Monthly Archives: September 2010

The 20 day rule for Twitter & Google

Categories: SEO, Social Media | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

I love seeing how the mechanics of web optimization works. My life depends on it, and I am passionately interested in it. Basically, I have reduced SEO strategy down to a three simple rules.

(1) Keep your content correct, informative, well organized, and up to date. Find out what type of content people like to read, and keep giving it to them.
(2) Keep traffic constantly flowing to your site from adwords, blogs, and social media campaigns.
(3) If there is a spike in Google traffic on your blog, or Twitter activity, that peak will manifest itself on your main site’s web stats exactly 20 days later.

We had tried accelerating our Twitter interactions eight months earlier from zero to about 8 per day.. I noticed a spike in site traffic that started a few weeks after the beginning of our campaign. I wanted to try it again, because our site traffic increased by about 14%. Yes, we got about 16,000 extra followers per month. That translates into more long term income which is the final statistic in the long train of events.

So, I decided to do it again. But, I didn’t communicate clearly enough to my social media manager. She thought I wanted two interactions per day with followers. I wanted ten. So, we agreed upon seven interactions per day. Our traffic went from 28,000 per week to 30,000 on the week that had its mid-day 20 days after. Shortly after it climbed to around 31,000. Once again, about a 11% increase in a very short amount of time after we went from 2 interactions per day to 7.

I wonder what would happen if we did 30 interactions per day for a two month period. Maybe we should try!

Remember the golden rule of Twitter:
Although the top line total number of followers doesn’t mean anything, you can USE those followers who are relevant and interact with them to boost your web stats. So, the top line number actually does have a value, and a very significant value too!

An LPO company comes to visit me!

Categories: LPO | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

A Legal Processing Outsourcing company came to visit me!

It was an exciting moment in my life as the manager of an outsourcing directory.  I had spoken to many companies in India and the Philippines on the phone, but I had only met a few programming and web design companies who I had used for my own business needs.  This was a first — a meeting — and an exciting one.  A Legal Process Outsourcing company boss from India took a tour of the United States meeting with their business contacts in various parts of the United States.  There were two gentlemen, both very well spoken. We discussed marketing strategies for their business.  I will omit their names and locations for their privacy.

In any case, we discussed ways to improve their site which looks really nice.  Also, I came up with many ways to promote their overall web presence using SEO techniques. I might be able to find them clients from the U.S. over time as I develop my business presence. I hope that I develop a great relationship with this company.

It is my dream to have a close relationship with many BPO and outsourcing companies in the future. I might pay India a visit in 2013 and visit several different cities. I might visit the Philippines and the United Arab Emirates as well.  It is hard to handle my workload and travel too, but I will find a way once I make many of my processes more streamlined.  Every month I find a new way to make one of my processes just a little bit more effective or efficient, and over time the results are phenominal!

See our list of LPO companies worldwide!

Are your callers annoying?

Hybrid binational companies — the way of the future?

Human beings or human capital?

Categories: Call Center | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose.
French Proverb

Twenty years ago when I had my first formal job at a call center, the industry was still young. Everyone knew the idea was to get people to buy or contribute as much as po$$ible over the phone, but no one really twisted any arms. Callers used their natural charms and genuine attitudes about life to convince people to do something, and it had to be something they wanted to call about. Of course, this was before the general erosion of trust had destroyed 80% of Americans’ feelings about people and their motives, before telemarketing became a common daily occurrence, before 9/11, before the mortgage crisis, before the poisonous BP oil disaster, before gas prices rose to $4 a gallon in the U.S., before the rich versus poor gap widened so much that it resembled the fault at the border of the Pacific Plate, before the tsunami of 2004 that released energy the magnitude of 23,000 Hiroshima-style atomic bombs, before Hurricane Katrina and the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, several presidents ago…before the continuing stockmarket crashes that parallel these natural and unnatural disasters.

There is no longer much trust in each other, and young people of all nations do not have a secure future to look forward to. They have seen their parents struggle, and some have seen their parents fail. Many people are willing to learn to say anything at all on the phone to earn a living.

