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Answering Service
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Call
Accounting Software Fills The Bill For End Of Year Budget
Surpluses
Many businesses and organizations employ a "use it or lose
it" strategy when it comes to setting annual budgets,
particularly in the technology sector. Often the end of year
budgets yield a frenzied spending spree on the latest gadgets
without any real perspective on whether or not the purchase is
even beneficial to the company. Any surplus can be the ideal
time to consider a tried and true technology purchase that can
actually generate a return on investment - call accounting
systems.
Telecom managers wrestle daily with keeping track of a vast
inventory of telecom equipment, vendors, bills, and endpoints,
not to mention the time it takes to sort out who made what
call and to which department it should be allocated.
The benefits and return on investment of a call accounting
system far outweigh the initial costs.
Cost allocation is used to hold departments, divisions or
individuals accountable for usage and to ensure they stay
within budgets. Calls can be charged back to departments for
phone costs based on their actual usage. A call accounting
software can save time and labor by distributing telecom
expenses by department. Often personal calls or calls that
don't normally fall within the corporate calling patterns can
be billed back to the person or department. By keeping track
of call detail records of each department, project or product,
it can be determined which are profitable and which aren't.
Take employee productivity. Call accounting systems can be
used to provide managers with reports showing number of calls,
types of calls, cost, average duration for each
person/station; evaluate calling patterns and calls completed
per hour (useful for collection agents, customer service
agents, telemarketers and sales persons); monitor the number
of incoming calls per hour to correctly estimate the number of
staff needed at the right time and at the least cost; verify
the effectiveness of marketing efforts. Analyzing how an
employee spends time on the phone can be an effective measure
of productivity.
Traffic Analysis is a good way to track needless spending.
Telecom managers can monitor the efficiency of the phone
system by locating unused trunks and can verify the correct
routing of calls in order to achieve cost effective routing.
Additionally, call accounting can help to spot fraudulent or
incorrect billing practices by vendors, as well as identify
and provide documentation of down trunks and malfunctioning
circuits that may make it possible to obtain rebates from
vendors.
One of the greatest ROIs that can be enjoyed through a call
accounting system is the ability to catch and minimize toll
fraud and internal phone abuse. Toll Fraud costs businesses
billions of dollars per year according to the FCC. Repeated
incoming call attempts over a trunk can indicate hacker
attempts to gain access to the switch in order to loop back
through it for outgoing call purposes. By using a call
accounting system, you can identify suspicious calling
patterns, monitor 411 and directory assistance calls, check
for abuse of incoming 800 calls from employees' friends and
relatives; track illegal or suspicious destinations to the
station originating them; monitor production time spent on the
phone. Legal departments can track employees suspected of
revealing confidential information to competitors, the news
media, or headhunters, and can provide proof that a call took
place in the event of obscene or harassing calls.
When planning for end of year budgets, telecom managers can
be the heroes with a purchase or upgrade of a call accounting
system with a call detail record feature that can provide a
cost savings benefit that will stretch far into the future and
is easily applicable now with legacy PBX systems, or later
with VoIP deployment.
Author, Len Simpson, writes articles on the
business benefits of call accounting and call detail
record technology. More information can be found at
www.telsoft-solutions.com.
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