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Predictive Dialers on the Market
When it comes to our business, we offer our subscribers a powerful resource and a recipe for success. Listed below is a comprehensive list of
predictive dialer resources that we offer our clients. I guarantee you will not
find a single site on the web that has this much information on so many dialers.
Just click on the dialer you wish to learn about.
- Amcat 2000 -ETS Teleprofit
- Amcat Excelerator
- Amcat Medialynx
SQL and Access 2000
- Amcat CCS - Call Center Solution
- ETS Sigmaworx
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OPC Spitfire/TouchStar
- Noble Systems
- InfoTel -
- Marketel
- Razor - VOIP Dialer
- DataTel
What is a Predictive Dialer?
From Wikipedia:
A predictive dialer is a computerized
system that automatically dials batches of telephone numbers for connection to
agents assigned to sales or other campaigns. Predictive dialers are widely used
in call centers.
History
The autodialer preceded the predictive dialer. While the
basic autodialer merely automatically dials telephone numbers for call center
agents who are idle or waiting for a call, the predictive dialer uses a variety
of algorithms to predict both the availability of agents and called party
answers, adjusting the calling process to the number of agents it anticipates
(or predicts) will be available when the calls it places are expected to be
answered.
The predictive dialer monitors the answers to the calls it places, detecting how
the calls it makes are answered. It discards unanswered calls, busy numbers,
disconnected lines, answers from fax machines, answering machines and similar
automated services, and only connects calls answered by people to waiting sales
representatives. Thus, it frees agents from the task of manually dialing
telephone numbers and subsequently listening to ringing tones, unanswered or
unsuccessful calls.
A predictive dialer can dramatically increase the time an agent spends on
communication rather than waiting: a 2002 survey indicated an increase in talk
time from twenty minutes in the hour to almost fifty. The system is most
suitable for low quality lists and large numbers of agents, however an
unexpectedly high contact rate can overwhelm the system leading to call
abandonment.
Call list data is the loaded to the dialer before commencing a campaign. The
data is generally derived from a large database such as a telephone directory or
similar listing from CRM software. Some predicitive dialers generate call lists
and report call attempts. Unsuccessful calls are often analyzed to determine if
the number called needs to be called back later or needs special treatment, such
as a manual or autodialed call by an agent to listen to an answer machine
message.
Predictive dialer systems are commonly used by telemarketing organizations
involved in B2C (business to consumer) calling as it allows their sales
representatives to have much more customer contact time. Predictive dialers may
also be used by market survey companies and debt collection services who need to
contact and personally speak to a lot of people by telephone. More commonly
predictive dialers are now being used as a quick and easy way to automate all
sorts of calls which would otherwise be made manually by a call center, such as
welcome calls for new customers, customer service call backs, appointment
confirmations / reminders, or even for the automation of large numbers of ad hoc
calls that might need to take place (such as by a taxi company, or parcel
delivery service etc).
They generally rely on the fact that if a person was to sit down and manually
dial 1000 people, a large percentage of these calls will not result in contact
with someone at the other end. Out of 1000 calls made, typically only about
25-35% would actually connect to a live person. Of the rest, a large number
(often 40-60%) won't be answered at all, around 10% might be answering machines,
faxes, modems or other electronic devices, around 5% of numbers would be busy
and the rest will result in network errors, or be identified as invalid numbers.
For call centers that need to make large numbers of outbound calls, this
represents a large problem. Typically in manual dialing environments, a given
agent will spend around 80% of their time listening to the phone ring waiting to
talk to someone, or dealing with invalid numbers or answering machines and only
about 20% of their time actually doing what they are really there to do. By
using a predictive dialer to filter out these unproductive calls and to spare
the agent from having to wait for the phone to be answered each time, call
centers can reverse the situation. Agents can now spend on average around 80%
[1] of their time talking to customers and only about 20% of their time waiting
for the next call - a 300% increase in productivity.
How Does it Work?
The predictive dialer exhibits predictive behavior when its
dialing algorithm produces more call attempts (dials) than the number of agents
currently logged in and available to handle calls. The predictive dialing
happens when the predictive dialer dials ahead of the agents becoming available
or when the predictive dialer matches a forecast number of available agents with
a forecast number of available called parties. The matching and dialing ahead
perspectives provide the large increases in dial rates and agent productivity.
