide Metrics should always be tailored to a company and its objectives. Determine what metrics capture the true results of your projects to calculate the return on investment for your organization. 1. Information Technology3 is a very important component in any business and is becoming increasingly central to the businesses success. Many companies are struggling to conceptualize along these lines. A major problem is the cultural divide, business managers focusing on business results, profits etc, while IT managers are focusing on technology. To align IT efforts with business goals, one needs a shared vision. 2. Aligning IT with Business4 For one to be competitive in this day and age, everything in the business relies on IT. This could include remuneration and benefits, marketing, sales, inventory, supplies, invoicing, communications and more. These are considered as business objects and the good IT manager should focus on the needs and analyze with an outward approach, without focusing internally on the technology itself. Regardless of size, alignment of the business and IT objectives is an exercise that should be completed at least once a year. 3. Strategic Planning A Strategic Plan must contain the overall objectives of the business and should be considered as the businesses recipe for success. It is not a business plan but can provide the foundation for one. A prerequisite for a Strategic Planning requires a critical analysis of existing or perceived strengths, weaknesses, threats and opportunities. A strategy for development should cover the following areas: o Vision o Mission o Objectives o Strategies o Goals A vision statement should be presented as a picture of the business in the future (A few years time), an ultimate goal of what you wish to accomplish. Most businesses today have reference to information technology in their Vision Statement. Samples of such statements could be: More IT specific: “Our vision is to provide integrated information technology throughout business, to enhance service, productivity, communication and access to information” Or less IT specific: “To be one of the leading suppliers of Motor Spares in South Africa” In the first case, it is the vision of the said company is to acquire a fully integrated IT backbone or architecture. This statement is very direct and the vision will impact directly on IT. In the second case, the statement has no direct reference to IT, but to achieve these goals, it is obvious that the IT requirements of the first statement would apply. 3 4 Integrating IT into Business – Gregory Booth Integrating IT with Business – Gregory Booth 12 Learner Guide Reasons among others being: o It is a national company with multiple branches o It requires a comprehensive inventory o Stock control o Communications between branches o Financial systems A mission statement will reflect how the vision will be accomplished. It will be translated directly into a set of goals and objectives. These are usually stipulated in point form. Goals are generally large statements that are what you wish to accomplish in a project or business. They are usually not very measurable. Objectives are operational. They tell of specific things that you wish to accomplish and are very measurable. Objectives will form the basis for activities for your business and will also form a basis for evaluation. Strategies describe the processes that will be followed to meet these goals and objectives. 4. How do we implement this? a. Review and define business goals Meet with stake holder and management to obtain a list of key business goals for the next three years. These could include new product introductions, customer service initiatives, HR and staffing requirements, facilities, marketing etc. b. Review and analyze current IT services and infrastructure. Do a complete audit of existing IT. These could include the state of the LAN/WAN, servers, desk top PCs, the software applications being used, the businesses website, e-business applications, databases etc. Create an audit document and map the business objects to the relevant services. c. Determine the technology goals of the business Create a list of IT goals that will support the business processes as well as any new requirements for any new business initiatives. These could include new desktop applications to support certain processes, additional desktop computers, expansion or redevelopment of the corporate website for marketing or e-business, introduction of an Enterprise Resource Planner (ERP), LAN/WAN extension or upgrade or new application development. d. Create a list of new projects Compile a list of new requirements based on an analysis of the previous three sections. These should be broken into actual projects with time constraints. Each project should be linked to one of the business or technology goals that it is intended to support as set out in the strategic plan. Other requirements should also be defined, even if it includes maintenance or upgrades to existing services. e. Draw up a project plan and define the timelines Analyze each project and put it into a realistic time schedule. Consult with management as to the priorities of each project. The schedule would be best presented in a chart that shows how current resources will be made available and utilized. This document will also be used for budgeting during the project time periods. This information is collected during brainstorming sessions with management in the business sectors and IT personnel. Outside consultants could also be considered in such sessions as internal people 13 Learner Guide are prone to focusing on internal issues instead of the big picture. 5. Approach to take The alignment of IT with business is a joint initiative conducted between two distinctively different cultures. Business executives and managers come from a culture closely focused on what must be done to make the business successful. These include profits, productivity, staffing, margins etc. IT people are focused on detail, and how thing work from an IT standpoint. If these two cultures are to be aligned and made to work together, both need to broaden their narrow focus to achieve an understanding of what and how business and IT should overlap. a. From the business side Business need to do more than just make demands. Business managers need to have a basic understanding of IT requirements and the constraints in which it operates such as: o Volume of demand for development and fixes o Age of systems that have to be maintained and operated o Impact of changes o Interdependencies between processes, application and infrastructure o IT skills, resources and budget o The pressures of managing temperamental IT staff It is also the responsibility of business managers to make sure that IT understands the businesses requirements. This is done by encouraging IT to develop and feel a sense of mission about business objectives. b. From the IT side IT needs to stop focusing on technology. A more accurate reference to their responsibilities would be “Business Technology”. Everything depends on it. IT no longer simply supports business processes, it creates and delivers them, scales and modify them. Nowadays, business process is being modified to suit IT and new innovation. IT departments have a different language to business departments. They speak a language of technology. Success is based on technology. IT needs to acknowledge that business is providing the goods and services that make the profit and develop a new set of metrics relevant to business outcomes and useful to managers. These include: o Mapping of infrastructure in a way that reveals the dependencies of business services to IT components o Monitoring the end user experience o Anticipating problems o Developing procedures that tie IT to business goals o Including business managers in IT roles o Training and support o Best practices applies in business to mirror in IT 6. Outcomes The ideal outcome of integrating IT with business would be a shared vision between business and IT departments, processes that deliver the services required to maintain high standards and customer satisfaction in a harmonized environment. 14 Learner Guide 7. Conclusion As a general conclusion, the adoption of a well thought out strategic plan, setting out goals, objectives and strategies to be integrated into IT systems and infrastructure, adding value to the chain of services that make the business successful. 3.5 Access vs. Security It is important to have access control to documents, to protect the integrity of your organization. Not all people can have equal access to all records, and it is important to structure access in accordance with a Popular Management of Information Principle: Information is accessed or released on a basis of “Need to Know” – and it is important to determine in the organization what a person’s right and duty to information is. It is helpful to colour code the access status and determine a person’s colour coded security status to records Status Colour Code Reason Must Know Nice to Know Green Yellow Need to Know Orange Need not Know Red Essential information to perform his duties, full access allowed Not directly related to his job function, but access to does not compromise confidentiality or security Needs access to portions of the information – not all of it. Some protection of security and confidentiality required Job function requires no access to this information, and adds no value to the person’s job functions 2. Individual Activity: MIS Access Your Facilitator will lead a discussion on the following topics: • • • What are the main components of your management information system? Do you have access / security levels in your MIS? Do you know how Access / Security levels are determined? How do your MIS support your organizational service levels? 15 Learner Guide 4. Conclusion Self Assessment: You have come to the end of this module – please take the time to review what you have learnt to date, and conduct a self assessment against the learning outcomes of this module US Learning Outcomes EEK1 Demonstrate an understanding of Windows, Word and Excel operating systems. Understand reading and interpreting management information systems. Organise and manage oneself and activities responsibly and effectively in responding to and achieving service level requirements Collect, analyse, organise and critically evaluate information pertaining to the compliance of service levels. EEK4 CCFO2 CCFO3 Sorted! Mostly ... Need Help! PoE Activity: Refer to your Portfolio Guide for the assessment activities related to this section. 16 Learner Guide 17 Learner Guide Module 2: SLA Management Learning Outcomes: The following unit standard is covered in this module: • 10313 Comply with service levels as set out in a Contact Centre Operation (Level 4 – 10 credits) The following learning outcomes will be covered in this module: US Area SO1 AC1,2 AC3 SO2 / AC1 AC2 AC3 AC4 EEK2 EEK3 CCFO1 CCFO3 CCFO4 CCFO5 CCFO6 Learning Outcome Understand company specific service levels. Explain the purpose of service level agreements and types of relevant service level agreements List, describe and explain the requirements of all relevant service levels Range: Service levels include but are not limited to management, information systems, information on systems and wall boards, sign on time, abandoned rate etc., shift changes. Meet, implement and maintain company specific service levels Monitor implementation processes to ensure compliance. Meet service level timeframes and targets consistently as per company specific requirements. Identify and evaluate potential constraints in meeting and maintaining service levels Understand product and industry specific knowledge. Understand call centre specific service levels. Work effectively with others in the achievement of service level requirements. Collect, analyse, organise and critically evaluate information pertaining to the compliance of service levels. Communicate effectively by demonstrating an application of the understanding of relevant service level agreements in relevant medium desired by client Demonstrate an understanding of the world as a set of related systems by recognising the meeting and maintenance of service levels impact on the overall success of the organisation. Develop entrepreneurial opportunities while complying with service levels. 18 Learner Guide 1. Introduction to Service Level Agreements Your Call Centre may have several Service Level Agreements in place for a variety of services, for example management, information management, IT systems, HR management or development. Self Reflection: SLA’s • • 1.1 Do you know what types of Service Level Agreements your organization has in place? Who manages the Service Level Agreements – and how? Definition of a Service Level Agreement (SLA) A service level agreement5 (frequently abbreviated as SLA) is a part of a service contract where the level of service is formally defined. Learner Tip: In practice, the term SLA is sometimes used to refer to the contracted delivery time (of the service) or performance. As an example, internet service providers will commonly include service level agreements within the terms of their contracts with customers, as a way to signify to their customers that their service may go down from time to time and that they must accept this breach in service as a (non-refundable) possibility! A service level agreement (SLA) is a negotiated agreement between two parties where one is the customer and the other is the service provider. This can be a legally binding formal or informal "contract" (see internal department relationships). Contracts between the service provider and other third parties are often (incorrectly) called SLAs — as the level of service has been set by the (principal) customer, there can be no "agreement" between third parties (these agreements are simply a "contract"). Learner Tip: Operating Level Agreements or OLA(s), however, may be used by internal groups to support SLA(s). 5 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Service_level_agreement 19 Learner Guide 1.2 Purpose of Service Level Agreements The SLA records a common understanding about services, priorities, responsibilities, guarantees, and warranties. Each area of service scope should have the "level of service" defined. The SLA may specify the levels of availability, serviceability, performance, operation, or other attributes of the service, such as billing. Critical Note: The "level of service" can also be specified as "target" and "minimum," which allows customers to be informed what to expect (the minimum), whilst providing a measurable (average) target value that shows the level of organization performance. In some contracts, penalties may be agreed upon in the case of noncompliance of the SLA (but see "internal" customers below). It is important to note that the "agreement" relates to the services the customer receives, and not how the service provider delivers that service. Output Based SLA Service-level agreements are, by their nature, "output" based — the result of the service as received by the customer is the subject of the "agreement." The (expert) service provider can demonstrate their value by organizing themselves with ingenuity, capability, and knowledge to deliver the service required, perhaps in an innovative way. Input Based SLA Organizations can also specify the way the service is to be delivered, through a specification (a service-level specification) and using subordinate "objectives" other than those related to the level of service. This type of agreement is known as an "input" SLA. This latter type of requirement is becoming obsolete as organizations become more demanding and shift the delivery methodology risk on to the service provider. 