Call Center
A Short Story by Ehtisham Rizvi
“Assalamu Alaikum. XYZ call center how may I help you.”
It was just another day at work for Taqi. He had just signed
in for his 3 to 11 evening shift at the inbound customer support call center for the local electricity supplier, and was answering his first call. The
opening greeting was worth ten points, and he had to sound fresh and pleasant
while delivering it to the customer.
“You know what?” The customer was angry and started yelling
from the get go. “You guys should just say how may I screw you instead
of how may I help you.”
“Sir we try to help each and every single one of our
customers, but some things are just out of our control.” Taqi had been working
there for about six months now, he had learned all the tricks of the trade, and
knew how to handle angry customers.
The CRM at the call center did not have the customer’s phone
number in the data bank, so he couldn't find the customer’s address. Judging by
the area code, he placed the customer in region 4, and judging by the
customer’s anger, he placed him in the area where there was no electricity for
the last 4 hours.
“May I know which area you are speaking from?” Although he
had already placed the customer in an area but he had to hear it from him.
After all, it was a recorded call and he didn't want to go off script. Points
were being awarded and quality was being assured; he had to aim for the extra
incentives.
“Why? That computer of yours isn't telling you anything?” He
was amazed how people just overestimated the power of computers.
“Sir, your number is not stored in our database. If you
could kindly tell me your area, I could provide you with the latest information
and updates.”
“Screw your updates; there is no electricity here for the
last four hours. I don’t need excuses, I need electricity.”
“Sir, the only area in Karachi without power for the last
four hours is FB Area Block 6. Is that where you are speaking from?”
“Why are you asking me if you already know?”
By this time, 40 seconds had already passed. Taqi had to
finish this call within one minute; negative points were awarded for each
second after that. He decided to take the familiar route; he would just shower
the bastard with information and wouldn't give him a chance to speak.
“Sir, the main cable supplying electricity to FB Area Block
6 was damaged a few hours ago. Repairs are in progress as we speak. We are also
trying to route electricity to your area through our overhead network. Your
electricity will be temporarily restored within half an hour, but the main
cable will be fixed in about eight hours.” He rushed through it in one breath,
but waited for the customer to respond.
“I am not speaking from block 6 you moron.” The clock was
ticking, the floor supervisor was already signaling him to wrap it up, and the
minute was almost up. Nothing had been achieved so far.
“Then which area are you speaking from?” He had
received worst calls than this, he had been cussed at, threatened, and once a
few angry customers had paid the call center a visit, but for some reason, this
to him was the worst customer he had ever dealt with. And the call was not over
yet.
“I am speaking from block 4, and my meters have burnt out. I
registered a complaint early this morning, and you guys haven’t sent the repair
team yet.”
“Sir could you please tell me your complaint number?”
“It’s 4974.”
Now this was another problem. Taqi looked at the complaint
numbers in the CRM, and only 1500 complaints had been issued so far. It
appeared as if the morning shift had been slow. He checked for complaint number
497, it belonged to someone else. He checked for 4974 for the day before, and
it wasn't there.
“When was this complaint number issued to you?” He knew this
would piss the customer off even more, but there was no other choice.
“What the hell do you people do all day? Someone issued this
number to me five minutes ago.” There were serious contradictions in the
customer’s statement. If the complaint number was issued 5 minutes ago, he couldn't possibly have registered the complaint in the morning.
Meanwhile, the
clock was ticking.
The floor supervisor had already left his chair, and was now
standing right next to Taqi, listening in on the conversation. This was a
pretty good sign that Taqi was in trouble and had to finish this quickly.
“Sir how about I send a reminder to your area support center asking them to hurry up? Could you please tell me your name and address?” He
put his hands on the keyboard, ready to file a new complaint, while trying to
save face for his fellow call center agents who handed out fake complaint
numbers.
“Now I have to go through the whole process again?” It
sounded as if the customer was about to burst in tears.
“Sir I apologize for the inconvenience, and assure you that
we will do everything in our power to get your connection fixed, just kindly tell
me your name and address so I can send them a new complaint.”
Two minutes were up, and the floor supervisor simply ended
the call with the push of a button.
“Sir, he was about to give me his details.”
Taqi protested.
“Next time, just give him another fake complaint number. And
for God’s sake keep your average down to 50 seconds.”
Taqi looked around in
disappointment as the supervisor walked away. The person to his right was lying
about a blackout; the person to his left was dropping calls in mid sentence
just to make it look like there was a problem with the line. Most were assigning
fake complaint numbers and giving false information to the customers.
The next caller in line had already been routed to him, but
he decided not to answer that call. He minimized the CRM and opened a new Word
document. He had a resignation to write.
3 comments:
Execellent one.
Plenty of potential here, but the 'hads' tend to flatten it a bit. Might be worth seeing how many you could take out without messing up the sense, and then looking at what that does to the dynamics. And maybe have another look at the ending - after all that forward motion, I really wanted more than a resignation letter because fiction can do a much better job of sticking pins in ghastly situations like this. Go on - impale it!
Thanks for the feedback. I will have another look at the 'had' situation. This is based on my real life experience; a few friends and I ended up resigning from a local call center, so that's why I ended the story this way.
Another possible ending could be that the guy simply gets up and walks out the door while his supervisor keeps calling his name.
He could do something similar to the movie "Wanted" where the guy breaks his keyboard on a colleague's head.
Or he could just go hysterical, rant for a while and then quit.
I don't really see him making a positive change in the call center. What kind of ending did you have in mind? :)
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