We saw how Xilinx improved their business operations after
they centralized their operations to support Cisco in ‘Demand Forecasting and
Inventory Management in the Supply Chain- Caselet 02” by eliminating
intermediate distributors as the single-point source of contact for its
customers. But what about hiring that contact center for all your customer
service needs? In this blog entry, we’ll look at how sourcing a contact center
might not be so bad for a growing enterprise in the age of cloud computing, and
where the job is where you are and the client is stationary.
LiveOps,
a self described ‘contact center cloud’, provides a cloud-based Contact Center for
coordinating communications with customers, field sales people, remote staff,
partner organizations, etc. LiveOps also provides
business users with real-time
visibility and control across remote and traditional contact centers
– enabling rapid to drive better business results.[1]
This model could keep communications open for
clients and the goal that their client’s needs are their priority. Could Xilinx
have avoided Cisco’s backlog of orders if this contact center was in place?
According to the model, Xilinx would have been alerted early and reacted to Cisco
appropriately.
Xilinx centralized their communications
operations support and enhanced the ongoing changes of their client’s supply
chain management. With LiveOps, the communications demand from clients is
packaged in a cloud computing service. According to LiveOps, more than 200
companies around the world, including Salesforce.com, Symantec, Royal Mail
Group, and Amway New Zealand trust LiveOps' technology to enable effective
multichannel, social and mobile interactions with their customers.[2] Although
LiveOps boasts as much as reducing up to 92% in operational costs[3], I am interested to know the cost-benefit analysis of
LiveOps as opposed to in-house contact center. But if 200+ companies chose
them, some cost savings measures must be in place (for the time being).
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.