Average Handle Time – A Good Metric? For Whom?

stop-watch

Two things drive me to a posting on Average Handle Time (AHT).

  1. A previous posting on Average Speed of Answer (ASA) remains the most popular posting on the blog, so I thought another Contact Center metric may be welcomed by our visitors.
  2. A recent discussion with a group of the Contact Center managers clearly showed AHT to be a point of interest.

Metrics can be a subjective bunch, and as such, definitive answers about their use may be ilusive, so please be ready for some generalizations based mostly on my personal experience – which by no means is definitive.

AHT is an often misunderstood metric because on the surface it looks like a problem to be managed, while if we look deeper, it tends to act more like a symptom.

AHT Definition: The average length of time it take agents to handle a customer, wrap-up and become available for the next customers? (This differs from Average Talk Time (ATT), which excludes wrap-up and other ancillary activities such as research).

The obvious benefit of a short AHT is that agents can take care of more customers in a set time and therefore, less agens are required to handle the incoming load. Expectedly, management, usually upper management, feels very comfortable placing attention on AHT as a way to control the largest cost of a contact center, people. Likewise, many Contact Center managers concentrate on AHT ensuring agent efficiency, at times incenting agents to achieve lower an lower AHT levels.

In my experience, the control-point for AHT is not the agent. In stead, AHT is more directly affected by our ability to provide the appropriate environment, knowledge, tools and expectations.

Here are the areas I believe contribute most to AHT.

Appropriate Staffing Levels
Staffing can become a vicious cycle. “If we had more staff we would not have this problem, but, if we were more efficient we would not need so much staff”. Although this posting is too general to address this important balance, we do know that bad Average Speed of Answer, Service Levels and excessive hold times which are greatly affected by staffing levels, can add 30 to 60 seconds to your AHT. Primarily, in the time it takes to calm down irate customers and the composure time for agent stress. Irate customers have a great effect on agent morale and the efficient flow of the call. It’s amazing how much more efficient we can be when our customers are cooperative and our agents are not stressed out.

Training
It goes without saying that knowledgeable agents have lower AHT than new agents. But technical and product training only take us so far. Our agents must also know how to quickly assess a customer’s needs, troubleshoot and create an interactive flow that is conducive to quick resolution. They must also know when to escalate. An simple analysis of call length within a queue can show us the tipping point of AHT. Passed a certain call length, we can see calls have a higher likelihood of reaching astronomical AHTs. That is the point at which to intervene and ask your agents if they need help. I know of a team that calls this the 12 minute rule – at 12 minutes a lead agent or supervisor would simply ask “need help?”. Less stress for the agent, lower AHT.

Processes
How many screens do your agents need to manage in order to manage an interaction? Do they need to get up from their station and send faxes, pull manuals, etc? Inefficient processes can add considerably to handle time.

Empowerment
An empowered agent is a less stressed agent who knows he/she has some decision-making power to do the right thing for the customer. Less time is spent working towards an unlikely solution while giving the agent more ownership of the outcome and more perceived value as an employee.
Of course, empowerment is not for every agent and requires proper training and clear guidelines, but we would do well to push as much empowerment as possible to the front lines of our customer touch-points. Surprisingly, empowerment can be easier to manage than the policies and processed designed to ensure customer satisfaction through escalations.

Attrition
Attrition is an indicator to most, if not all agent inefficiencies. It is the single most costly event in a contact center, mostly occurring within 90 days of hire and costing up to $8,000 per agent.
When we have high attrition, our average newbie rate on the floor is high, which means knowledge and efficiency is low (just think what happens to your stats -including AHT – when you have a new team nesting? uhgg!).

Also, high attrition floors have more challenges in agent dynamics which make empowerment, quality, and employee participation less likely and more difficult.
Average Handle Time is therefore, greatly affected by our ability to hire and keep the right employees. If you have an attrition rate of more than 50%, don’t worry about AHT. You’ve got bigger problems.

Perhaps most controversial, is the topic of agent relations.
At times, we can enter into contentious cycles with our agent community. Usually driven by frustration in our inability to improve operations, we’ll begin to feel a disconnect and a difficulty sharing the same side of the fence with those who directly manage the customer.

As long as it’s acceptable for us not to share the same side of the fence with our agents, AHT will remain difficult to manage and, unfortunately, we will continue to press the wrong button, expecting different results.  AHT is not a measure of agents approach or willingness to follow direction, but a measure of management’s ability to Train, Hire and Empower.