Thus, in 2012, the dilemma: how to run a call center? And how to run a call center so you get lots of work and can still face yourself in the mirror?

The latest ideas have revolved around what software to use to “manage” the calls and the call center and thus keep callers on their toes; how to keep training callers due to the constant turnover–formerly known to create business failure but now considered par for the course; and now, finally, where to outsource calls to–India or the Philippines–since U.S. workers demand to be paid “too much.” Note that all of this is about volume and turnover and bottom line, as if people really were dollar bills being spewed out on an assembly line and there will always be an endless supply of them…and thus, they are expendable…anything but human. This is the way companies and workers in the U.S. have been living. In fact, it has been shown to be the case that training good English-speaking callers and keeping them will, in the long run, make your call center more profitable to high-end companies. By the way, it is also better for all the people involved.

It seems that our current ideas of how to run a call center demonstrate all of the problems and cycles of thinking and management theory we have flipped through in the past twenty or thirty years, including the idea of “human capital.” I’m talking about human management; remember, what management originally meant was the way to get people to do their best. But now management has become an ugly word, and in practice often means the best way to manipulate people, lie to them, herd them in one direction and then another, and then, finally, when they least expect it, let them go.

Education and health are now termed “investments” in human capital; in other words, it is good for people to be healthy and smart. Why can’t we simply say that? In a time when the value of real investments is questionable, does the comparison of human benefits to capital–or people to money–inspire us? Is it sincere? After what we have seen of our investments, such a comparison seems blind and heartless. For if our human capital is to be managed by the same reckless forces that managed our major companies, stocks, banks, and governments– why would we want to use the term human capital? It has an eerie, Orwellian feel to it; ask any of the shareholders who collectively lost $11 billion when Enron collapsed, taking their retirement pensions, hopes, and dreams with it.

Here is my memory of working part-time in a prominent U.S. call center in 1993, right after I moved and was suddenly teaching not full-time but only part-time at a college.

The call center manager was a guy about 45, which in those days meant that he had some education and, given that he had lived through the 1960’s, had people-centered and earth-friendly values. He wasn’t rich, but he had a simple house and was generally happy in his life. He also made everyone at work happy: he complimented us when we did well, explained why something we said was or wasn’t effective, and sincerely believed in the companies we called on behalf of. Technology? We had the latest equipment, and it was adequate for what we did, and no new expensive software will help the bottom line if your people are not with you in spirit. Trainings? We had lots of them, but the core of the thing was that we all worked together well as a team, and we all tried our hardest without lying or creating false names….because nothing we were saying on the phone was a lie. It wasn’t tacky or scummy; we weren’t trying to fool anyone into doing anything. Of course, we also weren’t doing customer support or explaining technical manuals on the phone…but if we had been asked to, we would have managed to do it with a smile. All the callers were well-educated, and worked at the call center part-time or full-time because it supplemented their income, and all of them did it with a genuine feel for people. The term “human capital” would have been absurd.

Tom, the manager, was liked by everyone. He was known to be fair and approachable, and although he was not a softy or a pushover, you could ask him for a special schedule if you needed one. The clients who hired the call center also loved what we did. We had great rankings, and could get anyone to buy anything on the phone. Of course, the company only signed up with companies it genuinely developed a relationship with. And that is the secret of managing and developing any business at all: develop a real relationship by calling your clients and dealing honestly with them.

It was great while it lasted.

Like most things in that time of change, it didn’t last. The call center was bought out in 1994 by a bigger company, and went the way many companies have gone in the U.S. and elsewhere: the management became big and impersonal, giving lip service to the values of human decency and individuality that the smaller company really lived by. And that’s what companies do these days: they have a people-centered company mission statement that sounds good, and then they often do just the opposite in practice. And people know it.

Bigger is not better. Bigger cars take more gas and make the earth poor once more; bigger bombs destroy our future, bigger debates waste our time, bigger egos prevent us from communicating with one another. And if you are not big enough to lose, you are too small to win.

Covering our fears and our lies with impressive company names and more lies will not help the peoples of this world. Using the clever term “human capital” will not make us feel human. Admitting we are all human and then treating us as such, and forging on with a positive attitude, was always the best policy: as George Bernard Shaw put it, “If you can’t get rid of the skeleton in your closet, you’d best teach it to dance.”