20 Learner Guide 1.3 Structure of Service Level Agreements SLAs commonly include segments to address: a definition of services, performance measurement, problem management, customer duties, warranties, disaster recovery, termination of agreement. Service-level agreements (SLAs) are critical for the success of any outsourcing initiative as they set expectations for both parties – the outsourcer and the customer. The following outlines the type of information contained in a Service Level Agreement: 6 • • • • • • • • • • • • • Operating days and hours Definition of work Processes and procedures Agent quality Agent coaching Agent training Escalation procedures Technology Uptime requirements and performance Backup and contingency Reporting Transaction handling Security Critical Note: The best service-level agreements are very detailed and address every aspect of your relationship with your outsourcer, including rewards and penalties for good and bad performance. They also include how to handle transitions when relationships end. Service-level agreements (SLAs) should include commitments for response, escalation and resolution time whenever possible, and should break down the different types of issues. Vendors often have categories predefined, such as major and minor outages. Some companies also break down internal issues to troubles (something isn't working) versus service (i.e., a new feature or capability, or a change). 6 http://searchcrm.techtarget.com 21 Learner Guide 1.4 Types of Service Level Agreements You might have internal elements of your enterprise for which you need to guarantee service, as well as third party (outsourced) providers that you depend on to provide levels of service to your customer (external). Critical Note: You must ensure that internal objectives can be met, from which you offer external guarantees to your customers. This reliance of external SLAs on internal SLAs (which in turn might be dependent on outsourced SLAs) is the key to delivering true end-to-end service level agreements. It is important to distinguish between different types of SLAs – three types of SLAs are defined below: 7 External SLA Tracks services that you provide to your external customers. Reports are available to your customers, showing levels of service that are being provided. In this type of SLA, you are considered to be the provider of services for your external customer. Internal SLA Tracks the internal operation of your computing infrastructure. Reports generated are for internal use only. In this SLA, you are considered to be the provider, while your customer can also be your own organization or another internal group ultimately responsible for providing services to an external customer. Use an internal SLA to monitor your own internal operations, enabling you to provide services to your external customers on a more reliable basis. Outsourced SLA Tracks services provided to you by a third party. For this type of SLA, you are considered to be the customer, not the provider. You might want to define an outsourced SLA to monitor critical services that are provided to your organization, core services for your environment that you use to provide your services to your external customers. Learner Tip: While SLAs can be created to support one of these types, SLAs are increasingly becoming more oriented toward end-to-end and structured agreements, with a single SLA made up of internal, external, and outsourced layers. 7 http://publib.boulder.ibm.com 22 Learner Guide Mentored Discussion: Company Specific SLA’s Your Facilitator will lead a discussion on the following topics: • Internal SLA’s in place in Club Leisure • External SLA’s in place in Club Leisure • Outsourced SLA’s in place in Club Leisure For example, consider the environment depicted in the Graphic presentation below. Case Study: Showing the tiered nature of internal, external, and outsourced SLAs. • • • • • • • Company Y provides a Web hosting service for Company Z that includes a point-of-presence (represented by the circle), Web servers (A, B, and C), and a back-end database. The database is located at a remote site (where coordinated backup can occur) and is accessed through a backbone network provided by Company X. An external SLA is depicted that represents Company Z's access to the entire Web hosting service. Within Company Y, there are internal SLAs to track network connectivity between the point-of-presence and the Web servers, and to track the availability of the back-end database. Also pictured is the SLA provided by Company X, that assures proper operation to the backbone network (for which Company Y is a consumer). The SLA drawn as a dotted line tracks Company Y's view of the backbone network, and serves as a way of checking the consumed SLA from Company X. This is the outsourced SLA. 23 Learner Guide 3. Group Activity: SLA Indicators In your group, discuss the following and provide feedback to the group: 1. Draw up a Mind Map of the product and specific industry knowledge that Call Centre Agents must have in Club Leisure, The Mind Map must show main cluster areas, which must be translatable into performance indicators and training needs. 2. From the Mind Map drafted above, identify at least 4 specific service level areas which will be present in the internal SLA’s with Contact Centre Operators. 3. From the Mind Map drafted above, identify at least 4 key specific service level areas which will be present in the external SLA’s with your company’s IT Provider. 4. Identify if any Outsourced Service Level Agreements would be relevant – if so, what would the SLA service level indicators be? 2. Monitoring Service Level Agreements Because of the importance to business operations, companies manage sourcing arrangements through complex contracts that contain detailed statements of work (SOW) describing the services and deliverables to be provided, and SLA’s that use metrics to describe the desired performance standards and a framework for monitoring the ongoing delivery of service. When chosen wisely and implemented / monitored correctly, service level metrics are an invaluable governance tool. They can provide: 8 • • • • Precise delivery standards for service attributes such as quality, responsiveness, and efficiency An objective means for determining whether ongoing performance meets expectations and a basis for triggering rewards of penalties based on that performance. Valuable trend and operational data that enables the rapid identification and correction of issues A foundation for making informed adjustments in service delivery to meet changing business requirements Learner Tip: Unfortunately service level metrics rarely deliver the intended benefits listed above. Poorly selected or constructed service metrics can actually motivate behaviours that are detrimental to the success of the sourcing arrangement and its ability to deliver the desired business results. 8 Courtesy Ian S Hayes, clarity Consulting: “Creating better service level metrics” 24 Learner Guide 2.1 Why Service Metrics Fail Despite their importance, service level metrics are often added as an afterthought when negotiating a service level agreement. 1. Wrong Metrics Companies enter into service level agreements for one reason – to further one or more business objectives. If the goal is to streamline operations, then the service metric should measure the services improvement to company’s operation. Critical Note: Typical mistakes made in choosing metrics: • • • • • Going for ease of measurement rather than fit to business objective Not considering collection and analysis effort Does not provide actionable information – if it does not clearly tell you what should be done to fix the problem, it is a useless metric Measuring attributes outside the service provider’s control Picking a metric that is not clearly defined, and methods of collection of metric data is open to interpretation 2. Wrong Target Setting A service level agreement (SLA) normally contains both metrics and targets. For example, a Call Centre metric may be “calls per rep per hour” and the target may be set to 15. The service provider is judged (and rewarded / penalized) by its ability to meet the target. Often companies set targets to what is desirable rather than realistically achievable, or set the targets too low to achieve business goals. 3. Insufficient Metrics to support sound decision making Simplicity is a valid objective when choosing metrics for a SLA, and is often applied to the point if listing a few key indicators only. Though such metrics may be useful, they may not be able to supply the entire picture or assist in troubleshooting when things go wrong. 4. Improper set up and infrastructure to support metric usage Like any other tool, metrics require an investment of time, resources, education to be effective. SLA reporting is often seen as a burdensome overhead activity that produces reams of number filled data that lies unread in a cubicle. Someone in the organization must be responsible (and held accountable) for managing vendor’s performance to its terms. 25 Learner Guide Learner Tip: Planning for and implementing metrics collection, analysis and reporting processes is essential – and training of the Business managers (and Directors) in reading and interpreting the metric data is just as essential. 26 Learner Guide 5. Misused penalties and incentives Performance penalties and rewards can be a powerful tool if used correctly, but can poison the relationship if used incorrectly, even encouraging wrong behaviours. Metrics must be firmly aligned to business objectives, and penalties / rewards meaningful contributors. 4. Individual Activity: Using Metrics in Management On your own, look at the following questions and provider feedback to the group during a general discussion. 1. How does Service Level Agreements contribute to the management of staff and outsourced partners? 2. How is the development of Metrics linked to your Organizational Business Strategy and Goals? 3. How can the correct development of metrics support business or training needs analysis? 2.2 Steps for creating better Service Metrics Choosing the right service metrics, creating effective service level agreements and managing services using those agreements is critical in the Contact Centre environment. 1. • • • Start from the Business Objectives List the major business objectives. For each objective, list how the service contributes to the objective Next, consider the attributes that assess each contribution. Example Box: One objective in outsourcing the support of a corporate web-site may be to attract more prospective buyers to the business. The outsourcing engagement would contribute to this objective by developing an attractive web-site that encourages more visitors, promotes to company’s products and services and captures contact information for sales follow up. These contributions can be measured by the amount of people who visit the web-site, noting the access to each product’s features, and capturing of visitors information or sign-ups. 27 Learner Guide 2. Turn the Objectives into Metrics To turn the attributes determined above into metrics, consider the following: • • • • • Are the attributes within the power of the service provider to control or affect? If the attribute is not entirely in the control of the service provider, can it be supplemented by another metric that isolates the vendor’s responsibilities? Would the metric data from those attributes provide actionable insights? Consider the behaviour that would be motivated by the metric. If the vendor optimizes performance to maximize this metric, does it improve business performance? What would be the means of collecting and analysing the metric data? Continuing the Example: The bottom line metric may be the number of new buying prospects per month. However, this number is only partially within the control of the service provider. The other attributes could be measured by the number unique individuals that visit the site, the number of page views for company products, and the number of on-line sign-ups for demo’s and downloads. Each attribute is actionable – if for example the number of product page views drop, they can see it is time for new content or better promotion. 3. Add Operational Metrics Operational metrics fall into 4 categories: • Volume • Responsiveness • Quality • Efficiency Continuing the Example: Using demo and download sign ups, the company wants to know the number of sign-ups per time period (volume), the time needed to pass these prospects to sales (responsiveness), the type of person signing up (quality), and cost of sign up delivered (efficiency) 28 Learner Guide 4. Set reasonable performance targets Each metric should have its own performance targets in the SLA, and must be set realistically, based on actual history. Continuing the Example: The company wants 1000 download sign-ups per month, these sign-ups must reach the sales division within 15 minutes of occurrence, at least 60% of the sign ups must be business people, and the cost must not exceed R15-00 per sign up. These targets are actionable, and set very clear expectations for the service provider. Likewise, incentives or penalties can be provided if performance targets are exceeded or failed. 5. Create a metrics definition document. The metrics definition document accompanies the service level agreement and describes each metric in detail. It describes the intent of the metric (why it was chosen), how the metric is measured, and how the metric is interpreted. The goal is that both parties capture, analyze and act upon the metric in the same way, use the same tools and analysis methods, and ensures clarity of action when metric data changes. For example, is a spike in data (up or down) auctioned when it happens, or is data tracked over 2 – 3 months before action is required? 6. Build the contract to facilitate changes in the SLA Business conditions change, service needs and parameters change, and the SLA must be open to change where required. 7. Match SLA’s with separate customer satisfaction surveys. Performing separate customer satisfaction surveys of a given service’s internal customers is a critical double check of both the vendor’s performance and the quality of the SLA and its metrics. If the SLA meets or exceeds performance targets, but customer satisfaction is low (or vice versa), then the SLA is using the wrong metrics. Mismatch between customer satisfaction data and SLA data is a clear indicator that review is required! 