I believe AHT is not the best indicator of agent efficiency but a greater indicator of management effectiveness.

Rudy Vidal
Committed to XCS!

8 Responses to “Average Handle Time – A Good Metric? For Whom?”

  1. Robert Braathe Says:

    In a similar vein, the Wall Street Journal featured an article talking about timing cashier’s efficiency when ringing out customers. Here is an excerpt

    http://s.wsj.net/article/SB122651745876821483.html

    “The computer scores, Ms. Gauna says, don’t “take into consideration the many things that can go wrong at a register to kill your time” — a customer who doesn’t have enough cash and is “digging through a purse,” a credit card that doesn’t swipe through the charge, or an item with no price or item number on it. Some customers ask for cigarettes located in another part of the store, and the cashier has to get them. Others forget items and retreat to the aisles to find them.”

    Again, much like AHT, timing cashiers is not a testament of how efficient cashiers are, but how well managers are effective at operating their businesses. In order for these measures to be effective, variables such size of sale and type of transaction need to be considered.

  2. Laura Kinney Says:

    AHT measurement is pointless. From an agent’s point of view, it’s even counter-productive to their performance. Below, I give you a humorous excerpt from the hot, new, call center fiction book, HANDLE TiME by LiNCOLN PARK; which illustrates the agent’s point-of-view:

    “In call centers, to take time and help your customer will absolutely RUIN your Average Handle Time. Ruining your handle time means that you are ruining your quality; thus ruining your agent variable pay; finally ruining your paycheck. In other words, TO HELP YOUR CUSTOMER IS TO COMPLETELY AND UNEQUIVOCALLY RUIN YOUR PAYCHECK. I’m serious! The idea is to stay on the call for the shortest amount of time that you can; in order for you to take as many calls as you can. The customer’s satisfaction with your service is incidental. And so — every call center worker must ponder the following question and make a choice each time they logon to their systems — DO I HELP THE CUSTOMER, OR — DO I PAY RENT?”

    Besides reading the fantastically crazy fiction book, HANDLE TiME, I suggest call center managers consider humanity in the calculation of metrics to produce more realistic projections.

  3. Mae Says:

    I agree that other variables should be considered. If you’re helping a customer troubleshoot a problem with your company’s product, you can help the caller who is more knowledgeable about the product faster than the one who only knows how to turn it on. If you’re helping someone with a software problem, the guy with the brand new Mac laptop will restart faster than the guy with the twelve year old IBM with 8 programs open in the system tray and load of registry errors. If your AHT is three or four minutes over limit, but the customer is happy and never has to call back, is their really a point to AHT?

    • Rudy Vidal Says:

      Mae,
      thank you for your comment.
      Exactly the point. I believe the AHT and other marginal metrics are valid, only to the extent they don’t get in way of providing FCR and the best experience.
      They have a place to ensure efficiency, however at times, we are tempted to judge our effectiveness through their measure. That, brings us in danger of focusing on the metrics and forgetting the customer.

      Thanks again for your comment.
      Rudy V

  4. Wim Rampen Says:

    I would argue that managing productivity is the cheapest and fastest way to improve client satisfaction, FCR and costs. Please read my post:

    Productivity in Contact Centers – The Dirty Word – http://contactcenterintelligence.wordpress.com/2009/05/08/productivity-in-contact-centers-the-dirty-word/

  5. A. Vermeer Says:

    ABOLISH AHT !

    Contactcenters using ‘AHT’ (Average Handle Time) as a KPI (Key Performance Indicator) make a very big mistake ! The task of Contactcenters is to serve customers memorably, to generate more revenues than expenses for the company as a whole and to exploit all (sales)opportunities, also within an economic downturn. Operating at the highest levels certainly does’nt mean processing the most calls in the shortest possible AHT, constantly driving agents to a AHT that nicely links to a ‘budget’ ! Striving to produce bad service a few seconds faster will not have any effect and rewarding agents on the basis of a short AHT is a real recipe for disaster. The customers are the ultimate losers ! Some old-fashioned Contactcenters unfortunately still focus on a reduction of AHT and fail to recognise the immense opportunities that customer contacts gives them. They should realize that AHT drives behaviour to rush customers. There are really no benefits at all in calls being rushed as quickly and as cheaply as possible by minimizing AHT (neither for Contactcenters nor for customers).