If a system has 100 agents working on it, the dialer will dial a number of calls
sometimes crudely based on a phone line to agent ratio of 1.5:1 or 2:1. This
means that for each available agent, the system will dial the phone numbers of
two potential customers. As these calls are made to the telephone network the
dialer will monitor each call and determine what the outcome of the call was.
From 150 calls made, the system will immediately strip out any unproductive
outcomes, such as busy calls (these are usually queued for automatic redial), no
answers & invalid numbers. Some predictive dialers incorporate "answering
machine detection", which tries to determine if a live person or answering
machine picked up the phone. This is one cause of the typical delays that one
may experience before being connected to an agent.
If not enough calls are made ahead, agents will sit idle, whereas if there are
too many calls made and there are not enough agents to handle them, then the
call is typically dropped. A sophisticated system will throttle calls more
appropriately to deal with these situations.
The advanced predictive dialer determines and uses many operating
characteristics that it learns during the calling campaign and adjust
automatically to the behavior of an ongoing campaign. Examples of such
statistics include call connection rates (both current and average for recent
past days by hour of the day), average agent connection time, geographic
location dialed, etc. It uses these statistics continually to make sophisticated
predictions so as to minimize agent idle time while controlling occurrences of
nuisance calls, which are answered calls without the immediate benefit of
available agents. An advanced predictive dialer can readily maintain the ratio
of nuisance calls to answered calls at less than a fraction of one percent while
still dialing ahead. However, this level of performance may require a
sufficiently large critical mass of agents. Conversely, it becomes increasingly
difficult to maintain a high talk time percentage with a lower number of agents
without increasing dropped calls.
Dropped Calls
Predictive dialing systems use algorithms to control the ratio
of calls to agents. Because a dialer cannot know what proportion of its calls
will connect until it has made them, it will alter its dialing rate depending on
how many connections it manages to achieve. Occasionally the system will get
more live parties on call attempts than there are agents available take those
calls. Consequently, the dialer will disconnect or delay distribution of calls
that cannot be distributed to an agent. This is known as a dropped call or a
nuisance call. The called party hears only silence when the predictive dialer
does not at least play a recorded message. Compliant Predictive Dialers
give you the option to set your abandonment rate. The current legislation
sets the acceptable call abandonment rate at 3%. That means the Predictive
Dialer will drop only 3, out of every 100 calls made. Then the Predictive
Algorithm automatically adjusts the flow of call to accomidate the campaigns
progress, making sure to stay within those parimiters. This is why
call centers have to be very careful about the Predictive Dialer they choose,
and the proceedures the follow.
The experience for those who receive a predictive dialer call can be less
satisfactory. There may be an appreciable period of non-response before a call
is routed to a sales representative. This annoys people and also gives them a
chance to abandon the call. If no sales representative is available for a
successful call, it is often disconnected. In certain countries, this
disconnection is a breach of regulatory codes, and most countries now regulate
limits on the number of silent calls that a company makes within a certain time
frame. In the UK and the USA, these dropped calls have caused concern and
outrage amongst the public, and strict regulations now govern how these systems
may be used, with threats of large fines for companies that abuse these systems.
Types of Predictive Dialers
Predictive dialers perform the same function but the
architecture and delivery methods can vary greatly between manufacturers. There
are several types of predictive dialing: Software, Hardware, Smart, and Hosted
dialers.
In recent years, 'mixed' type predictive dialers have emerged. These predictive
dialers are based on simpler hardware, such as voice modems, and more powerful
software for answering machine detection and call progress detection. The
biggest advantage of this type of predictive dialers is the substantial lower
cost of ownership. Another form of predictive dialer has evolved called the
'smart' predictive dialer combining voice broadcasting and attendant phone
agents. Hosted predictive dialing is a service provided by third party providers
that connects calls via the internet to agents.
Software Based Predictive
Dialers
Software only solutions use ISDN messaging, or a CTI link to
provide call progress analysis for calls made. Software only dialers are often
cheaper because they do not require expensive telephony components, but in some
cases can offer less functionality than more traditional 'hard dialer'
solutions, particularly when it comes to detecting answering machines (AMD) and
integration with other 'voice' related functions (voice recording, IVR, speech
recognition, text-to-speech etc.). Typically a software dialer is connected to
an existing PBX system via the PBX CTI link. In most cases, expensive
specialized 'call classification' cards are required in the PBX for call
progress analysis and answering machine detection. Open Source dialers have
proven themselves in the production world and enable call centers of all sizes
to lower costs. Other advantages include customization of the software suites to
meet the needs on an individual basis.