29 Learner Guide 2.3 Company Specific Service Levels Common Metrics Service-level agreements can contain numerous service performance metrics with corresponding service level objectives. A common case in IT Service Management is a call centre or service desk. Metrics commonly agreed to in these cases include: • • • • • ABA (Abandonment Rate): Percentage of calls abandoned while waiting to be answered. ASA (Average Speed to Answer): Average time (usually in seconds) it takes for a call to be answered by the service desk. TSF (Time Service Factor): Percentage of calls answered within a definite timeframe, e.g., 80% in 20 seconds. FCR (First Call Resolution): Percentage of incoming calls that can be resolved without the use of a call-back or without having the caller call back the helpdesk to finish resolving the case. TAT (Turn Around Time): Time taken to complete a certain task. Learner Tip: Uptime Agreements are another very common metric, often used for data services such as shared hosting, virtual private servers and dedicated servers. Common agreements include percentage of network uptime, power uptime, amount of scheduled maintenance windows, etc. 5. Group Activity: Company Specific Service Levels In your groups – look at the Common Metrics provided above, and answer the following questions: 1. For each of the common metric categories provided above, define the company specific targets that are deemed acceptable in Club Leisure. 2. How are these targets communicated and maintained? 3. What monitoring system is in place to ensure adherence to the targets? Resource Guide: Refer to your Resource guide P5 for a Resource 1: Metrics in SLA Monitoring. 2.4 Monitoring Implementation The question many Call Centre Team leaders and Managers ask, is: • • What do I monitor in the Call Centre environment? Which pressure points or areas must be included in a daily / weekly monitoring plan? 30 Learner Guide • How do I use monitoring information to overcome potential constraints in meeting and maintaining service levels? Real-Time Monitoring9 Real time monitoring and reporting provides critical contact centre metrics and gives supervisors the ability to manage their agent teams effectively. Authorized supervisors can monitor live agent and customer interactions from any location. A supervisor uses a web browser to pick an agent to monitor. A sophisticated Call Centre system will allow the supervisor to observe, select another agent or quit monitoring. Benefits of Real-Time Monitoring include: • • Complete visibility into your call centre operations Customer service quality assurance 2.4.1 Pressure Points in Monitoring Learner Tip: Performance management has been a challenge due to varied technologies and data intricacies often involved in Contact Centres. While numerous systems integrate to support the operation of Contact Centre, data from these systems are not always processed and visualized in the right manner to aid performance management. 2.4.2 Call Centre Process Flow The Diagram on the following page10 illustrates the call flow (black arrows) along with the flow of information from Call Centre transaction systems. Performance related data is extracted from the individual transaction systems and transformed for visualization in the form of reports and charts. Conventionally, for performance management focus was on the data present in data transformation and reporting layers (highlighted area). Learner Tip: This led to inconsistencies in metrics and reports affecting performance management. Data analysis of the underlying transaction systems and building a robust technology infrastructure are essential for effective Contact Centre Performance Management. 9 http://www.contactual.com/en/Call-Center/Call-Center-Technology/Hosted-Call-Center/MonitoringRecording 10 http://www.exilant.com/contact_center/cs_overview.html 31 Learner Guide Importance of Metrics Contact Centres generate huge volume of transaction data in numerous systems. This data is used to derive its performance metrics. However non-standardization of data elements across systems, leads to inconsistency in the derived metrics and reports. Usability of these derived metrics is also greatly affected by ability to quickly visualize the required information. Understanding the nature and source of data is essential to derive proper metrics in a contact centre. Reporting infrastructure has to be abstracted from the raw data and a semantic layer has to be built, so that users get faster access to metrics and reports. Metrics help spot issues, identify root causes and control factors affecting customers. However, complexity and proliferation of systems in a contact centre makes it difficult to derive the right metrics. 32 Learner Guide Insight thru Data Analysis While Contact Centres use traditional reports and charts to monitor performance, they lack the ability to obtain insights into their operations. Often complex relationships and patterns remain hidden in the data, which are revealed through manual analysis. Data Analysis is required to uncover hidden relationships and patterns in the data. A multidisciplinary team is required to perform the tasks involved in implementing analytic projects. Understanding of Contact Centre processes and data that drive them are essential for a successful implementation. Gain insight from customer interactions Conventional reports cannot uncover complex patterns and relationships present in interaction data. Analytics improves performance management of contact centres by providing such insights. Data Quality Poor data quality makes an otherwise helpful report and insight useless. It is very important to realize that a functioning contact centre is not automatically ready for implementing performance management strategies. This is because the rigor applied to validate data quality during implementation may not rise to the standard expected for performance management. Data Analysis is an important step in any performance management initiative. During this process, data has to be compared against system of records to identify inconsistencies. This activity has to be performed on a periodic basis to ensure clean data. 2.5 Using Metrics to Monitor Performance The following article was written by Penny Reynolds, a founding partner of a Nashville Call Centre School, a contact centre consulting and education company. Article: Monitoring Call Centre Performance Read the following article for discussion in the next activity. A new look at THE TOP 20 Contact Centre Metrics11 The evolution of a simple call centre into a multichannel contact centre doesn't happen overnight. You may need to add or upgrade technologies, and certainly staff skills will need to expand as customer contacts begin to include e-mail and Web chat in addition to incoming phone calls. It's also important to rethink what performance measurements are important for this new breed of operation. Are the measures of performance that served you well in the call centre the same ones that will determine how well the multichannel contact centre is working? You can organize contact centre standards into three categories: service, quality, and efficiency. 11 http://multichannelmerchant.com/opsandfulfillment 33 Learner Guide We've put together the top 20 metrics in these categories. SERVICES MEASURES The most important measures of performance in the contact centre are those associated with service. Some of these measures are the same for both the old-fashioned call centre and the modern-day contact centre, while some need to change slightly to reflect the new types of transactions. 1) BLOCKAGE An accessibility measure, blockage — busy signals — indicates what percentage of customers will not be able to access the centre at a given time due to insufficient network facilities in place. Most centres measure blockage by time of day or by occurrences of “all trunks busy” situations. Failure to include a blockage goal allows a centre to always meet its speed-of-answer goal simply by blocking the excess calls. As you can imagine, this damages customer accessibility and satisfaction, even though the contact centre appears to be doing a great job of managing the queue. The contact centre must also carefully determine the amount of bandwidth and e-mail server capacity to ensure that large quantities of e-mails do not overload the system. Likewise, the number of lines supporting fax services must be sufficient. 2) ABANDON RATE Call centres measure the number of abandons as well as the abandon rate, since both relate to retention and revenue. Keep in mind, however, that the abandon rate is not entirely under the call centre’s control. While abandons are affected by the average wait time in queue (which the contact centre can control), a multitude of other factors also influence this number, such as individual caller tolerance, time of day, availability of service alternatives, and so on. Abandon rate is not typically a measure associated with e-mail communications, as e-mail does not abandon the “queue” once it has been sent, but it does apply to Web chat interactions. 3) SELF-SERVICE AVAILABILITY More and more contacts are being offloaded from contact centre agents to self-service alternatives. In the contact centre, self-service usage is an important gauge of accessibility and is typically measured as an overall number, by self-service methodology and menu points, and by time of day or demographic group. In cases of Web chat, automated alternatives such as FAQs or use of help functions can reduce the requirement for the live interaction with a Web chat agent. 4) AND 5) SERVICE LEVEL AND AVERAGE SPEED OF ANSWER Service level, the percentage of calls answered in a defined wait threshold, is the most common speed-of-answer measure in the call centre. It is typically stated as X percent of calls handled in Y seconds or less. Average speed of answer (ASA) represents the average wait time of all calls in the period. In the contact centre, speed of answer for Web chat should also be measured and reported with a service level or an ASA number. Many centres measure initial response as well as the back-and-forth times, as having too many open Web chat sessions can slow the expected response time once an interaction has begun. The speed of answer for e-mail transactions, on the other hand, is defined as “response time” and may be depicted in terms of hours or even days, rather than in seconds or minutes of elapsed time. 6) LONGEST DELAY IN QUEUE Another speed-of-answer measure is how long the oldest call in queue has been waiting: the longest delay in queue (LDQ). A number of centres use real-time LDQ to indicate when more staff needs to be 34 Learner Guide made immediately available. Historical LDQ is a more common measure, to indicate the “worst case” experience of a customer over a period of time. Historical LDQ is measured in two categories. One is the longest delay for a customer whose transaction was finally handled by an agent (longest delay to answer), and the other is the longest delay for a customer who finally abandoned the contact (longest delay to abandon), as might be the case in a Web chat scenario. QUALITY MEASURES Perhaps a more significant indicator of customer satisfaction than the “how fast” measures outlined above is “how well” the contact was handled. 7) FIRST RESOLUTION RATE The percentage of transactions completed within a single contact, often called the “one and done” ratio, is a crucial measure of quality. It gauges the ability of the centre, as well as of an individual, to accomplish an interaction in a single step without requiring a transfer to another person or area and without needing another interaction at a future time to resolve the issue. The satisfactory resolution of a call is tracked overall in the centre, as well as by type of call and perhaps by time of day, by team, or by individual. You should likewise track the one-contact resolution rate for e-mail transactions and Web interactions. The resolution rate will likely be lower for e-mails, as it generally takes multiple messages between two parties to resolve a matter to completion. 8) TRANSFER RATE The transfer percentage is an indication of what percentage of contacts has to be transferred to another person or place for handling. Tracking transfers can help fine-tune the routing strategies as well as identify performance gaps of the staff. Likewise, tracking e-mails that must be transferred to others or text chat interactions that require outside assistance helps to identify personnel training issues or holes in online support tools. 9) COMMUNICATIONS ETIQUETTE One of the critical factors that affect the caller's perception of how well a call was handled is simple courtesy. You can monitor the degree to which telephone communications skills and etiquette are displayed via observation or some form of quality monitoring. E-mail and Web chat etiquette should also be observed. Standard wordings that employees should follow in both types of communications should be carefully observed, reviewed, and recorded. 10) ADHERENCE TO PROCEDURES Adherence to procedures such as workflow processes and call scripts is particularly important so that the customer receives a consistent interaction regardless of the contact channel or individual agent involved. In the call centre, adherence to processes and procedures is typically measured for individuals through simple observation and the quality monitoring process. Adherence to processes and procedures such as written scripts and preapproved responses is also important for e-mail and other channels of contact. EFFICIENCY MEASURES Executives in every type of organization are concerned with how well its resources are being put to use. That is especially true in the contact centre, where more than two-thirds of operating expenses are related to personnel costs. 35 Learner Guide 11) AGENT OCCUPANCY Agent occupancy is the measure of actual time an agent is busy on customer contacts compared with available or idle time, calculated by dividing workload hours by staff hours. Occupancy is an important measure of how well the call centre has scheduled its staff and how efficiently it is using its resources. If occupancy is too low, agents are sitting around idle with not enough to do. If occupancy is too high, agents may be overworked. Agent occupancy rates often reflect the randomness and unpredictability of incoming calls. In those instances, the desired level of occupancy may lead managers to pull agents away from processing emails to answering phones, or vice versa. Because Web chat interactions are essentially random events like incoming calls, the same measures of occupancy apply here as in an incoming call scenario. 12) STAFF SHRINKAGE Staff shrinkage is the percentage of time that employees are not available to handle calls. It consists of meeting and training time, breaks, paid time off, off-phone work, and general unexplained time where agents are away from their stations. Staff shrinkage is an important number to track, since it plays an important role in how many people will need to be scheduled each half-hour. The same measures of shrinkage that are used for call centre calculations also apply to the multichannel contact centre. 13) SCHEDULE EFFICIENCY Workforce management is all about getting the “just right” number of people in place each period of the day to handle customer contacts. Schedule efficiency measures the degree of overstaffing and understaffing that result from the scheduling design. Measure schedule efficiency for responding to the randomly arriving Web chats just as you measure it for responding to incoming calls. Since e-mails typically represent sequential rather than random workload, the work fits the schedule, and therefore overstaffing and understaffing measures are less relevant. 