Increase Back-Office Capacity by 10% to +20%

Process More Work at a Lower Cost

How is Capacity Planning in Back-Office Operations Different?

Workforce planners for customer service have typically focused on the contact center. Recently, organizations have been merging their back-office processing functions into their customer service operations. In these instances, you need to build capacity plans that span both groups.

However, capacity planning in the back-office is different than in the contact center for many reasons. Here are a few of the key differences:

  • Complex processes: Back-office work is often complex, with multiple steps that require different teams to execute different tasks.
  • Siloed systems. Different teams often have different legacy processing and workflow systems with severe integration limitations. Organizations are challenged to capture all the work items and data needed to create accurate capacity plans.
  • Backlog: Work has extended service level agreements (SLAs) that can span days or weeks, creating a backlog of carryover work that needs to be factored into demand forecasts.
  • Exception work: A lot of the work in the back-office that require human touch are exceptions, which increase the variability of the work, making it difficult to account for handle times, which impact the accuracy of your capacity plans.
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