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Contact Centres vs. Call Centres: What’s the Difference?

Chances are, your service organisation has one or the other. How can you make sure you’ve chosen the right option?

Zoe Sitrin

The terms call centre and contact centre are often used interchangeably, and while they’re both hubs for customer service, they aren’t exactly the same thing. Call centres focus solely on phone communications, while modern contact centresOpens in a new window provide support through a variety of channels, including phone, email, live chat, self-service knowledge articles, and chatbots. Let’s dig into the differences between a contact centre vs. call centre, so you can decide the best customer service approach for your business and how call & contact centre software can help.

Customers today have high expectations for the companies they do business with. We found that 94% of customers say a positive customer service experience makes them more likely to make a purchase again. Yet, only 13% of customers say they can get their issues solved with little effort.

What does a positive customer experience look like? It’s meeting customers where they are, using the communication methods and technology they prefer, and providing an array of service options — rather than limiting service to only over the phone. So as customer preferences evolve with technology, more call centres are transforming into contact centresOpens in a new window.

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What is a call centre?

A call centre is a remote or on-premises customer service group that provides customer service over the phone. Call centres can employ anywhere from a few agents for small to midsize businesses to hundreds for large corporations.

Each agent typically handles several phone calls per day to help with customer issues ranging from billing inquiries to complex technical problems. Some call centres use customer relationship management (CRM) software to resolve issues faster and provide agents with customer data, but many call centres are still working to adopt this technology.

What is a contact centre?

A contact centre is a customer service hub that provides a variety of communication channels, including phone, email, social media, chat, SMS and messaging, video conferencing, screen sharing, and more. Agents typically have the expertise to work across all of these channels or a specialised subset depending on their team structure.

A contact centre also uses CRM technology to empower agents to help customers, accelerate response times, and provide personalised interactions and offers.

Customer communication preferences vary widely. Someone who is on the go might dial a customer service line, while someone at their desk might reach out to an agent via live chat.

When contact centres route requests from multiple channels to service agents based on their availability and skillset, service agents are able to multitask and increase their efficiency.

One key metric for contact centre success is reducing manual work for agents. Agents are tasked with things like case notes, data transfers, and call routing, which can reduce the speed and efficiency of the service they provide.

Contact centres use automation and artificial intelligence (AI) to reduce these tasks from their agent’s workload so they can focus on solving customer problems and providing a seamless service experience. These technologies can do things like automatically transcribe phone calls, suggest live chat responsesOpens in a new window, or find help articles for agents to share with customers.

Generative AIOpens in a new window is making efficiency even easier. When applied to service, generative AI can take customer data, such as a customer query or account information, and create something new out of it. Some examples of these powerful use cases include auto-generating knowledge articles based on case resolution data, providing personalised responses to live chat questions, and pulling real-time data to help agents solve customer problems quickly.

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Contact centre vs. call centre: Which is better?

Call centres have a singular focus — providing quality service over the phone. Contact centres take an omni-channel approach that many consumers find more convenient (no more waiting on the phone line, getting serenaded by elevator music).

Channel choice

Your customers just want to get their issues resolved as quickly as possible. At the end of the day, you need to meet them where they are via their preferred channels of communication, which will vary depending on the type of service or product you offer.

With a contact centre, you can reach customers on these channels:

  • Phone
  • Email
  • Social media
  • Online forms
  • Knowledge bases
  • Customer self-service portals
  • Online chat/live support
  • Messenger apps
  • Text/SMS
  • Mobile apps
  • Communities and discussion forums
  • Video support

Your industry will greatly influence the customer service channels your company provides. Are you a utility company? Then self-serviceOpens in a new window, SMS, and phone are critical for your contact centre. How about an ecommerce retailer? Your customers are already shopping online – being able to reach you via web or mobile chat is likely important to them.

Service Channel Adoption

Despite the expansion and acceptance of digital channels and the range of customer preferences, 81% of service professionals say the phone is a preferred channel for complex issues, so even digital contact centres have to keep the phone lines open.

Personalised customer service

One major difference between a call centre and a contact centre is the use of customer data and CRM technology to provide personalised customer service.

When the phone is the only option to get in contact with a business, the interactions tend to be simple — like resetting an account password or asking a question — and less frequent with the same customer. And given that CRM technology is only used by some call centres, agents may have limited information about a customer and their preferences.

Contact centres tend to handle more complex tasks. The simpler customer issues are usually solved via low-touch channels (think self service articles, chatbots, SMS, or live chat), while more complex issues are handled over the phone.

A service agent in a contact centre uses the company’s CRM instance to reference past interactionsOpens in a new window, see which products or package the customer currently has, and provide personalised up- or cross-selling options. This is made possible with integration across sales, service, marketing, and commerce data all funneling through a single CRM platform.

Agent skills

Your choice of contact centre vs. call centre will also come down to your agents’ skillsetsOpens in a new window and the budget and resources available for agent training.

Given that contact centre agents use more digital and asynchronous channels than call centres, they need to be able to multitask and must be comfortable with digital technology. Call centre agents, on the other hand, need to think quickly and remain calm to de-escalate situations in real-time.

Customer service agents need to have the right mixture of soft and hard skills to meet customer expectations. When it comes to soft skills, they need to be proficient communicators and listeners, be good critical thinkers and problem solvers, and be able to resolve conflict in tense situations. When it comes to hard skills, they need to know how to use dashboards, service tools, consoles, automation tools, and access to customer data to do their job well and make more personalised recommendations to customers in real time.

Choosing between a call centre vs. contact centre strategy

Call centres are more straightforward to operate, with high operating costs coming from headcount and phone systems or software. Their simplicity can be attractive for businesses that want to avoid overcomplicating their customer service strategy, especially if they have a small, known customer base who prefers to get service over the phone.

In contrast, contact centres personalise the customer experience by providing various service channels based on customer preferences. This makes it so easier issues are solved asynchronously and more complex issues are solved over the phone. This cost-effective approach is what we call “Shift to ScaleOpens in a new window.”

While contact centres generally have higher ongoing costs from software licenses, your customers have a better service experience when they get to choose how they interact with your business. This means your customers feel satisfied or even delighted after a service interaction, which will lead to a higher CSAT scoreOpens in a new window, increased customer loyalty, and result in more revenue from repeat and renewed customers.

Call centre vs. contact centre strategy

If you’re unsure of which customer service strategy is right for you, ask yourself the following questions:

1. How big is the customer base you service?

  • A: We’ll service a small, niche demographic
  • B: We’ll have a large, diverse customer base

2. How hard will these issues be to solve for your customers?

  • A: Mostly easy-to-solve issues
  • B: The problems will vary in complexity

3. How important is it for your business to provide personalised customer service?

  • A: Personalised service is not a priority for my business
  • B: Personalised service is a priority for my business

4. How important is it for your business to offer multiple support channels?

  • A: Having multiple support channels is not very important to my business
  • B: Having multiple support channels is important to my business

5. Does your business have a limited service budget or can it support multiple software licenses and technology?

  • A: My business has a limited budget for customer service
  • B: My business has budget to support multiple software licenses and technologies

If you answered mostly with A’s, then a call centre strategy may be the best option for your business. If you answered with mostly B’s, then a contact centre is the best strategy for you.

Customer service is the business of making sure your customers stay happy and loyal. Call centres are still relevant in certain contexts, but the world is changing — make sure your customer service models change with it.