14) SCHEDULE ADHERENCE Schedule adherence measures the degree to which the specific hours scheduled are actually worked by the agents. It is an overall call centre measure and is also one of the most important team and individual measures of performance, since it has such great impact on productivity and service. Schedule adherence is a critical measure in the multichannel contact centre as well. Specific hours worked is less of an issue in a group responding to e-mails rather than real-time demand of calls and Web chats, but it is still relevant in processing the work in a timely manner, especially if response-time guarantees exist. 15) AND 16) AVERAGE HANDLE TIME AND AFTER-CALL WORK A common measure of contact handling is the average handle time (AHT), made up of talk time plus after-call work (ACW). To accommodate differences in calling patterns, you should measure and identify it by time of day as well as by day of week. AHT is also important regarding the other types of multichannel contact workload. It's harder to calculate, however, given the difficulties of measuring how long it takes to handle an e-mail or a Web chat transaction. An e-mail may be opened and put aside for varying amounts of time before it is completed. Likewise, a Web chat session may appear to take longer than a phone call, since a Web agent typically has several sessions open at once. 17) SYSTEM AVAILABILITY Slow response time from the computer system can add seconds or minutes to the handle time of a transaction. In the call centre, system speed, uptime, and overall availability should be measured on 36 Learner Guide an ongoing basis to ensure maximum response time and efficiency as well as service to callers. For example, if the interactive voice response (IVR) typically handles 50% of calls to completion but is out of service, more calls will require agent assistance than normal, causing overtime costs, long delays, and generally poor service. Often this will be a measure of performance that resides in the IT department, but it is also a crucial measure of contact centre performance. 18) CONVERSION RATE The conversion rate refers to the percentage of transactions in which a sales opportunity is translated into an actual sale. It can be measured as an absolute number of sales or as a percentage of calls that result in a sale. You should track and measure conversion rates for incoming calls as well as outgoing calls, e-mail transactions, and other Web interactions. 19) UPSELL/CROSS-SELL RATE Many companies measure the up-sell or cross-sell rate as a success rate at generating revenue over and above the original order or intention of the call. It is becoming a more common practice, not just for pure revenue-generating contact centres but for customer service centres as well. Although more prevalent regarding telephone calls, it is also an appropriate measure of performance for other communications channels. 20) COST PER CALL A common measure of operational efficiency is cost per call or cost per minute to handle the call workload, both in a simple call centre and in a multichannel contact environment. This cost per call can simply be a labour cost per call, or it can be a fully loaded rate that includes wage rates in addition to telecommunications, facilities, and other costs. In setting cost per call, it is critical to define the components being used and to use them consistently in evaluating how well the centre is using financial resources over time. This metric is commonly used to compare one company or site to another in benchmarking, but that's not a good practice, as the components included and the types of contacts will often vary. 6. Group Activity: Monitoring Plan In your groups - read the article provided above, then discuss the following questions: 1. Using the 3 categories provided by the Author, draft a basic Monitoring Plan that shows WHAT will be monitored, and WHEN it should happen (daily / weekly / monthly etc). 2. Indicate the methods of monitoring you would apply for each category / area 3. Indicate how feedback will be provided top relevant role players on monitoring findings 4. Indicate the types of Actionable Events that will be considered in correcting deviances in any of the three categories identified. 37 Learner Guide 2.6 Alternative Monitoring Strategy Article: Monitoring Call Centre Performance Read the following article for discussion in the next activity. Have service-level stats outlived their sell-by date?12 We all measure the number of calls answered in 15 seconds, and the amount of wrap-up time. Why? Because they are easy to measure. Richard Snow’s research indicates that they may have gone past their sell-by date. Last year, I carried out a benchmark study into agent performance management. One of the key questions was about what metrics companies currently use to measure how well they are performing at handling customer interactions. I deliberately included options that might be seen as traditional service-level measures and others that are much more business and outcome related. As the chart shows, the results were quite interesting and not really that unexpected, given my overall experience talking to contact centre managers. 12 http://www.callcentrehelper.com 38 Learner Guide The biggest surprise was that the two metrics about pure volumes of calls and other types of interactions handled only made it as far as 9th and 10th in the list. This suggests companies are more interested in timing statistics, with average length of a call not surprisingly being the number one metric and the time taken to complete after-call work making number 4. First-call resolution In terms of business and outcome measures, first-call resolution rates have climbed up the list and made it to number 2, and, given all the hype around it, not surprisingly customer satisfaction scores make it into the top five. But what of real business measures? You have to look quite a long way down the list to number 6 before you see anything business related (number of customer saves) and value of sales only makes it in at number 12, and number of new accounts generated comes bottom of the list. This all rather suggests that traditional service-level metrics have far from reached their sell-by date and companies are more interested in how efficient their centres are rather than how effectively they are performing at delivering against key business objectives. The average company uses six measurements What these top-line results don’t show is that on average companies use six metrics to judge the performance of their centres, and indeed the six includes a mixture of service-level metrics, outcome measures and business-related measures. It is this that really points us to the answer as to whether service stats have outlived their sell-by date, which is of course “yes” and “no”. Yes because by themselves they don’t paint the complete picture and used incorrectly they could actually do more harm than good, and no because they will always be part of any set of metrics used to judge the performance of contact centres (or more broadly, the handling of customer interactions). What I think we will see is that the mix of metrics will change, so while traditional service metrics will remain, the balance will swing more to business- and outcome-related metrics. In fact, I have already seen more importance being placed on a crucial metric – first-call (or interaction) resolution rates (FCR). FCR in truth is a hybrid metric in that it includes an element of efficiency (more interactions were closed at the first attempt so more efficient and fewer follow-ups, also saving money) and an element of outcome (more closed at the first attempt, so happy customers). The challenge for companies is to measure true FCR rates, for example, closing a call by saying “someone will get back to you” should not be included as closed at the first attempt. These days companies have to look across multiple channels to track interactions and define, then monitor, which are truly closed to the customer’s satisfaction. However, what is interesting is that centre managers I have spoken with say changing to focus on FCR brings about a change of behaviour in people handling interactions, in that they try harder to solve 39 Learner Guide the customer’s issue, which can only be good for the customer, the company and the agent. And this is why companies need to move on from just relying on traditional service-level metrics and begin to include business- and outcome-related measures in a composite set of metrics that drive better behaviours, that deliver better business results, and as a consequence indeed drive some of the efficiencies they are so eager to see. 7. Group Activity: Alternative Monitoring Methods In your groups - read the article provided above, then discuss the following questions: • • 3. Do you agree that with the Author that the use of traditional statistics may have reached their “sell by” date? Motivate your answer. What does the Author suggest as alternative monitoring parameters – do you agree with him? Motivate your answer. Conclusion Self Assessment: You have come to the end of this module – please take the time to review what you have learnt to date, and conduct a self assessment against the learning outcomes of this module US SO1 SO2 AC2 AC3 AC4 Learning Outcomes Sorted! Mostly ... Need Help! Understand company specific service levels. Meet, implement and maintain company specific service levels Monitor implementation processes to ensure compliance. Meet service level timeframes and targets consistently as per company specific requirements. Identify and evaluate potential constraints in meeting and maintaining service levels 40 Learner Guide Module 3: Staff Development Learning Outcomes: The following unit standard is covered in this module: • 10327 Provide coaching to personnel within a Contact Centre (Level 4 – 10 credits) The following learning outcomes will be covered in this module: US Area SO1 / AC 2 AC1 AC3 SO2 AC1 AC2 AC3 SO3 AC1 AC2 AC3 AC4 AC5 AC6 EEK1 EEK2 EEK3 EEK4 CCFO1 CCFO2 CCFO3 CCFO4 CCFO5 Learning Outcome Identify development areas within a Contact Centre context that are based on an assessment against performance standards. Conduct a needs analysis according to company specific procedures. Range: formal or informal Define and translate development areas into specific coaching criteria. Select coaching techniques and methodology. Select appropriate coaching techniques and methodologies based on correct identification of development areas. Select coaching techniques and methodologies to learners' NQF entry levels. Ensure that the coaching techniques and methodologies are consistent with performance requirements. Coach Contact Centre personnel. Provide the appropriate support. Adhere to call centre specific coaching principles. Use informal and formal coaching methods. Conduct relevant and objective assessments. Ensure coaching content is consistent with specific development areas. Reach company defined coaching targets and objectives Provide coaching reports to learners and management. Range: Informal coaching: include but not limited to work the floor, coaching from statistics and/or call centre reports. Formal coaching: one on one through listening to live calls, taped calls. Understand methods and techniques to develop understanding by others. Display an in-depth knowledge of formal and informal coaching methodologies in a Contact Centre. Understand communication techniques within a coaching context. Understand people’s behaviours. Identify and solve performance problems in which coaching responses display appropriate critical and creative thinking. Work effectively with others as a member of a coaching or supervisory team. Collect, analyse, organise and critically evaluate information related to the identification of areas of coaching required. Communicate effectively with learners during the process of coaching. Reflect on and explore a variety of strategies to learn more effectively to 41 Learner Guide enhance coaching efforts. 1. Purpose of this Module It is often necessary for Line Managers, Supervisors and experienced employees to take care of staff development in the workplace. This module deals with staff development through coaching and mentoring, within the context of the current skills development platform in South Africa. 2. Working with Adults Learner Tip: To ensure maximum learning takes place, the Workplace Coach must consider certain principles of optimum adult learning, and integrate these principles in the planning and execution of coaching sessions. 2.1 Adult Learning Principles The task of training, coaching or mentoring adults is almost daunting, and must be approached carefully. Should the Workplace Coach misinterpret an adult training session, they may build up a lot of resentment towards the Coach, organization and the intended training. 1. Stimulation of prior knowledge People learn quicker and easier when they can integrate new ideas into what they already know. Find a way of relating your presentation to the existing knowledge of the learners. 2. Self determination and individualization Being self-directed, adults will determine how they will learn. 3. Providing active practice People learn by doing –the more performance is repeated, the greater the learning that takes place. 4. Providing feedback When people are provided with feedback on their performance or knowledge, how accurate it is and what they can do to improve, they tend to learn more effectively. Feedback is the most effective and least utilized form of reinforcement. 5. Experience-based learning Adults learn most effectively if they can relate new information to their own experiences or relate experiences to the content and direction of the programme. 42 Learner Guide 6. Relevance and application Design learning experiences that allow the learner to plan or re-learn application of the new skills and knowledge on a daily basis. 7. Involvement and inclusion Adults want the opportunity to participate provided they have sufficient information to participate effectively. Time must be allocated for questions, clarification and learner contributions. 8. Psychological comfort Adults generally personalize errors, which affects their self-esteem. Attacks on their self-esteem will de-motivate them. 2.2 • • • Learning Styles Approximately 40% of the general population prefer to learn visually (seeing, reading, demonstrations, etc.) Another 40% prefer auditory processing (listening, discussions, presentations, etc.) The remaining 20% learn best kinaesthetically (physically, with feelings, moving the body, etc.) In rare cases, some people prefer learning gustatory (by taste) or olfactory (by smell). 43 Learner Guide Self Reflection: Learning Style • • 3. What type of learner are you? How do you take in the most information? What do you do to organize information for study purposes? The Skills Development Platform Learner Tip: The NQF, or National Qualifications Framework, is a means for transforming education and training in South Africa. It has been designed to:13 • • • • • 3.1 • • • • • • • combine education and training into a single framework, and bring together separate education and training systems into a single, national system; make it easier for learners to enter the education and training system and to move and progress within it; improve the quality of education and training in South Africa; open up learning and work opportunities for those who were treated unfairly in the past because of their race or gender; and enable learners to develop to their full potential and thereby support the social and economic development of the country as a whole. Understanding the NQF It is a map showing different learning pathways It follows an outcomes based approach to education and training It gives persons access to qualifications It enables persons to acquire qualifications through both formal and informal learning situations It closes the gap between education (knowledge) and training (skills) It focuses on what must be learnt rather than what must be taught It recognizes and gives status to different kinds of learning (e.g. academic, vocational, technical, work-based learning and life experience) Learner Tip: The NQF is maintained by SAQA, or the South African Qualifications Authority. Their implementation partners are the SETA’s, who work with employers and providers in implementing skills development in their companies. 