The use of customer service agents working from home will continue to gain
momentum until at least 2010, analysts have predicted.
A newly published IDC study noted that the practice of employing home-based
agents, which the analyst firm calls "home-shoring", is being driven by the need
for more productive agents.
However, the study also reported that 'home-shoring' can deliver higher agent
retention rates and the ability to respond more flexibly to peaks and troughs in
voice traffic.
"Over time, the offshore outsourcing of customer care will be associated more
and more with its neglected sibling, home-shoring," said Stephen Loynd, senior
analyst for IDC's CRM and Customer Care BPO service.
"Ironically, outsourcing will therefore be associated not only with the
offshoring of US jobs, but with the expansion of employment opportunities in the
US. Home-shoring is about to hit a growth spurt."
The IDC study said that the 112,000 home-based phone representatives in the
US will swell to 300,000 by 2010 as companies increasingly develop and invest in
home-based agents, either with their own employees or by hiring outsourcers.
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