What’s the best way to run a call center? How can you run a call center so you get lots of work and can still face yourself in the mirror?

If you’ve been reading this page, I think you have the answer.

Attachment to a particular outcome will destroy you

Categories: Of Interest | Tagged | Leave a comment

After engaging in a spiritual practice for two decades, I learned that attachments are bad. The problem is that I had a few attachments. If you have been working with someone for ten years, it is not so easy to let them go. If you have been living in the same place for two decades it is not so easy to just pack up and go. If you have been driving the same car or doing the same job for a long time, it is natural no matter how spiritual you might think you are to have an attachment.

What I learned is that spiritual knowledge really helps in business. India is the world capital of spiritual knowledge. Unfortunately, the ones who are highly evolved don’t work, and those who work, are generally at a very low level of spiritual attainment or non-attainment. If India would apply its spiritual knowledge to business, they would be superstars. Maybe in another four decades. I will keep my fingers crossed.

I wanted to have one of my assistants handle all of certain types of tasks. She did part of it but not all. I didn’t have enough work to hire and train another assistant — or at least so I thought. So, since she didn’t do everything, then I started working overtime to get all of the tasks done that I wanted done. I just tired myself out. The problem originated from an attachment. I was “used to” using a particular person for tasks. I was used to doing things myself. I was not used to training new people to do new things. After all, that is time consuming, and “what if” they don’t do a good job, or “what if” they quit.

So, I trained someone new to do the work, and they learned to be better in many ways than the original person I was using. Wow! So, I got over my attachment to a particular way of doing things, and the result was better. Of course, the result could have been worse as well — and that is why we try things before we commit to them.

Next, I was having issues with a service provider for another task that I outsourced. I had been working with her for seven years. I had very little experience with others on the particular task she did. But, I had trouble with one of the people in her office who always was rude to me. It got to the point where my patience was running out — and they were no bargain either. So, I found others who could do the work she did equally well. Of course, they didn’t have the technical skills that the original person had, but they were good in other ways that I never thought of which made up for it. Additionally, the price was much lower.

What I learned was — whatever you didn’t think of could be very valuable. New people might be good in ways you never imagined. As a manager, your skill lies in your ability to explore and nurture the hidden potential in others! So, don’t get attach to individuals, or particular ways of doing things. Be flexible and learn to explore!

China and Russia Quitting the Dollar?

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China and Russia Stopping Trading With Dollars?

The news came out on Nov 24th, 2010 that China and Russia would stop using American Dollars to trade with each other. I’m surprised such large countries woud use the dollar to trade with each other in the first place. Is this a strategical move for China to assert its superiority?

China is careful
China is much to careful to do anything to sabotage their trade relationship with the U.S. We purchase so many billions of dollars of every conceivable type of product from them, that any loss of trade would be felt hard by Chinese manufacturers. Usage of particular currencies effects how those currencies measure up in the Forex markets, and any change in the use of dollars will weaken our dollar. But, what does that mean, and what does it lead to?

A weak dollar?
Many in America can not figure out why America buys more than it sells in international trade. Are we just big spenders. The balance seems to be covered by China buying up trillions of our bonds. China owns us. If they decide to stop financing us, the U.S. would be in a serious economic situation that could force the government to print more money, causing out of control inflation. A weak dollar will mean that Americans will have to pay more for imported goods like cars, oil, outsourced Indian software, blueberries from Chile, sugar cane, and the list is endless. On the brighter side, a weak dollar means that America will be able to export much more than before due to much more competitive prices. Americans are not aware of this, but America is a world leader in weapons, aircraft, medicinals, pharmaceuticals, industrial machinery, automotive parts, telecommunications, electrical apparatuses, and Plastic materials, as well as the production of inexpensive beef. The rest of the world can not live without these. We might see the jobless rate go far down if our goods and services are purchased more widely around the world, and we might even see regular trade surpluses for years to come.