13 SAQA Criteria & Guidelines – the NQF 44 Learner Guide The National Framework is broadly bands, and 10 levels of 5 – 10 • • • 3.2 Qualifications structured into three education and training: Academic 2-4 Vocational 1 ABET General Schools and Adult Education Centres operate mainly at GET level ( NQF 1 and below) FET Colleges, and public / private providers offering vocational / skills training operate mainly at FET level (NQF level 2 – 4) Universities and Universities of Technology (old technikons) offering academic qualifications operate mainly at HET level (NQF level 5 – 8) The NQF Level Descriptors Critical Note: Level Descriptors are statements about intellectual demand, complexity of learning and learner autonomy. A Level Descriptor is a description of the competence required on each of the defined learning levels of the NQF, and demonstrates the knowledge, skills and attributes required of the learner in terms of entry potential or capacity, and exit competence. What does that mean? Intellectual Demand How much memory / understanding is required to master the content / skills, volume of the work to be mastered Complexity of Learning How difficult / abstract the content of learning is Learner Autonomy 45 Learner Guide How much the learner is required to interpret information on his own, take responsibility for his own learning and progress. Resource: The following is an extract from Government Gazette14 Vol. 459, No. 25451, 26 September 2003 (Notice 1348 of 2003), which outlines the level descriptors of the NQF. Level descriptors, NQF level 1 A learning programme leading to the award of a qualification or unit standards at NQF level 1 shall develop learners who demonstrate with regard to: a. applied competence - i. a general knowledge of one or more areas or fields of study, in addition to the fundamental areas of study; ii. an understanding of the context within which the learner operates; iii. an ability to use key common tools and instruments; iv. sound listening, speaking, reading and writing skills; v. basic numeracy skills including an understanding of the symbolic systems; vi. an ability to recognize and solve problems within a familiar, well-defined context; vii. an ability to recall, collect and organize given information clearly and accurately; and viii. an ability to report information clearly and accurately in spoken and written form; b. autonomy of learning - i. a capacity to apply themselves to a well-defined task under direct supervision; ii. an ability to sequence and schedule learning tasks; iii. an ability to access and use a range of learning resources; and iv. an ability to work as part of a group. Level descriptors, NQF level 2 A learning programme leading to the award of a qualification or unit standards at NQF level 2 shall develop learners who demonstrate with regard to: a. applied competence - i. a basic operational knowledge of one or more areas or fields of study, in addition to the fundamental areas of study; ii. an understanding of the environment within which the learner operates in a wider context; iii. an ability to use a variety of common tools and instruments; iv. the ability to apply literacy and numeracy skills to a range of different but familiar contexts; v. an ability to use their knowledge to select and apply known solutions to well-defined routine problems; 14 Notice 1348 of 2003 46 Learner Guide vi. a basic ability to collect, organize and report information clearly and accurately; and vii. an ability to express an opinion on given information clearly in spoken and written form; b. autonomy of learning - i. a capacity to work and learn in a disciplined manner in a well-structured and supervised environment; ii. an ability to manage their time effectively; and iii. an ability to develop sound working relationships and an ability to work effectively as part of a group. Level descriptors, NQF level 3 A learning programme leading to the award of a qualification or unit standards at NQF level 3 shall develop learners who demonstrate with regard to: a. applied competence - i. a basic understanding of one or more fields’ or disciplines’ key concepts and knowledge, in addition to the fundamental areas of study; ii. an understanding of the organization or operating environment as a system; iii. application of skills in measuring the environment using key instruments and equipment; iv. operational literacy; v. an ability to use their knowledge to select appropriate procedures to solve problems within given parameters; vi. a basic ability to summaries and interpret information relevant to the context from a range of sources; vii. an ability to take a position on available information, discuss the issues and reach a resolution; and viii. produce a coherent presentation and report, providing explanations for positions taken; b. autonomy of learning i. a capacity to operate within clearly defined contexts; ii. an ability to work and learn within a managed environment; and iii. capacity to actively contribute to team effectiveness. Level descriptors, NQF level 4 A learning programme leading to the award of a qualification or unit standards at NQF level 4 shall develop learners who demonstrate with regard to: a. applied competence - i. a fundamental knowledge base of the most important areas of one or more fields or disciplines, in addition to the fundamental areas of study; ii. an informed understanding of the key terms, rules, concepts, established principles and theories in one or more fields or disciplines; iii. an understanding of the organization or operating environment as a system within a wider context; 47 Learner Guide iv. an ability to apply essential methods, procedures and techniques of the field or discipline; v. an ability to apply and carry out actions by interpreting information from text and operational symbols or representations; vi. an ability to use their knowledge to solve common problems within a familiar context; vii. an ability to adjust an application of a common solution within relevant parameters to meet the needs of small changes in the problem or operating context; viii. an ability to motivate the change using relevant evidence; ix. a basic ability in gathering relevant information, analysis and evaluation skills; and x. an ability to communicate and present information reliably and accurately in writing and verbally; b. autonomy of learning i. a capacity to take responsibility for their own learning within a supervised environment; ii. a capacity to take decisions about and responsibility for actions; iii. a capacity to evaluate their own performance against given criteria; and iv. a capacity to take the initiative to address any shortcomings they find. 8. Group Activity: NQF Level Descriptors Read the level descriptors above. Discuss the following questions in your group, and provide feedback to the class on your findings: 1. How do the level descriptors differ between level 2 and level 4? 2. If you had to coach a person in the Call Centre scripts – how would the learning outcomes be different for level 2 and level 4? 3. How would your expectations of a level 2 and level 4 learner be different? 48 Learner Guide 3.3 Achieving Applied Competence The level descriptors make reference to the learner’s “Applied Competence”. In developing staff through coaching, mentoring, skills training or facilitation, the purpose or goal is for a candidate to reach Applied Competence - so what does that mean? What does Applied Competence mean?15 Learner Tip: The above descriptions of applied competence provides the following principles when conducting staff development: • • • 15 There must be a theory / foundational basis to the coaching There must be a skills aspect in performing the tasks There must be a “penny drop” factor – i.e. the learner truly gets why certain the skills is important, and why it must be done in a particular way. ETD Practices Project 49 Learner Guide 3.4 An Outcomes Based Model In the current skills development platform, training and development is based on the principles of an outcomes based model. The graphic below illustrates the main elements of an outcomes based model: Outcome • Theory • Skills • Attitude Assessment Method Critical Note: WHAT you want to achieve in the training session, will determine WHY you want to develop a coaching session, and for WHO, HOW it will be assessed, WHERE training and assessment will take place, WHEN facilitation, coaching or mentoring should take place, WHERE the best learning experiences will be achieved, and finally – WITH WHAT resources and material. In the outcomes based model the following principles are critical: 1. Outcome The outcome of what must be achieved must be clearly defined. The outcome can be the purpose of the programme, the exit level outcomes or individual competencies that must be achieved. The outcomes are derived from the unit standard purpose statement and specific outcomes. Outcomes are normally worded as: “At the end of the session, the learner will be able to do the following: • Write a letter using the correct templates provided • Take telephone messages using a prescribed format 2. Assessment The purpose and outcomes of the programme will determine how, where and when assessment should take place, and with which tools. The assessment criteria will provide guidance in this regard. 3. Method The programme purpose, outcomes and intended assessment will determine the method of provision and learning, and therefore influence the structure and design of the programme. 50 Learner Guide 9. Group Activity: Developing a Outcomes Based Approach In your groups – select one of the following coaching areas to coach a group of new employees on. • • Newly launched company product New information system / database application For the coaching area selected, develop the following in your group: 1. Clear learning outcome for the coaching session 2. Method of assessment 3. Method of training / coaching 4. Conducting a Needs Analysis Learner Tip: In order to determine the staff development needs accurately, it is important that a training needs analysis be conducted. 4.1 The Training Needs Analysis Many theories and modules regarding Training Needs Analysis have been developed and published. There is no right or wrong way – the most effective way within your organization should be adapted to determine training needs. The Training Needs Analysis that has been adapted for this course consists out of 7 steps: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Recognize the performance alertness Identify whether it is a performance concern Restate the performance objectives Identify the training needs Analyze the training needs Formulate training objectives Design appropriate training intervention 51 Learner Guide M O N I T O R Step 1: Performance Alertness Step 2: Performance Concern Step 3: Performance Objectives Step 4: Training Need Identification 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Performance Alertness Performance Concern Performance Objectives Training Needs Identification Training Needs Analyze Training Objectives Training design Other needs Discard others The first warning that a potential performance problem may exist : • client complaints or management complaints, • deadlines not kept, • conflict between workers, • new machinery / equipment purchased by the company, • excessive wastage, • disciplinary problems experienced • Workplace Skills Plan requirements / skills audit findings • New employee appointments • Professional registration / legislative requirements • Establish whether the performance complaint is cause for concern: determine what is the norm or standard expected, what is the actual performance given and whether there is a gap between the desired and actual performance. • Look at factors such as whether it is a once-off incident, what are the implications thereof, and whether it affects the standards required by the organization. • Re-establish the original standards required - is it realistic, does it apply to that specific situation/person, should the parameters be re-defined? • This must be stated as “actions” as it will be crucial for the trainer to develop the learning outcomes. • Be aware of establishing “what IS, not what SHOULD be”, as idealistic wishes often move the parameters out of reach of the normal employee. • Analyze the performance discrepancies in relation to correction methods. What could fix the gap? • It is important to realize at this stage that not everything can be fixed by training, and needs other than training needs must be put to one side for different action to be taken. • True training issues must be separated from “other” needs, and the input of the employees involved, management and human resources is essential at this point. 52 Learner Guide Step 5: Analysis of Training Needs Step 6: Restate Objectives / outcomes required Step 7: Training Design Monitor / feedback 4.2 • Once you have identified the true training needs, you must analyze them in relation to all the surrounding factors of the organization. • They need checking against factors such as practicality, cost, priorities, learning issues involved, organizational plans, manpower or training alternatives etc. • Training needs should also at this stage be clustered into logical groups or areas of learning or coaching, as this will later on determine the structure of your training course. • The training needs identified are now rewritten as training objectives and compared to the performance objectives in Step 3 - determine whether the needs identified will, if translated to training, satisfy the original objectives. • The training objectives and performance objectives should match, and all irrelevant data discarded. • Based on the training objectives, the Trainer can now also determine which methods of training will be the most effective to satisfy the training and organizational need. • The training method to satisfy the training objective is now stipulated. What will best meet the needs: on-the-job training, seminar, workshops or a formal course? • A combination of several training designs over a period of time? This is the stage where the whole TNA comes together, and the training identified can now be implemented. • The actual process of training / coaching could reveal various further performance concerns, or adjustment may have to be made to some of the stages. Continuous feedback and monitoring ensures that the TNA and final training methods stay in line with the organizational and individual needs, and supports the Japanese management concept o kaizen or continuous learning & improvement within an organization. The Gap Analysis • An essential step of the Training Needs Analysis is the GAP ANALYSIS. This will be determined between step 2 & step 3, and will indicate to the Trainer what the CURRENT performance is, and what the STANDARD performance is. • If the GAP analysis is done correctly, it provides the foundation for the rest of the TNA. 53 Learner Guide The GAP ANALYSIS is illustrated below 16: Analysis of Job Description Current Performance Required Performance What is the GAP? CORRECTION METHOD? Review Standards Consultation Training Needs Other Needs 10. Group Activity: Training Needs Analysis In your group, outline at least 4 functions that must be performed in your Contact Centre environment. 