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Tag: Aura

by: Paul Stockford, Chief Analyst, Saddletree Research

Lots of people have commitment issues. So do a lot of companies. Take, for example, the larger vendors in the contact center industry. Look at the “Partners” tab on the website of companies like Avaya and Cisco and you’ll see a list of partner companies as long as your arm. Whether these large companies are trying to cover all their bases or whether they are compensating for single-partner anxiety, it has always been this way. That’s why I was so surprised to see that Avaya, with their recent announcement of the new Avaya Aura Contact Center, has settled down and made a commitment to a single WFO partner – Verint.

New product announcements are scary enough for lots of vendors, and new product announcements that represent a completely new product concept that will likely replace a customer’s trusted, if-it-ain’t-broke-don’t-fix-it contact center solution can be absolutely terrifying. So, why not lessen customer and prospect apprehension by adding a proven, reliable, cost-effective and efficiency-boosting solution under the covers of the new system. That’s exactly what Avaya has done with the addition of Verint WFO under the hood of the Aura Contact Center.

Avaya could have gone with any number of WFO suppliers as its partner but the fact that it chose Verint is a testament to Impact 360’s standing in the contact center community. I don’t have any insider information, but I would bet that Verint was put through the ringer before Avaya made the commitment to Impact 360 and I understand that there was more than one dog in the fight.

If I were one of the marketing geniuses at Avaya I would definitely want to be able to point to the stability of a Verint product under the hood of my new product to ease customer’s fears about upgrading to an untested product. Although Aura Contact Center introduces several new concepts to potential users, it also offers the security of proven Verint WFO technology under the Avaya label.

Avaya has undergone many changes over the past few years and I’m not convinced that all the changes have been for the better, but in this case Avaya has made a wise choice. Not only has Avaya acknowledged the strategic importance of WFO in a customer service productivity strategy, it has chosen a partner that has proven over the years that it can deliver the goods.

On July 20th Avaya announced new and enhanced capabilities across several of its AURA product family areas including messaging, contact centers, enterprise voice telephony, conferencing, session managers and border controllers and communications-enabled business applications. While the flurry of activity was impressive because of its shear breadth and depth, those announcements most relevant to Customer Interaction Group, given our customer care focus, have to do with contact center application enhancements and the incorporation of the related planned Nortel product line into the Avaya Contact Center Suite that will take the company and its merged customer base into the future.

Not surprisingly, as outlined by Jorge Blanco, Avaya’s VP Product Marketing, Contact Center Solutions, Avaya’s forward thrust in contact centers will focus on “experience management” or, in other words, the management of the customer’s overall experience as he/she move through multimedia interactions with an enterprise. The newly-announced Avaya AuraTM Contact Center is a multimedia contact center application designed to more effectively deal with multiple streams of customer information channels including voice, e-mail, web chat, and instant messaging/short message service (SMS) and standardize interactions across customer access channels. The new offering was designed to simultaneously improve the midsize enterprise’s ability to manage customer service while enhancing the end user’s experience. continue reading…

By: Brynn Palmer – Customer Experience Doctor

The promise of Workforce Optimization to improve enterprise performance and lower operating costs makes it the new darling of the contact center world.  And why not?

The ability to collect and act on enterprise data validates the contact center’s role as a strategic business unit.  For those of us who have lived the contact center life of being considered “a cost center”, this is a victory long in the making.

While I celebrate the opportunity Workforce Optimization holds for the transformation of the contact center, the greatest victory is reserved for the customer.  

According to a recent American Express Global Customer Service Barometer, nine in ten Americans (91%) consider the level of customer service important when deciding to do business with a company.  But only one-quarter (24%) believe companies value their business.  In essence, the majority of customers have no faith in a company’s interest in a long term relationship; although 86% indicated they would “stick around” after a bad experience if their prior experiences had been positive. Nine %, the study shows, will even spend more with companies that provide excellent service. continue reading…