    The Management should realize that serving a customer memorably does not imply that a customer or a call is a thing to be ‘handled’….. as quickly and as cheaply as possible (he wants to be served !). We also should realize that Contactcenters are a strategic asset and one of the most underexploited resources in modern enterprises. So, we should exploit literally all opportunities to align the companies actual business objectives with organizational goals such as profitability, revenue, return on investment(ROI), earnings per share(EPS) and company growth. Contactcenters have immense sales opportunities for the company as a whole, they have the ability to further secure and strengthen the relationship with existing customers (customer satisfaction, retention).

    Losing high life-time customers greatly increases cost to companies, because the cost of acquiring new customers is TEN times as high as the cost of customer RETENTION. Failure to exploit these opportunities will put Contactcenters – and the companies they serve – at a growing disadvantage.

    Let’s not beat about the bush: if you reward short AHT’s, you will finally get short AHT’s ! But you will also get lousy service, agents in too big a hurry to satisfy the customer, lower sales/ upsell/ cross-sell, less appointments and retention, more call-backs, more complaints and a lousy ROI. As a package deal, you will also get lower agent-motivation, stress, burnt-out agents and higher training cost for new hires. It’s as simple as that. Why don’t Contactcenters “get it” ?

    Taking it from the perspective of CSR’s/Agents in Contactcenter, AHT is a metric(KPI) which largely depends on sheer circumstances and situations which CANNOT be controlled by the AGENT, such as : • nature of calls taken, type/language of client ; • number and complexity of questions or complaints ; • changes in processes, products, services, systems, requirements, metrics, scripts and assessments ; • time of day and week: agents working in the evening and weekend will encounter a significantly longer AHT (customers have more time and want to have a chat ; the behaviour of customers may differ) ; • missing, late, incomplete or wrong scripts and/or (agent)information ; • system speed, response times, malfunction of systems, too many systems, new system(s) ; • malfunction of the internet or telecommunication ; • malfunction or missing facilities in the Contactcenter ; • alterations and substitutions of products, services or tools ; • auditing, training and/or coaching-on-the job of collegues and new-hires, etc.

    Moreover, we should realize that ‘performance’ or a ‘KPI’, as a Contactcenter defines it, goes well beyond measures such as AHT, because :
    > the validity of the results from AHT is doubtful because there are no industry agreed-on definitions or standards on applying it ;
    > focussing on lowering AHT will have many undesired consequences, amongst others for the number of sales and for the balance between quality and customer focus (i.e. retention and customer-satisfaction) ; > defining success and measuring in AHT is a blunt and obsolete internal metric which has little to do with enterprise reality and with what a Contactcenter should most care about ; > measuring in AHT it is short sighted, counter-productive and causes problems in other areas of the Contactcenter ; > given the immense opportunities of customer contacts, running a Contactcenter as a ‘Costcenter’ (=“a department in the organization that does not generate profit”) is a pure waste.

    No wonder that there is a loud and growing call to measure and define success in Contactcenters with more value – and outcome-oriented metrics than AHT. Increasingly, Contactcenters are only measuring in profit-based metrics (such as OCR, number of sales and appointments, ROI).

    Eliminating AHT in a Contactcenter pays off with improved sales conversion, first-call resolution, customer satisfaction, retention, revenue, ROI and EPS, thus putting the Contactcenter into a much stronger strategic and rewarding position within the organization as a whole.
    As a result, more and more Contactcenters enter into negotiations with their board of directors in order to transform their Contactcenter from a ‘Costcenter’ into a sound ‘Valuecenter’ !

  6. A. Vermeer Says:

    Wim, I am pleased to ascertain that other experts, like Tripp Babbitt, in the meantime made it clear that AHT (Average Handle Time) is very oldfashioned (rooted in the “Command and Control thinking”, a productivity mindset of over 100 years old), has completely run it’s course and is no longer tenable in Contactcenters !

    Please go here (Ctrl + click) : http://blog.newsystemsthinking.com/blog/my-brand-of-insanity/0/0/call-center-aht-average-handle-time-wrong-measure-wrong-solutions

  7. Rudy Vidal Says:

    A. Vermeer,
    I could not agree more.
    Making decisions on based on AHT alone, is a dangerous proposition.

    Thanks for your comment.

    Please note I moved the Blog to http://www.rudyvidal.net/blog

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