How does this effect India?
The China / Russia currency agreement made a week ago doesn’t really effect the world so drastically, but if those two countries permanently stopped using the dollar for any trade outside of the United States, the dollar would plummet, and that would make India’s outsourcing services a lot more costly with a weak dollar. Our exchange rate might become 30 rupees to 1 dollar, making it 50% more expensive to get outsourcing done. That would cause a huge reduction in the amount of outsourcing done between the U.S. and India, and between the U.S. and any other country.

America’s tragedy
Unfortunately, do to the poor spending decisions made in America over the last forty years, America is in debt up to its eyeballs, and we are no longer in control of our country. China pulls the strings now, and will have an increasing level of power over us, since they own our debts. Any move China makes that effects our debt or currency exchange will hurt the U.S. and hurt China’s ability to export to us too, but if they are willing to make a sacrifice in exports, they could bring America into a very serious financial crisis. I personally feel that its better for America to live leanly, stop fighting unnecessary wars, stop having trade deficits, raise taxes, and reduce our debts to a sane level in the next ten years. If we don’t, then a disaster is imminent. The bigger issue is that Americans are by and large not willing to make short term sacrifices for long term security, and this equates to a suicide made in a succession of very small steps over a long period of time which is similar to smoking unfiltered cigarettes or engaging in illegal drug use over an extended period of time.

The Indian Diet Can Kill You

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The Indian diet can kill you!

Indians have endless misconceptions about what a healthy diet is, and much of these misconceptions come from illogical prejudices and religious rules. Muslims are anti-pork, and Hindus are anti-meat in general, although those from meat eating castes seem to think that chicken and lamb are okay. Just don’t say the word beef around Hindu people — that is a forbidden food, and even having a milligram of beef can send you hurdling to hell forever according to many Hindus.

Hindu’s who follow Brahman and Vyshya eating restrictions consider themselves to be “Vegetarian”. But, if you look a little more carefully at the Indian diet, veg, or non-veg, people are eating rice, potatoes, and wheat for 90% of their calories. There is an abundance of fried foods too which lead to deteriorization of the arteries.

Indians have an astoundingly high rate of heart problems, diabetes, and other health problems, which stem partly to genetics and partly to diet. I have noticed that fatigue is a huge problem, especially in Tamil Nadu due to the diet, and the weather. Part of the problem is the lack of diversity in what people are eating, the other problem is what people are not eating.

Here are some miracle foods which Indians should consider whether lord Krishna approves or not… I’m sure he will understand if it is good for your health! If in doubt, just call him up for a personalized opinion!

Salmon – sure it is expensive, but you might live 20 years longer if you eat this regularly. The omegas in Salmon clean up your blood’s triglicerides, and the healthy fats in salmon can soften blood vessels. You might complain about spending a little more money, but how much money does it cost to be in the hospital having a heart attack. Please compare the two financial estimates when you are at your local fish market. Please look up the content of Omega-3 in Salmon, Tuna, and other fish on the internet, and look up what the benefits of Omegas are as well.

Red Wine – sure, it is forbidden for Brahmans to drink, but would you rather die of a heart attack? You might get outcasted by your family for having an occassional drink of red wine, but it won’t matter — because they will all be dead soon, and you will live a lot longer as a result of wine. Red wine has been reported to stimulate a gene which promotes long life. It reduces stress as well, cleans the blood of cholesterol, improves circulation, has many antioxidants, and reduces the chance of heart disease. Look up the health benefits of red wine on the internet. The benefits come from chemicals in the skin of the grape, especially when it is fermented. Drinking too much is damaging to the liver, but a half a glass of red wine per day can do miracles for your circulation and health.

Vegetables? rice, potatoes, and wheat have their place in a diet, but eating REAL vegetables like spinach, broccoli, kale, dandelion greens, cabbage, and other high fiber, low calorie vegetables, can do wonders for your health. Each different species has it’s own health benefits, so it is good to have lots of different types of vegetables. High fiber vegetables increase regularity which cleanses the body of toxins and can lower cholesterol as well! Do you eat your vegetables, particularly your greens?

