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A-H
Abandon rate (ABN): The number of customers who abandon the Queue after waiting for a given time period (30 seconds, 90 seconds, 10 minutes.etc.), expressed as a percentage of total contacts.
After call work (ACW): The "wrap-up time" associated with a contact beyond the actual communication with the customer. This can include tagging or flagging the contact appropriately, adding notes for future support, rerouting the contact to the proper team or solving their underlying problem.
Agent States: Agent States are the possible states an agent can be in; they include: logged in, away, or on-call. Agent States are taken from your connected support platform. Agent States are used to determine an Agent's adherence in the Realtime Overview.
Arrival pattern: A structured representation of the times and frequencies of inbound contacts derived from an analysis of past contacts, designed to identify peaks and troughs in contact frequency.
Attrition: The rate at which employees leave your support team. This can be both external (leave the company) and internal (move to a different team). It can also be voluntary or involuntary.
Availability rate: The proportion of time that an agent is actively ready to work with customers but not engaged directly with a customer contact, i.e. their time between contacts or waiting for a customer contact.
Average handle time (AHT): The average time spent on a customer contact, including any hold time and after-contact work of tracking, follow-up resolution or note-taking.
Average speed of answer (ASA): The mean of all first response times for your support team.
Backlog: The gross number of support contacts that have yet to be addressed or resolved within a set amount of time. A backlog usually specifically refers to those contacts which have extended beyond your team's expected handling time and does not include those still within the expected handling time. That said, a backlog can easily compound upon itself as new contacts continue to breach the expected handling time while the team works on addressing the issue.
Channels: Channels are the means by which your team interacts with and supports your customers. These include: Email, Chat, SMS, Phone, and Social.
Cost per case: The average cost per support contact, which can include both fixed costs (such as office payments and Internet expenses) and variable costs (such as scheduled labor, unscheduled overtime, etc.).
Customer satisfaction score (CSAT): The score a customer leaves in response to a survey question about their satisfaction after a contact. CSAT scores can be detailed and ask about different sub-aspects of the support experience (such as total time spent, agent experience, and issue resolution) or simply ask for a rating from 1-5.
Default Events: A Default Event is an Event type that does not impact your staffing requirements. These are typically used for meetings, lunches, breaks, and project time.
Erlang formulas: A set of industry-standard formulas which allow you to model the relationship between staffing, call volume, and response time. For a given set of inputs, these formulas yield a number of required agents. Read about Erlang C in more depth here.
Events: Events are discrete blocks of time used to schedule your team. You can create three types of Events: Productive, Default, or Time-off.
Filters: Filters are selective lists based on predetermined criteria. They allow you to change your view within the Staffing Timeline based on Channel, Team, Queue, Site, and Skill.
First contact resolution: The percent of issues handled completely in the initial contact where a customer does not need additional assistance.
Forecast accuracy: The degree to which your prediction of support volume reflects the reality of observed support volume.
Full-time equivalent (FTE): The number of hours needed to handle case volume, expressed in units of full-time work weeks (40-hour increments).
I-R
Interval: A period of time which is measured and treated independently for volume forecasting, staffing and analysis. Common intervals for support operations are 60 minutes, 30 minutes or 15 minutes.
Occupancy rate: The percent of logged-in time that an agent spent actively working on customer issues. Industry standard occupancy rates range from 70-85% and it is often recommended not to exceed 85% occupancy to guard against agent burnout.
People: People in Assembled indicate your team that can log into the platform. People were previously known as agents and/or users.
Productive Events: Productive Events are blocks of time associated with a Channel that impact your staffing requirements.
Queues: Queues are a filter that can be used to segment a Channel's volume and map specific tickets within your integrated platform. This allows for more granular forecasting. VIP support or Standard Support are common Queues as they may each have different forecasts and SLAs to follow.
Realtime: Realtime Overview is a live-updating dashboard that gives you insight into your current volume, SLAs, what your team is currently doing and whether they are in or out of adherence.
S-Z
Schedule Adherence (SA): The amount of agent time actually spent in accordance with their scheduled tasks as a proportion of their total scheduled time. EX: If an agent is scheduled for 100 minutes (of either directly productive or non-productive activity), and they stick to their schedule for 90 minutes, their SA is 90%.
Schedule Conformance: The amount of agent time actually spent working as a proportion of their total time scheduled to work, regardless of their adherence. EX: If an agent is scheduled to work for 100 minutes and they work for 95 minutes, their conformance is 95%, regardless of whether they complete the work in their scheduled time or not.
Schedule efficiency: The degree to which your scheduled staff aligns to a given interval's projected requirement. This can be expressed as a percentage of alignment in absolute value.
Service level (SL): Your team’s stated objective for the amount of time until your first response to a customer. Also referred to as service level agreement (SLA).
Shrinkage: The reduction in productivity associated with managing a real-life workforce instead of theoretical FTEs. This number accounts for breaks, trainings, meetings, vacation time and absences.
Sites: Sites are a filter typically used to reflect physical location, such as APAC, EMEA, New York, or San Francisco.
Skills: Skills are a filter that can be used to reflect a specific type of proficiency that is useful for particular cases or customers. If people on your team have specializations, you can indicate that with Skills.
Staffable: If a person is Staffable in Assembled, this indicates that they can be scheduled on the staffing timeline.
Staffing Timeline: The Staffing Timeline is where you can view your forecasting and staffing requirements and view or create your team's schedule.
Teams: Teams are a filter used to indicate which agents are a part of which Team. This is fully customizable and should reflect however your team views itself, e.g. "Jessica's Team" or "Tier 2 Team."
Templates: Templates allow you to save a schedule and apply it again for a later time period. You save a Template for your entire Team or for specific people based on the filters and Channels you've set.
Time-off Events: These Events are the blocks of time used when someone submits a Time-off request. When doing so, an agent can choose a specific Event to associate with the Time-off request.
Utilization rate: The amount of time that an agent is either productive (e.g. occupied) or available to handle incoming contacts as a proportion of their total paid hours. An agent’s total time consists of their utilized time + their time away from support (breaks, meetings, trainings, meals, etc.).
Volume Forecast: A prediction of the incoming support contacts your team will receive over a given interval—whether that’s a day, a week, a month or the next 15 minutes.
Volumes: The support contacts expected to be handled by a customer support team. These can be subdivided by the channel through which they're received—e.g. email, chat, phone, SMS.
Workforce management: The forecasting, staffing, scheduling and metrics involved in helping your team meet its service goals reliably and efficiently.
Check out our Essential Workforce Management Glossary to explore the 25 must-know terms and concepts of Workforce Management 🙂
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