First, teach reps only what they need to know to begin answering calls.
Many trainers look at classroom training as an opportunity to unload all of the information they have in their heads and have it be absorbed by learners. But this never happens.
In order to learn, learners must have questions. And the fact is that when you get new call center reps in training, they don’t have a lot of questions upfront. They don’t know what they don’t know.
The real goal here is proficiency.
It doesn’t matter if they can remember everything perfectly. It doesn’t matter if they use help guides to complete a task. What matters is that employees handle a call quickly and correctly. The bonus is they are learning as they do these tasks for the first time.
By limiting your agents’ dependency on memorization, you are opening a path to continuous learning. That puts less pressure and stress on your employees.
🔍 Related: How to Organize Your Call Center Program Into 5 PhasesWhat information MUST your reps know to handle a call? Focus onboarding on having your new hires master that information. Having a continuous learning culture in your company means they will have an opportunity to build on that knowledge every day.
As your agents spend more time handling calls, they will continue to become more proficient and master the tasks they learned in their initial training. Set up regular checkpoints with reps to gauge their progress.
For a call center, you can assess where reps are after the first four weeks of taking calls. After handling calls for a few weeks, listen to several calls and identify areas of growth. In these evaluations, you are looking for strengths and areas for improvement.
For example, their technical knowledge may not be on full display during calls, so you may need to go through some exercises to assess their understanding.
During these checkpoint assessments, you are looking to see if your agents are proficient and ready to handle more complex calls. Some notes to consider evaluating include:
Develop a rubric or scale so it is clear how everyone is scored. These scores should point to areas that are strengths as well as areas that need improvement. And your rubric doesn’t need to be complicated. It just needs to cover key growth skills like the scoresheet below.
Score |
Strength |
Growth Opportunity |
|
Technical knowledge |
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Identify the purpose of calls |
|||
Find right procedures |
|||
Follow procedures |
|||
Build rapport |
|||
Handle stressful situations |
|||
Critical thinking |
|||
Controlling the call |
|||
Yes |
No |
||
Ready to take on more? |
Remember: This is more than a scorecard. You’re not necessarily evaluating their KPIs. Right now you’re identifying their strengths and the gaps in their skills and knowledge.
Take those scores from the assessment and figure out which learning assets will help your agents develop their competency.
You have learning assets that your reps may not be taking advantage of — partly because they are really busy and partly because they don’t know about them.
If your reps are lacking in technical knowledge, then find courses in your learning management system (LMS) or videos/presentations in your knowledge base they can go through to learn more.
If your reps are lacking in critical thinking, create quizzes or write up situations that reps will respond to (either written or verbal) by explaining how they would solve/address the situation.
If your reps aren’t able to find the right procedures in the knowledge base, find a job aid with tips on how to perform searches.
If your reps aren’t able to identify the purpose of calls very well, you could find phone recordings that they listen to with exercises. Then they can write down what they would say to identify the purpose of the call.
Are they ready to learn more? If reps are doing well for what they’re currently assigned, are they ready to take on more outside of their current role?
Create assets (like the ones suggested above) to cross-train agents. This will help prepare your call center for an influx of calls or if a different department is short-staffed one day.
🔍 Related: How to Make Call Center Training Less Stressful For Your Agents (4 Tips)
Now that you know the different skills you are evaluating and have learning assets to support employees, you’ll want to formalize a learning development plan. This phase is about how to go about addressing the agents’ weaknesses.
Using your scorecard, you could set up different levels associated with skill mastery. Each level of proficiency would cover certain continuous learning assets. For example, once an agent masters processing invoices, they can learn more about handling a complex refund transaction.
Whether it is according to levels or specific skills, you can assign the learning assets to your reps and have them complete those assignments during a specified period of time.
An important part of continuous learning is accountability. You may need to allow your agents 30 minutes a day to review learning assets. Track assignment completion and follow up on the learnings.
A key part of continuous learning is in its name — it’s continuous. That means you are always returning to Step 2 to evaluate where your agents are. Repeat your assessment and continue to identify areas of growth.
Set up a regular cadence to start the process over again. Do you want to have your assessments monthly, quarterly, bi-annually, etc.?
Your agents will never be perfect. There will always be room for improvement. Ideally, each time you will identify a new area where your agents will continue to learn.
Following this continuous learning plan, you will accomplish three important goals:
With ScreenSteps, our knowledge base makes it easy for agents to learn while in the workflow. They can easily pull up your call flows and procedures on your ScreenSteps knowledge base. Then they can follow the step-by-step instructions without putting a customer on hold.
Are you looking for more approaches to continuous learning? Need to know what assets, software, or classes you should use? Here are 5 ways that can help you incorporate continuous learning in your workplace.