1. Clearly define the standard that is expected in the performance of each function. 2. Outline any possible gaps that may exist between desired and actual performance at this stage 3. Identify the possible solutions – is it a training problem or due to something else? 4. Identify how you would go about correcting the performance discrepancy. 16 Training Needs Analysis in the workplace (R. Peterson) 54 Learner Guide 5. Coaching Mentored Discussion: Coaching & Mentoring Your facilitator will lead a discussion on the topic of Coaching and Mentoring. Questions will be as follows: • • • • What is the difference between Coaching and Mentoring? When is Coaching appropriate, and when is mentoring appropriate? Have you ever been coached – what was the context? Have you ever been mentored – what was the context? It can be difficult to distinguish between coaching, mentoring and counselling. In practice, ‘mentoring’ for example is sometimes used interchangeably with ‘coaching’. Traditionally, however, mentoring in the workplace has tended to describe a relationship in which a more experienced colleague used their greater knowledge and understanding of the work or workplace to support the development of a more junior or inexperienced member of staff. 5.1 Defining Coaching Coaching17 can be defined as developing a person’s skills and knowledge so that their job performance improves, hopefully leading to the achievement of organisational objectives. It targets high performance and improvement at work, although it may also have an impact on an individual’s private life. It usually lasts for a short period and focuses on specific skills and goals. Although there is a lack of agreement among coaching professionals about precise definitions, these are some generally agreed characteristics of coaching in organisations: • • • • • • • It is essentially a non-directive form of development. It focuses on improving performance and developing individuals’ skills. Personal issues may be discussed but the emphasis is on performance at work. Coaching activities have both organisational and individual goals. It assumes that the individual is psychologically well and does not require a clinical intervention. It provides people with feedback on both their strengths and their weaknesses. It is a skilled activity which should be delivered by trained people. Learner Tip: Coaching is the process of teaching a person a task through supervised “trial and error”. 17 www.cipd.co.uk 55 Learner Guide Think of the rugby coaches – they do not teach rugby in front of a white board only, they do it on the field, where players try new tactics, and is constantly corrected by the coach, and repeats the skills until it becomes second nature. 5.2 GROW - a Coaching Model The GROW Coaching Model18 The Grow Coaching Model is probably the most common coaching model used in business, at least in the UK. It offers a way of structuring coaching sessions to facilitate a balanced discussion: • • • • GOAL – defining what you want to achieve REALITY – exploring the current situation, relevant history and future trends OPTIONS – coming up with new ideas for reaching the goal WHAT/WHO/WHEN – deciding on a concrete plan of action In practice, since most coaching is driven by questions, this means that different types of question are used at each stage: • • • • GOAL – questions to define the goal as clearly as possible and also to evoke an emotional response [What do you want to achieve? What will be different when you achieve it? What's important about this for you?] REALITY – questions to elicit specific details of the situation and context [What is happening now? Who is involved? What is their outcome? What is likely to happen in future?] OPTIONS – open-ended questions to facilitate creative thinking [What could you do? What ideas can you bring in from past successes? What haven't you tried yet?] WHAT – focused questions to get an agreement to specific actions and criteria for success [What will you do? When will you do it? Who do you need to involve? When should you see results?] Used judiciously, the GROW model offers an excellent framework for structuring a coaching session. It is particularly useful for beginners, helping them to see the wood for the trees and keep the session on track. However we must remember that models and structures are not the heart of coaching: Critical Note: GROW, without the context of AWARENESS and RESPONSIBILITY, and the skill of questioning to generate them, has little value. One must think of the GROW model as a compass for orientation rather than a rigid sequence of steps to be followed. I don’t think I’ve ever taken part in a coaching session that began with Goals, then progressed smoothly through an analysis of Reality, then brainstormed Options before settling on the What?/When?/Who? and How? of an action plan. 18 http://www.wishfulthinking.co.uk 56 Learner Guide 57 Learner Guide Coaching can begin at any of the four stages of the GROW model. A coachee might begin by telling you about something she wants to achieve (Goal), a current problem (Reality), a new idea for improving things (Options) or by outlining an action plan (What). As a coach, it’s usually a good idea to follow the coachee’s lead initially by asking a few questions to elicit more detail, then move onto the other steps. Many Coaches start a coaching conversation by asking a goal-focused question (e.g. “So what do you want to achieve?”) as a way of setting the tone for the discussion. Sometimes the coachee replies with a description of a problem (Reality) which is fine – I’ll listen, probe for a few details then as soon as possible return to Goals, to keep the conversation focused. On the other hand, if someone comes to the Coaching Session full of ideas and enthusiasm (Goals, Options), you can do your best to help them maintain this while taking account of hard facts (Reality) and getting a commitment to specific action (What). As so often with coaching, the important principle is balance. Resource Guide: Refer to your Resource Guide P13 Resource 1 for an article on Coaching Models. 11. Individual Activity: Coaching Models Your Facilitator will lead a discussion on the Article about Coaching Models. • Why is Coaching Model necessary? • What is the difference between Coaching Strategy and Tactics? 5.3 Process of Coaching 12. Group Activity: Coaching In your groups – look at the graphic illustration of the EDIIT Coaching Process below. Select one of the following tasks, and draw up a Coaching Sheet of how you would facilitate learning through the EDIIT Principle of the skill. • • • • • Milking a Cow Ironing a shirt Boiling eggs perfectly Making a box from paper Building a bird feeder 58 Learner Guide A process of coaching that is very easy to use is the EDIIT Principle of Coaching. This technique works as follows: Explanation Explain the theory underpinning the skills, including safety precautions. Describe the purpose and process of the skill, and the expected standard of performance. Demonstration Demonstrate the skill (or call for a demonstration by another person), reinforcing the theory and process steps. Imitation Allow the learner to imitate the action, and provide correction or additional support until the learner has mastered the skill. Interrogation Interrogate the “what if” scenarios around the skill – this enforces critical cross field competence, and explores the learners ability to apply the same concepts in troubleshooting. Testing/ follow up Test the learner’s ability against the set standard – this assessment must be documented and a decision of competence made. 59 Learner Guide Self Reflection: • • • 5.4 Which method of Coaching have you used before? What is the standard method of coaching used in your organization, and do you make use of Coaching Sheets? How do you document Coaching sessions? Skills to Coach Self Analysis 19 Coaching and development are essential in building skills and motivation. The first key step in successful development is to spot the opportunities. A very simple and highly effective tool is the Coaching Wheel. The wheel can comprise any group of skills, behaviours and job responsibilities that are relevant to a particular role, individual and organisation. The example below is of a possible view of the key competencies required within the role of a Contact Centre Team Leader. The coach would work with the individual to ascertain the elements of their role and then challenge them to score their own current performance (10 is the most positive score and 0 the least). This subjective self rating combines their ability, experience, enjoyment, motivation or satisfaction. For each segment of the wheel a line can then be drawn at the agreed rating level. The 19 Coaching Wheel http://www.rxp.co.uk/services/self.php 60 Learner Guide Learner Tip: At the end of this process the individual (and coach) would have a visual view of how they see themselves in their role. Immediately this may identify the key areas that need short term developmental focus. The concept of the coaching wheel is therefore generic – it can be applied between coach and recipient for many different areas and management levels. 13. Group Activity: Team Leader Wheel In your groups – look at the Team Leader Wheel and identify the following: • What do you think are the key competencies in each slice of the Team Leader Wheel? • Identify at least 2 competencies per slice. 5.5 Decision to Coach When is coaching the best development intervention? The first step will be the identification of some kind of learning or development needs, either by the individual themselves, their line manager or someone from the HR department. Once this has been identified, the next step is for the manager and the individual to decide how best the need can be met. Critical Note: Coaching is just one of a range of training and development interventions that organisations can use to meet identified learning and development needs. Its merits should be considered alongside other types of development interventions, such as training courses, mentoring or on-the-job training. Employee preferences should also be kept in mind. There is a danger that coaching can be seen as a solution for all kinds of development needs. It is important that coaching is only used when it is genuinely seen as the best way of helping an individual learn and develop. A useful decision tree tool is reproduced in the figure on the following page. 61 Learner Guide Decision tree: is coaching an appropriate intervention?20 Some examples of situations where coaching is a suitable development tool include: • • • • helping competent technical experts develop better interpersonal or managerial skills developing an individual’s potential and providing career support developing a more strategic perspective after a promotion to a more senior role handling conflict situations so that they are resolved effectively. It is important to remember that here are some individuals who may not respond well to coaching. This may be because their problems are best dealt with by another type of intervention, or it may be because their attitude may interfere with the effectiveness of coaching. So before coaching is begun, organisations need to assess an individual’s ‘readiness’. Learner Tip: Some examples of situations when coaching is not an appropriate intervention are if the individual has psychological problems, they are resistant to coaching or they lack self-insight. 20 www.cipd.co.uk 62 Learner Guide Resource Guide: Refer to your Resource Guide P14 Resource 2 for an article on the Qualities of a Good Coach. 14. Case Study: Coaching – or Not? Read the case studies of learners in the workplace given below and relate them to the descriptions of the coaches’ role. Identify the kind of support / guidance you would give to each of the learners. Case Study 1 Sandy works in the Contact Centre, and deals with new product launches. She prepares thoroughly by reading all available material on the new products, and understands the rules and point systems around the new products well. She is always able to answer questions from other Call centre Agents on the products. In the workplace her performance is poor, she is very nervous and easily intimidated by client questions, and makes do not seem to have a good relationship with clients. Case Study 2 Daniel’s Supervisor has worked very hard to explain to Daniel that he must pay attention to certain safety rules and protocols in the Contact Centre environment. However, he often ‘ignores protocol’ in order to finish his call allocation for the day quickly. Twice during his competency assessments the assessor had to intervene to prevent misinformation being communicated to clients. In addition, he has been seen on several occasions bringing unauthorized food and drink beverages into the contact centre environment, and even indulging while on the phone with clients. There have been feedback sessions and targets set for improvement on several occasions - each time it is discussed with Daniel he promises to improve. Daniel is very popular with his fellow workers. An Old Lesson … Although the lights went out in Vaudeville a long time ago, one of the standard gags was about the guy looking for his keys under a street lamp. Another guy stops by to help and asks, “Where do you think you lost them?” To which the man replies, “About a half of a block away over by my car, but the light is better here.” To improve live call handling, start looking where the keys are likely to be 63 Learner Guide (system-wide improvements), not where the light seems good (trying to improve agents one at a time). 64 Learner Guide 5.6 Using Coaching Plans & Sheets As a Supervisor or experienced employee required to conduct coaching with fellow staff members, you may be required to plan for, and document your coaching sessions. Example 1: A Coaching Sheet could therefore be structured in the following manner: COACHING SHEET 1 Coaching Topic 2 Coach 3 Trainee(s) 4 Date of Coaching Session 5 7 Briefing – Performance Concern Proposed method of coaching Trainee Demonstration 8 Coaching Questions 9 Assessment (Date, process, decision) 6 The Coaching Sheet can also be used as basis for drafting a Coaching Plan, and updating the plan afterwards as a Coaching Sheet to reflect actual activities that took place in the Coaching Session. Example 2: A simpler format of keeping record of coaching activities are illustrated below: Date Topic of Coaching Description of Coaching Activities Coach Candidate Signature Signature Generally, the format above is used for higher level candidates, and the Coaching Sheet is used like a reflective journal – this means the candidate keeps the record up to date and the Coach just signs off that the sessions actually happened. 