RECENT ASSIGNMENT

Tweet Share WhatsApp Share
GET ANSWERS / LIVE CHAT


ASSESSMENT TWO SEMESTER 1, 2021
ANALYSING A SPREADSHEET AND PRESENTING A BUSINESS REPORT
Due Date/Time: 11:59 pm, Friday 30th April 2021 30% of Final Grade
Call Centre Case Study
Calls R Us is a small call centre which provides customer services and sales for corporate clients. They are based in a converted warehouse in Melbourne’s outer Western suburbs with room for 8 Call Centre agents who answer the calls plus offices for management staff.
The business is jointly owned by business partners, Cecilia, Thomas and Makani who met while they were students during their undergrad at RMIT and were also working part time in a call centre, so they have some understanding of how a call centre works. Now that they have started their own business, they are finding that managing a call centre is challenging.
Their clients are various electronic retail businesses who sell similar categories of electronic goods. Calls R Us provide sales and customer support services for their clients by acting as their call centre (outsourcing to a third party). Calls R Us has many phone numbers which all come into the same call centre and each phone number is allocated to a different client. Our client’s customers do not know that they have called a third-party call centre, as far as the customer is concerned, they have called the retail business directly.
The clients advertise their allocated phone number to their customers and the agents have a phone display which displays the phone number the customer dialled (the one allocated to a client) so it is important the agent makes note of the phone number on their display so they know which client the call will be about and greet the customer accordingly. Occasionally this has caused some confusion. If an agent forgets to look at the display or forgets which client the phone number was allocated to, they might answer with the wrong client greeting or discuss another client’s products.
Agents are in a virtual queue to receive the next call that comes through to the call centre. After each call the agent is given at least 10 seconds before they get another call so they can wrap up any leftover work from the previous call. If they need more time to finish a complex call the agent can put themself at the back of the queue or make themself unavailable until they are ready.
The call centre only operates as an inbound call centre (i.e. a customer initiates the call rather than outbound calls where the call centre tries to generate business by calling customers). Operating hours are 9am – 5pm seven days a week.
Calls R Us are paid a fee directly by their clients. $15 for calls that are resolved and $2 for calls which the agent could not resolve, e.g. could not find the information the customer needed or did not make a sale. The agent records the outcome of the call as resolved or unresolved in the CRM system the same whether it is a sale or a simple service enquiry call.
Cecilia takes care of accounting and finance, Makani sales (of our call centre services to our clients) and forecasting whilst Thomas manages the daily operations of the call centre. Call centre agents are rostered onto variable shifts depending on how many clients they have and the number of calls they are expecting.
Matching the staff numbers to their expected call volumes is a key challenge of any call centre. Too many staff and they sit idle eating into the profits. Not enough staff and the customer’s waiting times increase making them frustrated and less likely to make purchases. The challenges of getting this right have been a source of tension for the three partners. As the Operations manager, Thomas is keen to roster many staff on as he is responsible for making sure calls are handled quickly and customer waiting times are low. Cecilia is pressuring Thomas to reduce the staff however, as idle staff reduce their profit margins, “We can’t be paying for people to read magazines and complete their uni assignments in between calls.” Cecilia also thinks Makani is not doing a good enough job at forecasting the number of client campaigns and the number of calls each campaign should expect. Makani thinks having more people than they need is better than not having enough and is already concerned that they are missing too many calls as it is with a number of calls not answered. Cecilia thinks there are more than enough staff, they are just not working efficiently.
The management team have not really been paying attention to the Customer Satisfaction ratings. Customers are directed to an automated voice prompt to rate the call (1 Poor - 5 Excellent) once they have finished talking to an agent. The average satisfaction ratings grouped by product are provided direct to the clients at the end of every month via an automated report without the call centre management team’s involvement. Thomas had a recent informal conversation with one of their clients who was concerned about the customer satisfaction ratings. The client also queried why they were charged for some unresolved calls with an unknown product. The client warned that without improvements the client would be looking for a new call centre. Thomas thinks he should have further information before he raises the issue with the other partners and clients.
Calls R Us are not paid by the customers calling the call centre but by their clients, so they need to make sure they are responding to their client’s needs. On the other hand, if they do not provide a good service to the customers, then their clients will not want to continue to use their services.
Cecilia, Thomas and Makani seek your consultation to help them understand the performance of their Call Centre and how well their business has been running for the last month.
What should they be measuring? Average Wait Time (time the customer waits in a queue before they speak to a real person) and Average Talk Time (how long it takes the operator to complete the call once they start talking) or is it just important to know how many calls were resolved successfully and try to improve revenue? Are there enough or too many staff rostered on to manage the number and duration of calls? How well are they serving their clients and could this be improved?
A spreadsheet has been provided containing call record data for the month of January 2021.