Tomatoes – Tomatoes are good for the heart, but cooked tomatoes have a much better quality anti-oxidant quality. Punjabi dishes usually have a tomato based sauce. Sambar has some tomato in it too. It is good to have some sort of cooked tomatoes several times a week to enhance the energy flow to your heart meridian according to Chinese medicine. A healthy heart can make you feel more energetic and happier!

Beef – My acupuncturist says that having a rare steak from time to time helps your body boost the red blood cell count. A diet that prohibits certain types of foods, also prevents you from having certain critical types of nutrition. There is more to nutrition than merely counting how many vitamins a particular food has. Food has metaphysical properties which the Chinese have been studying for 3000 years. People who don’t ever eat meat often seem very fatigued and have a grey color to them. On the other hand, too much meat can give you a heart attack from the cholesterol. A rare steak that is red in the middle (not raw unless you want to get food poisoning), is wonderful for your health from time to time. Perhaps an 8 ounce steak is perfect. I have not seen any steak places in India, but a balanced diet should include a little meat.

Oats – You can have Cherios or oatmeal. This magical grain can lower your cholesterol, lower your blood pressure, help you lose weight, and give you a lot of energy for the whole day. Oatmeal is common for europeans and americans, but not common in India. This food could save your life and revolutionize your health. It should be consumed in the MORNING for ideal health results.

Chocolate – this is a health food, especially dark chocolate which is extremely high in antioxidants (look this up online). Additionally, it is good for the heart, and has phytochemicals that can make you happy! Eat in moderation and enjoy your new secret to happiness!

There are many other power foods. As a general rule, fruits, vegetables, and fish are good for your health. Farmed fish might be higher in toxins which is a real danger. When eating fish, use the internet to look up the toxic levels in certain species of fish as the toxic level of Swordfish is roughly 100x the toxic level of salmon for instance!

Things to avoid

(1) Deep fried foods – these will deteriorate your arteries leaving you vulnerable to premature death, liver toxicity, obesity and heart attacks.

(2) Beer and hard liquor – these are horrible for your health and harden your arteries. Your liver can also become very toxic and disturbed if there is too much alcohol consumption.

(3) Processed carbohydrates. White flour and white sugar are particularly bad. It is better to have whole wheat rotis or other whole wheat bread products.

(4) Ice cream

Giving employees the right to make decisions

Categories: Management | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Now there is a risky topic. Most managers are terrified to let their underlings do anything without supervision. But, imagine the management savings if employees could make some of their own decisions. If you run a call center, it takes time to wait for a call center manager. But, what if your call center clerks can make a few last minute decisions to benefit your clients’ callers?

You really need to do a cost analysis. What is the cost if your employee is too generous and lets the customer get too much compensation for a corporate mistake? What is the benefit of the time saved by allowing them to make such decisions. If they are too generous, the customers will not complain — there — another benefit.

One boss liked to go on vacation a lot. He told his people that any decision that was $100 or less they could make themselves. In the worst case scenario he would lose a few hundred per month, but then he wouldn’t need to be bothered. Now, there is a solution! Set a cap on how much they can give out without permission. You just saved management hours per week and saved your callers from being on hold endlessly.

Another approach is to let your call center employees make arbitrary decisions how to handle cases, but document the decisions in a file. Every week or month those decisions could be reviewed with management to “fine tune” the employees decision making skills. Good idea or bad idea? An idea is only as good as your ability to make it work beneficially! Letting employees be their own manager might work for some, but not for all. Or, it might work on a limited basis for a few, but on a more extensive basis with others. You can try it and see what happens. Write a blog about it if it goes well.

Tweets:
(1) Give your employees the right to make decisions. But, what if they make a wrong decision?
(2) If you give your employees the right to make certain types of decisions = easier to manage

You might also like:

Having a foundation in business for long term growth
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2014/03/27/having-a-foundation-in-business-for-long-term-growth/

Do you overanalyze or do you trust your instincts?
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2014/03/18/do-you-over-analyze-or-trust-your-instincts/

Philippines is #2 in non-voice outsourcing?

Categories: Philippines, Semi-Popular | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Philippines is #2 in non-voice based outsourcing?