Pros:
* Low cost without consideration of sunk costs of a fully-provisioned PBX
* Flexible architecture works well in multi-site and distributed environments
Cons:
* A few older PBX's will not work with a soft dialer configuration
* Higher error rates in classification of calls (Fax, modem etc. have to be
detected by the agent)
* Lower call processing capacity
Hardware Based Dialers
Hardware dialers use dedicated telephony switches to perform
call progress analysis and answering machine detection. Those switches usually
have two main types of connections, agent audio and external audio. The agent
audio connections are usually simple T1/E1/ISDN etc. telephony spans which are
connected directly to an existing PBX (although other connection types that do
not require a PBX are available such as Analogue or VoIP connections). When an
agent first logs in for the day, the dialer will place a call from the switch
directly to the phone on the agent's desk. This open phone call between the
agent and the dialer switch is then kept open for the duration of the session.
The second type of connection is the external audio connection which is the
connection that will be used to make outbound phone calls. These connections are
typically ISDN/T1/E1 connections direct to the PSTN. When an outbound call is
made and answered, the call is immediately joined to an already open agent audio
connection of the agent selected to take the call.
Pros:
* Fewer telephony connections required (In hard dialers external audio
connections can go directly to the PSTN)
* Dialer typically will not need upgrading in line with PBX/CTI etc.; since
standard telephony connections are the only link between the PBX and the dialer,
the dialer is less affected by software changes/versions
* Superior answering machine and call progress detection capability
* Remote agent capabilities - hard dialers can connect to any phone, anywhere on
the PSTN. (Highly suitable for home working or remote sites)
* Independent of special CTI communication and proprietary PBX protocols
* Independent of PBX (Can work with a PBX or without benefit of any PBX or ACD)
* Higher capacity for handling calls (up to about 100,000 calls per hour)
* Faster call switching, as both ends of the call are already in place.
Cons:
* More expensive than a soft dialer when the enterprise already has a PBX with
spare capacity for processing calls.
* Increased cost of ownership as expensive to upgrade and maintain.
Smart Predictive Dialers
Smart predictive dialers combine auto dialing with voice
messaging and phone agents who are prepared to handle calls initiated by the
dialer. Answering machines, busy signals, and no answer calls are processed in a
manner similar to that of a normal predictive dialing system. However, when a
'live' answer is detected, the dialer plays an introductory recorded message,
giving the call recipient the option to talk with an agent to complete the
transaction. This message is a consistent greeting that identifies the caller,
the nature of the call, and the option to speak with an agent. This process
requires a more sophisticated predictive algorithm to ensure that a phone agent
is available when the call recipient asks to speak with an agent.
Pros:
* Call lists are pre-qualified without the need for an agent
* Call lists are processed much more quickly and efficiently
* Fewer agents are required to handle far more calls
* Agents are only speaking with interested callers
* Call list processing is far less expensive
Cons:
* Overall list performance may be less due to call recipient resistance to
recorded messages
* Certain U.S. states do not allow recorded messaging (unless prior business
relationship has been established). This may limit the use of this technique to
only certain types of business or consumer campaigns in certain geographical
areas.
* Illegal in the UK unless you have received prior permission from the people
you are calling
Hosted Predictive Dialers
Hosted predictive dialers (aka Virtual Predictive Dialers,
Web-Enabled Predictive Dialers, VoIP Predictive Dialers) use the Software as a
Service (SaaS) model to provide organizations and individuals with a predictive
dialer capability. Typically, the only requirement for a firm to use a hosted
predictive dialer system is a computer with an Internet connection and a
telephone line for each agent.
Pros:
* No required investments in computer or telephone hardware
* No required investments in software or licenses
* Administration and support are handled by the service provider
* Links into the system are remote, enabling agents and supervisors to connect
from any location
* Software updates and upgrades included.
Cons:
* Service is dependent on an internet connection; when the internet goes down,
so does the service
* Providers using VoIP as their primary delivery method experience limited
reliability and performance.
For all your
predictive dialer, dialer, call center, auto dialing, used dialer, marketel, ets,
amcat, noble, chase, spitfire, stratasoft, touchstar, OPC, five9, information
and resource
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