65 Learner Guide 15. Individual Activity: Coaching Plan On your own – select any area of operation on your IRIS system that a new employee may need coaching on. Using Coaching Plan format below, COACHING PLAN Coaching Topic Coach Trainee(s) Date of Coaching Session Briefing – Performance Concern Learning Outcomes Proposed Method of Coaching Proposed Coaching Questions Proposed Method of Assessment 5.7 Formal vs. Informal Coaching Methodologies The word ‘coaching’ conjures up an image of a one-to-one session scheduled in the diary, focusing exclusively on the coachee’s goals and how s/he can work towards them. And a lot of coaching does take place in this format, particularly when delivered by an external coach.21 Formal coaching sessions are a powerful way of using coaching with your team, and should never be undervalued – yet the Contact Centre Team Leader also has the option of using coaching informally, integrating the coaching approach into the everyday conversations with the team, so that it becomes part of her basic approach to management. 21 http://www.wishfulthinking.co.uk 66 Learner Guide Critical Note: In their book Solution-Focused Coaching, Jane Green and Anthony Grant talk of a ‘coaching continuum’: In-house workplace coaching lies on a continuum from the formal structured workplace coaching at one end to the informal, on-the-run workplace coaching at the other – what you might call corridor coaching: the few minutes snatched in the corridor in the midst of a busy project. The two types of coaching are not mutually exclusive – many effective coaching managers use both styles in complementary ways. Formal Coaching The most obvious characteristic of formal coaching is that coaching is being used explicitly – during the coaching session both parties are clear that they are engaged in ‘coaching’ and are committed to this process as well as the outcome. Formal coaching usually takes place during scheduled appointments, so that time is set aside specifically for coaching work. By having dedicated sessions, the manager sends a powerful signal to individual team members that their development and success is important, and that she is there to provide support. When a series of appointments are scheduled, coaching becomes a beginning and end. This can have a motivating effect, with the well-known phenomenon of ‘deadline magic’ coming into play 67 Learner Guide towards the end of the coaching process, when both coach and coachee focus their efforts on achieving the goal(s) within the allotted time. The clear parameters of formal coaching mean that both coach and coachee tend to spend most coaching sessions in coaching mode – i.e. with the coachee doing most of the talking, and the coach primarily engaged in listening, asking questions and giving feedback. Informal Coaching Informal coaching is a bit of a grey area – when coaching is used implicitly, as part of the everyday conversation between the manager and her team, it may be that neither party would describe the conversation as ‘coaching’. Learner Tip: Some team members are uncomfortable with the word ‘coaching’ or the idea of being coached – but respond well to a manager who takes the time to listen carefully to them and ask questions that empower them to find their own way of meeting a challenge or solving a problem, without being told what to do. Or a manager may be so familiar with the coaching approach (or it may be so similar to her natural communication style) that she may not consciously decide to ‘coach’ someone but instinctively listen and ask rather than ‘tell and sell’. Informal coaching does not take place in scheduled appointments but in everyday workplace conversations. These conversations may be short or long, one-to-one or within a group, taskfocused or people-focused – what qualifies them as coaching is not a formal model or structure, but a style of conversation. The coaching style of management is one in which the manager typically takes a ’step back’ in order to empower team members and elicit their commitment and creativity, helping them to both get the job done and learn something new in the process. So instead of giving orders or dispensing knowledge, the manager asks questions and listens to see what team members come up with. For a manager-coach, coaching is not something that begins and ends with the coaching session or programme – asking questions, listening, empathizing and giving observational (rather than judgmental) feedback are elements of her personal communication style. For a coaching organization, the coaching style is simply ‘the way we do things round here’. Learner Tip: Because informal coaching is a way of doing things rather than a clearly defined programme, there is no overall beginning and end, but an ongoing process. The coaching conversation becomes open-ended, with markers such as goalsetting and review occurring along the way, not as book-ends but part of a larger process of learning. 68 Learner Guide As informal coaching is not confined to formal sessions, the coaching style is not used exclusively but according to the demands of the situation, as part of a range of management styles. During a given conversation a manager may switch in and out of coaching mode, as well as using other management styles. Which style should I use? Neither style is better or worse than the other, and many managers use both. Which one you use will depend on a range of factors: The manager’s preference Some managers are comfortable with scheduling formal coaching sessions and having a clearly structured coaching programme – others’ toes curl up at the very thought. When working with people, it’s vitally important to be yourself and use or adapt an approach that you feel comfortable with. So make sure you are honest with yourself and your team about your own preferences and work with, not against them. On the other hand there’s nothing wrong with a bit of creative experiment – I’ve seen some managers achieve great results by starting the first coaching session by saying “Well this is a new approach for me and to be honest I’m not sure whether it’s my style, but let’s try it out and see how it goes…”. The coachee’s preference It goes without saying that this is at least as important as the manager’s preference. Some coachees love the idea of having dedicated time for their own coaching and development work, as well as clearly defined goals and a structure for achieving them. Others, particularly in creative agencies, are deeply suspicious of any kind of formal structure for this kind of work, and much prefer to do things in a more informal, casual way. Ignore this at your peril! Just as individuals have preferences, so do organizations. Approaches that are well-received in a large broadcaster or newspaper may be unworkable or inflammatory in a small agency or studio. This doesn’t mean you can’t try something new, but you may have to be creative about how you sell it to people within the company. Company culture The kind of task It’s difficult to generalize about this, as I’ve seen both formal and informal coaching used successfully with a wide range of tasks and goals. However for ‘big picture’ goals such as a large new project, a person’s career or annual goals, a formal coaching session can be a powerful way of setting the scene and getting people focused. 69 Learner Guide Learner Tip: There are also many instances in which a smaller or ongoing issue may not merit a formal meeting, but a brief chat by the proverbial water cooler is just the job to tease out a problem and get things moving again. 6. Conducting the Coaching Activity Resource Guide: Refer to your Resource Guide – Module 3 Resource 6.1 Communication Critical Note: In conducting your staff development session, it is critical that clear communication takes place of what the learning outcomes are, what the assessment expectations are, and how training will take place. 6.2 A Communications Model Learner Tip: There is always a sender and a receiver in communication. At least there is an intended receiver. In the diagram above A is the sender, B is the receiver. In between there is a message being sent with certain intent, and there is a message being received with certain perception. Successful communication depend on how close the intent and perception is to each other! 70 Learner Guide • A and B have different personal realities. They each have their own world formed by their experiences, their perceptions, their ideas, etc. They will perceive, experience, and interpret things differently. The same event will always be perceived a little different by each of two people. • The sender will have some kind of meaning she wishes to convey to the receiver. In the case of facilitation, it is a structured, pre-agreed message that needs to be communicated, and the receiver is aware of the pre-agreement – therefore there is a measure of anticipation and preconception that has already been created. • Between humans there will be several layers of the message being sent. There will often be a verbal portion, something that is being expressed in language, spoken or written. And there is also a non-verbal portion, covering everything else, most notably body language. Sometimes the verbal and non-verbal messages don't agree with each other, they are incongruent. If they do agree we say that they are congruent. • Based on what the receiver perceives, and based on her interpretation of the verbal and nonverbal input, she will form a concept in her reality of what the meaning of the message is. It will mean something to her. • It might or might not be what the sender intended. In successful communication the perceived message will approximate the intended message to the sender's satisfaction. However, the sender will only know that if she receives a message back that is congruent with what she had in mind. • One can never take for granted that the receiver has the same reality as the sender. One can never take for granted that the receiver will interpret the message the same way as the sender intended it. Self Reflection: • • Why are the above principles on communication important for the Workplace Coach? How can you use the principles outlined above to ensure that your Coaching Session is effective? Resource Guide: Refer to your Resource Guide P 16 Resource 3 for an article on Coaching Language. 16. Individual Activity: Coaching Language Your Facilitator will lead a discussion on the article about Coaching Language. • Discuss each area identified in the article as a “no-no”, and rate the 71 Learner Guide • importance of the discussion point on a scale from 1 – 4 (Least to most important) At the end of the discussion, provide feedback to the class on your top 3 rated “no-no” areas, and compare notes whether your class mates agreed or differed 72 Learner Guide 6.3 Providing Feedback Listening effectively • • • • • Try to listen for feelings and observe non-verbal behaviour. Focus all attention on the other person – don’t allow your thoughts to drift. Listen to yourself as you are giving feedback Send non-verbal signals indicating supportiveness, a desire to help regardless of the nature of the message Respond to intense emotion sympathetically. Guidelines for giving Feedback • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Where possible, give instant feedback Keep the time short between the learner’s performance and feedback Summarise the content and flag the fact that it’s a summary Encourage learners to assess their own performance Balance positive with negative (allow learner to identify negative point himself by asking appropriate questions) Negative points should be constructive – reframe negative points Where written feedback is given, it should be followed up with oral feedback Encourage learners to obtain feedback from other sources (peers, supervisors, etc.) Make criteria clear prior to assessments Distinguish between different skills Offer support Relate feedback to performance rather than person Distinguish between formative and summative assessments Give periodic feedback on progress Self Reflection: Do you know what is meant with the “Sandwich Feedback method? Can you describe how that works? 73 Learner Guide 74 Learner Guide 6.4 A Feedback Model Ensure Goals and Expectations Are Shared Up Front Establishing performance objectives is an important part of obtaining the desired performance from any employee. In most cases, these goals should be established in terms of the effects of the employee’s behaviour, not the behaviour itself. What is wanted are results, not simple-minded compliance? Focus On Performance Feedback from external sources is intended to influence performance. Performance is often confused with behaviour and it pays to keep the two straight. When we speak of performance, we are referring to a complex mix of goals, expectations, behaviour, and the effects of behaviour. Behaviour is a means to an end. The goal or end sought is a result of some kind. Results consist of or are brought about by the effects of behaviour, but behaviour itself is not the result sought (except in certain limited instances). Make the Consequences Known Frequently, people do not know the consequences of their actions until it is too late. This is especially true when the effects of behaviour, instead of being immediate and direct, are indirect and delayed. And it is especially true when these effects consist of impact on other people. Be Specific About Behaviour and Its Effects When giving feedback to an employee, it does not help to simply pass judgment. Feedback, to be useful, must provide specific information about behaviour, its effects, and its consequences in light of previously established goals and expectations. 75 Learner Guide Your Goals and Expectations Aren’t Necessarily Mine—Or Anyone Else’s There is always the potential for conflict in goals and expectations. This has implications for feedback. Regarding people, positive feedback acts to confirm behaviour and negative feedback acts to disconfirm it. What is essential to understand here is that the classification of feedback as positive or negative is made by the person receiving it. Don’t Wait for Feedback, Go Get It One mark of our maturity and security as human beings is that a key measure of how we’re doing is progress regarding the attainment of our goals. These goals might be personal, professional, or job, task, or project specific. We are often able to obtain feedback on our own but, on occasion, and especially when the effects we seek to create are in or involve others, we have to solicit feedback. Our own conclusions aren’t enough. If you want to know how you’re doing, you have to accept the responsibility for finding out. Factor In the Long-Term View People remember. They also learn. Effects and consequences, even when delayed or indirect, can and do have an effect on behaviour and performance. 17. Group Activity: Conducting a Coaching Session In your group, you are required divide into 2 sets – Coaches and Learners. Coaches, select a fun skill that you wish to coach your learner group on. Example: • How to make a really good sandwich / salad. • How to apply evening wear makeup. • How to do the Hakka (All Blacks War Dance) Each member of the Coaching Group must give instructions for one step in the skill, before the next member takes over. Make sure that you follow the EDIIT Coaching Model in your coaching session. Coaches must draw up a Coaching Plan beforehand, and complete a Coaching Sheet afterwards. At the end of the Coaching Session, the Learner Group will critique the Coaching Session and provide feedback to the Coaches on their performance. The Learner Group will then become the Coaches, and the exercise repeated. 