Some of the data and calculations have been completed for you and you are guided to some of the other calculations and tools. Costs have not been provided so you are not required to make calculations and predictions regarding profitability of the business.
A summary sheet has been started for you. You may make your calculations using any Excel methods/tools you are comfortable with.
Report Requirements
You are expected to undertake descriptive, predictive and prescriptive analysis of the data that Calls R Us has provided and use Excel to analyse the data. The results of the analysis are then required to be presented in a professionally organized report that analyses and discusses both operations so far and the various options available to help improve future operations. Some specific expectations are as follows:
a) Analyse the January call records to identify the key variables/features (e.g. products, client satisfaction, agents, call durations, call outcomes, etc). Has the Call Centre been well run?
b) Discuss at least 2 options to improve the performance of the variables/features identified in (a).
c) Predict the likely outcomes of these key variables/features for the first two weeks of February (assuming no changes to business operations since January) and then compare the effect of the changes discussed in (b) for the same two weeks.
d) Identify at least one business issue which the business should further explore to improve their business. Clearly explain your reasoning using data to support your discussion. Justify how this would improve the business.
e) Make two specific recommendations to the owners to improve the management of the business. Briefly justify these recommendations (i.e. prescribe what should be done and why this would be helpful, drawing on your previous predictive and descriptive analysis). Demonstrate the benefits to the business of acting on these recommendations
Preparing the Business Report
Report structure and specifications
The analysis, findings and recommendations which you prepare for Cecilia, Thomas and Makani should be outlined in a professional business report. This report should include:
? A title page – with a relevant graphic, report title, student name/number, course name (Business Information Systems), course number (ISYS2056), your workshop time and your workshop tutors’ names.
? A Table of Contents (TOC) automatically generated by Microsoft Word. Default settings for the table of contents should not be altered.
? A brief introduction which clearly outlines the purpose of the report.
? Presentation of the analysis and discussion regarding the results of your analysis. Relevant descriptive, predictive and prescriptive analysis has been included.
? Relevant charts which are labelled correctly and assist the reader in understanding the results of your analysis included in the appropriate analysis section
? A short concluding summary of the major findings of the report. (supported by relevant data: e.g., use final figures you have calculated. etc)
? Clear recommendations that the business owner can adopt. These recommendations must be drawn from the analysis you have carried out in the body of the report.
? You should incorporate good report writing practices - refer to “Writing a Business Report” on the assignment page.
Report format
The report should be developed using the guidelines covered in Canvas and workshops. Specifically, you should:
• Ensure your report is concise - No more than 1200 words. This word count includes title page and TOC. It does not include appendices.
• Present the report in a professional, business format with no spelling or grammatical errors.
• Use appropriate headings and subheadings throughout the body of the report.
? Use double or 1.5 spacing.
? Fully justify all text in the report.
? Include a page header with a suitably formatted title (the header must not appear on the title page).
? Include a page footer with your name, student number and page number (the footer must not appear on the title page).
? Include relevant charts and tables you have created in the body of your report (appropriately labelled). The charts and tables (screenshots of your spreadsheet are not appropriate) must be discussed as part of the paper (not in the appendix)
? In an appendix include screen shots of calculations (as discussed below) which you have used to assist in your analysis. (Note: You do not need to refer to this appendix in the body of your report.) A guide to inserting screen shots commences on page 4 of this document.
? Do not include references or citations in this report
Report Submission
The Business Report must be submitted, in MS Word format, by 11:59 pm Friday 30th April, via the link provided in the “Assignments” area on the ISYS2056 Business Information Systems site on Canvas. A Student Guide to submission (using Turnitin) is available at:
https://www.rmit.edu.au/students/support-and-facilities/it-services-forstudents/canvas/turnitin
A Guide to inserting a screenshot in ‘Word’
• Open and/or minimise the program/sheet you wish to create the screen shot from (in this case your Excel document). As your screenshots are designed to show calculations, you should make sure you have highlighted the relevant cell and the function is clearly visible in the function dialogue (fx) box.
• Open your ‘Word’ document.
• Select Insert/Screenshot/Screen Clipping.
• Select the sheet you wish to create the screenshot from. The screen should fade and a + appear. Use the + as a cropping tool to select the required screenshot. Note: There is no need to show every cell. (See Figure 1 in which one of the relevant cells is highlighted (B3) and the function for column B is clearly visible.)
• Label the screenshot appropriately.
Figure 1 - Screen shot of Countif function
If you need to create a screenshot of a column that is not located near the fx box (see Figure 2) you can:
• Select the relevant cell. Double click on the cell to show the formula.
• Create screen clipping as per the instructions above. Provide an appropriate label.
Figure 2 – Screenshot of Sumif function
To show several formulas in the one screenshot (see Figure 3) you can:
• Select the relevant cells.
• Select Formulas/Formula Auditing/Show formulas.
• Take the screenshot as per the directions above. (NOTE: Text needs to be large enough to be read clearly.)
Figure 3 – Screenshot showing functions in several columns



GET ANSWERS / LIVE CHAT