2011 was a special year for the Philippines.  They passed India to become the #1 country in call center outsourcing (voice-supported outsourcing).  But, the Philippines is #2 now in non-voice services according to bpooutcomes.com.
 
Many companies are pleased with their outsourcing ventures with the Philippines, and there are many advantages.  But there are disadvantages in outsourcing to the Philippines that you might not think of.  Corruption, bureaucracy, poor infrastructure, abject poverty, and a suceptability to natural disasters!
 
When companies outsource, they might be making an equation regarding, how the language skills of the employees are, cost, ease of communication, level of experience and technical saavy.  But, how many companies integrate the possibility of a severe tsunami, flood, hurricane, or other disaster into the picture.  It is so unpredictable, that even if you do take these factors into consideration, you will not know how to weight them.
 
Look at what happened in Thailand a few months ago.  Everything was fine, and then they had a horrible flood in July 2011 along the Mekong and Chao Phraya rivers.  Can you imagine if you give all of your call center work to a company near a river in Asia, and then all of a sudden, your workers have to take an inflatable boat to work — assuming work is still there?   I worry about this too!
 
Putting aside these risks that are hard to evaluate, the Philippines has a great work force of friendly people with superb English language and cultural skills.  So, don’t worry, be happy… and take your altimeter with you when you visit your prospective call centers in the Philippines. Remember that high ground needs to be on the requirement list!

Tweets:
(1) 2011 was the year that Philippines passed India to become #1 in Call Center Outsourcing
(2) Disadvantages in outsourcing to the Philippines: Corruption, bureaucracy, poor infrastructure, natural disasters!
(3) If you outsource to SE Asia, if there is a flood, your workers might need an inflatable boat 2go 2work!

You might also like:

Call Center Manila News
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2011/04/06/call-center-manila-news/

I see amazing potential in India
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2013/05/06/i-see-amazing-potential-in-india/

Back logs, slack and availability in your labor force’s schedule

Categories: Management | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Most companies in America have no available labor. How can they possibly accommodate new clients if they refuse to do overtime and have no available labor? The answer is that they sometimes take on new clients, but lose them to offshore outsourcers soon after. And once you ruin your reputation with a particular client, they will never come back to you. It is better to tell them you are booked up and not accepting clients at the moment.

Running a data entry company or software company is not easy. You have a certain quantity of workers. You have jobs coming in at unpredictable times. It makes sense to have a back-log of work that is going to be done in the future. That way you can deal better with the short term fluctuations in demand.

But, you have several choices if you want to have some availability in your schedule to accommodate new clients. You can either have one worker on the bench who is not doing anything other than waiting and being available. Or, you can have back-logged work and postpone the back-logged work to make time for your new client. If you have different pricing models for work that needs to be done immediately verses in the next few weeks, verses in the next few months, you can gain tremendous flexibility for attracting new clients and grow your company. Most companies are not thoughtful enough to come up with strategies for having availability — and this is exactly why they don’t grow.

Another mistake American companies make is that they don’t raise their rates when they have no availability. If a hotel has only a few rooms left, they raise their rates, so that they can have an equilibrium of availability. The goal is usually to maintain an average availability of 20-30%. That way if demand fluctuates upwards you will still probably have a few rooms left, and if demand is unpredictably low, you might still be half full. Hotels have mastered the balancing act of supply and demand, but I have NEVER seen a software company or data entry company show any signs if even having thought about this principal.

Overtime is yet another way to guarantee availability. Yes, it costs more to pay for overtime, but that way you can keep your newly acquired clients. You might lose a few hundred dollars, but you keep the clients which could be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. Unfortunately, this concept is too long term for Americans to understand which is why their business is quickly going to India!

Remember: no availability = no growth
Find a way to always have potential for availability in your schedule.

Also remember: America’s stupidity is India’s blessing. India will eventually take many of the clients that got burned by negligent American companies!

You might also like:

Should you have slack in your schedule as a manager?
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2013/10/07/should-you-have-slack-in-your-schedule-as-a-manager/

Making deadlines at work and enforcing them
http://bpo.123outsource.net/2013/07/13/making-deadlines-at-work-enforcing-them/