76 Learner Guide Resource Guide: Refer to your Resource Guide P 18 Resource 4 for an article on Improving Call Centre Performance 7. Preparing Coaching Reports Reports regarding Call Centre Agents progress and competence can take various formats – depending on whether the process of coaching was undertaken in a formal or informal manner. Coaching reports based on informal coaching could range from: • • • • Management notes based on “working the floor” Coaching Journals Coaching Sheets Analysis of statistical data / Call Centre Reports Coaching reports based on formal coaching could range from: • • Listening to active calls – completed observation sheets Listening to taped calls – Assessment Sheet and related Development Plan Resource Guide: Refer to your Resource Guide P 20 Resource 5 for an article on Coaching Call Centre Coaches. 77 Learner Guide 7.1 Statistical Analysis Below is an example of a Statistical Analysis done of a Call Centre’s performance. 22 The report could then be used to draft an overall summary of the additional training or coaching needs that are required. Name Test Date Overall Test Score Average CallHandling Time SO MT DCR DCN PSRN ALP TW Flores, Maria 04 February 2010 05 February 2010 04 February 2010 04 February 2010 04 April 2010 04 February 2010 04 February 2010 04 February 2010 04 February 2010 04 March 2010 04 February 2010 04 March 2010 04 March 2010 04 February 2010 04 March 2010 91 03:42 Medium High High Medium High High High 88 04:01 Medium High High High High High Medium 85 04:27 Medium High High Medium High High High 85 03:51 Medium Medium High High High High Low 83 04:11 Low Medium High Medium High Medium High 78 04:57 High Medium High Medium Medium Medium High 74 03:58 Medium Medium High Medium Medium Medium High 73 04:38 Medium Medium High Medium High Medium Medium 72 04:26 High Low High Medium Low Medium Medium 68 04:44 Low Medium High Medium High Medium Medium 68 04:23 Medium Low High Medium Low Medium High 67 04:52 Low Low Medium Medium Medium Medium Medium 65 04:36 High Low Medium Medium Medium Low Low 63 05:14 Medium Low Low Medium Low Low Medium 62 05:02 Low Low Low Low Medium Low Medium Armstrong, Kevin Taylor, Gillian Zak, Barbara Lee, Dan Owen, Dale Hunter, Mitchell Dalton, Alex Wing, Richard Johnson, Jim Jones, Amy Dodge, Chris Rameirez, Ray Spencer, Elizabeth Smith, Pat KEY: SO - Sales Orientation MT - Multi-Tasking DCR - Developing Customer Rapport 22 DCN - Discovering Customer Needs PSRN - Problem Solving & Responding to Customer Needs ALP - Ability to Learn & Apply Procedures TW - Teamwork Easy Simulation: © Employment Technologies Corporation (2004) 78 Learner Guide Skill Low Medium High Sales Orientation 4 (26%) 8 (53%) 3 (20%) Multi-Tasking 6 (40%) 6 (40%) 3 (20%) Developing Customer Rapport 2 (13%) 2 (13%) 12 (74%) Discovering Customer Needs 1 (7%) 12 (80%) 2 (13%) Problem Solving and Responding to Customer needs Ability to Learn and Apply Procedures 3 (20%) 5 (34%) 7 (46%) 3 (20%) 8 (53%) 4 (26%) Teamwork 2 (14%) 7 (46%) 6 (40%) 18. Individual Activity: Coaching Needs On your own – review the report sample provided above and do the following: 1. Can you identify from the report where the major areas of development would be? Identify at least 3 areas, and list them in order of priority. 2. What would you recommend to management – formal or informal coaching, or a combination of both? Motivate your selection of Coaching Technique. 7.2 Individual Reporting Below is an example of an individualized Report, which could be used / adapted to provide feedback to management on individual performance and developmental needs, as well as Development Plans that must be monitored. CALL CENTRE AUDIT PRIVATE & CONFIDENTIAL - MR. TOM SAMPLE Basic Characteristics Outgoing, persuasive, gregarious, thorough, careful, detail-orientated, sociable, positive, precise Understanding and Responding to Client Needs • • • • • Tom Sample is friendly and amiable and will relate positively to most people He is anxious to help others and create a favourable impression He is particularly sensitive to negative feedback He will rarely be consciously antagonistic but may, sometimes, respond in a tactless way Tom Sample prefers a specialist approach to his interaction with callers 79 Learner Guide Imparting Information • • • • Tom Sample is a competent, confident and factual communicator He will be able to impart technical or specialist information logically and with flair His communications will be conducted at a fast pace and will be both convincing and enthusiastic Tom Sample is a good promoter of images, concepts, his organization and himself Problem Solving • • • • Tom Sample prefers to act in a consulting capacity rather than as a decision-maker He is a perfectionist. This fact may delay him finding solutions Tom Sample backs up his suggested solutions with all the available supporting information He demonstrates a high degree of persuasiveness, activity and diplomacy Demonstrating Persistence with Sensitivity • • • • Tom Sample is, at times, not particularly sensitive to his peers He will concede when directly challenged or confronted He will certainly prefer to work in a non-antagonistic environment He can become bored if he is not regularly involved actively, with others Response to Peak Work Loads • • • • • Tom Sample may be more concerned with popularity than tangible results He can often talk himself out of demanding assignments He may also allow himself get bogged down in unnecessary detail He can be an impetuous decision-maker when under pressure In order to fully understand Tom Sample's response to pressure, we suggest that reference is made to the comments contained in the "Behaviour Under Pressure" paragraph within the basic PPA Report. Managing Aggression and Unreasonable Clients • • • • Tom Sample will use his positive and optimistic personality to overcome unreasonable claims He has the ability to solve both human problems and technical issues If in a conflict situation, Tom Sample will revert to rules and procedures in support of his stance Tom Sample will use information, data and detail, coupled with his persuasive manner to reassure aggressive callers Proactively Promoting Products, Services and Concepts • • • • Tom Sample has a most persuasive presentation style He can be verbally communicative and physically demonstrative He has a high social drive For a more thorough description of his communication and promotional capabilities, we recommend that the "Sales Summary" be prepared for Tom Sample. 80 Learner Guide Summary Tom Sample is a highly social individual. He prefers to influence verbally with specialist advice. He can cope with detail but prefers variety of task. Tom Sample seeks to avoid confrontation, preferring a more friendly, participative and democratic environment. He has a high level of restless energy and a strong need for variety of tasks. His behavioural style will, we believe, be too cautious, conservative and erratic for outbound call centre positions and could possibly be lacking in patience, stability and self-control for inbound Call Centre activities. Resource Guide: Individual Report Please refer to your Resource Guide (Module 3 – Resource 6) for an additional individualized report on Call Centre Performance. Make sure you read it and do the mentored discussion below, as it will assist you in completing your Portfolio Activities for this section. Mentored Discussion: Individual Report • • 8. Do you agree with the developmental areas identified at the end of the report? Which other developmental areas have you spotted in the report? Conclusion Self Assessment: You have come to the end of this module – please take the time to review what you have learnt to date, and conduct a self assessment against the learning outcomes of this module. 81 Learner Guide US Learning Outcomes SO1 / AC 2 Identify development areas within a Contact Centre context that are based on an assessment against performance standards. Conduct a needs analysis according to company specific procedures. Range: formal or informal Define and translate development areas into specific coaching criteria. Select appropriate coaching techniques and methodology based on correct identification of development areas. Select coaching techniques and methodologies to learners' NQF entry levels. Coach Contact Centre personnel. Adhere to call centre specific coaching principles through use of informal and formal coaching methods. Conduct relevant and objective assessments. Provide coaching reports to learners and management. Range: Informal coaching: include but not limited to work the floor, coaching from statistics and/or call centre reports. Formal coaching: one on one through listening to live calls, taped calls. Understand methods and techniques to develop understanding by others. Identify and solve performance problems in which coaching responses display appropriate critical and creative thinking. Work effectively with others as a member of a coaching or supervisory team. Collect, analyse, organise and critically evaluate information related to the identification of areas of coaching required. Communicate effectively with learners during the process of coaching. AC1 AC3 SO2 AC2 SO3 AC2 AC3 AC6 EEK1 CCFO1 CCFO2 CCFO3 CCFO4 Sorted! Mostly ... Need Help! 82 Learner Guide PoE Activity: Refer to your Portfolio Guide for the assessment activities related to this section. Formative Activities These are the Critical Outcomes adopted by SAQA: 1. Identify and solve problems in which responses display that responsible decisions using critical and creative thinking have been made. 2. Work effectively with others as a member of a team, group, organisation, community. 3. Organise and manage oneself and one’s activities responsibly and effectively. 4. Collect, analyse, organise and critically evaluate information. 5. Communicate effectively using visual, mathematical and/or language skills in the modes of oral and/or written presentation. 6. Use science and technology effectively and critically, showing responsibility towards the environment and health of others. 7. Demonstrate an understanding of the world as a set of related systems by recognising that problem-solving contexts do not exist in isolation 8. In order to contribute to the full personal development of each learner and the social and economic development of the society at large, it must be the intention underlying any programme of learning to make an individual aware of the importance of: Reflecting on and exploring a variety of strategies to learn more effectively; Participating as responsible citizens in the life of local, national and global communities; Being culturally and aesthetically sensitive across a range of social contexts; Exploring education and career opportunities, and Developing entrepreneurial opportunities. 83 1. Group Activity: Computer Literacy 2. Individual Activity: MIS Access 3. Group Activity: SLA Indicators 4. Individual Activity: Using Metrics in Management 5. Group Activity: Company Specific Service Levels 6. Group Activity: Monitoring Plan 7. Group Activity: Alternative Monitoring Methods 8. Group Activity: NQF level Descriptors 9. Group Activity: Developing an Outcomes Based Approach 10. Group Activity: Training Needs Analysis 11. Individual Activity: Coaching Models 12. Group Activity: Coaching 13. Group Activity: Team Leader Wheel 14. Case Study: Coaching or Not? 15. Individual Activity: Coaching Plan 16. Individual Activity: Coaching Language 17. Group Activity: Conducting a Coaching Session 18. Individual Activity: Coaching Needs √ X X √ X √ X √ X √ X X X X X X X X √ X X X X X X √ √ X X X X √ X √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √ √ X X √ X X X X √ X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X √ X X X X X X √ X X X X X X √ √ X X X √ 7 understanding of the world as a set of related systems 8. Contribute to the full personal development 6 Use science and technology 5 Communicate effectively 4 Collect analyse evaluate information 3 Organize and manage oneself 2 Work with others 1 Identify & solve problems 10327 FORMATIVE ACTIVITY 10313 Learner Guide X X X X 84 Learner Guide Administration 1. Learner Evaluation Form Learning Programme Name Trainer Name Learner name (Optional) Dates of Facilitation Employer / Work site Date of Evaluation Learner Signature Trainer Signature Critical Note: Please complete the Evaluation Form as thoroughly as you are able to, in order for us to continuously improve our training quality! The purpose of the Evaluation Form is to evaluate the following: • • • • logistics and support facilitation training material assessment Your honest and detailed input is therefore of great value to us, and we appreciate your assistance in completing this evaluation form! 85 1 2 3 4 Excellent Criteria / Question Above Standard No Sufficient Logistics and Support Evaluation Poor A Below Standard Learner Guide 5 Criteria / Question 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 2 3 4 Excellent No Above Standard Trainer Evaluation Poor B Sufficient Was the Programme Coordinator helpful and efficient? Was the training equipment and material used effective and prepared? 3 Was the training venue conducive to learning (set-up for convenience of learners, comfortable in terms of temperature, etc.)? Additional Comments on Logistics and Support Below Standard 1 2 5 The Trainer was prepared and knowledgeable on the subject of the programme The Trainer encouraged learner participation and input The Trainer made use of a variety of methods, exercises, activities and discussions The Trainer used the material in a structured and effective manner The Trainer was understandable, approachable and respectful of the learners The Trainer was punctual and kept to the schedule 86 Learner Guide 1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 2 3 4 Excellent Criteria / Question Above Standard No Sufficient Learning Programme Evaluation Poor C Below Standard Additional Comments on Facilitation & Learning Programme 5 The learning outcomes of the programme are relevant and suitable. The content of the programme was relevant and suitable for the target group. The length of the facilitation was suitable for the programme. The learning material assisted in learning new knowledge and skills to apply in a practical manner. The Learning Material was free from spelling and grammar errors Handouts and Exercises are clear, concise and relevant to the outcomes and content. Learning material is generally of a high standard, and user friendly Spelling/ Grammatical Errors Trainer/Learner File, etc. Section/Page What? Additional Comments on Facilitation & Learning Programme 87 1 2 3 4 Excellent Criteria / Question Above Standard No Sufficient Assessment Evaluation Poor D Below Standard Learner Guide 5 1 A clear overview provided of the assessment requirements of the programme was provided 2 The assessment process and time lines were clearly explained 3 All assessment activities and activities were discussed Additional Comments on Assessment 88