|
|
|
|
|
Market Research Report
Evolving Medical Information Call Centers through Performance Measurement and Process Improvement
|
Evolving Medical Information Call Centers through Performance Measurement and Process Improvement published by Cutting Edge Information in February, 2009. This report consists of 94 Pages and the price starts from US $ 3995.
Abstract
Reinvent Your Medical Information Call Centers:
- Are your call loads decreasing because customers seek information via new
avenues?
- Do you face info-sharing competition within your own organization?
- What new areas demand medical information expertise?
Evolving Medical Information Call Centers addresses these questions - and
more - to give your company the boost needed to correct your call centers'
mistakes and evolve the group into new territories. Our study contains
real-world data and best practices from top pharmaceutical companies' medical
information call center operations.
With customers able to find product information on the Internet or from other
sources -- and with internal teams encroaching on territory previously owned
by medical information groups -- call center leaders now face a number of
potentially function-changing challenges.
Top teams combat the evolving landscape by tightening their own ships - which
means enacting performance metrics and process improvements to become more
efficient and to strengthen customer relationships. Additionally, medical
information call centers continue to move into new areas, adding tasks where
their skill sets translate well.
- Cutting Edge Information developed this research to help medical
information call center leaders in their improvement efforts. The report makes
its case in three easy-to-navigate chapters:
- Medical Information Structures, Headcounts and Budgets - As the first
major point of contact between patients and doctors and the company, call
centers set the tone between customers and the firm. For medical information
teams to deliver the highest quality service, they must be structured well and
own sufficient headcounts and budgets. This chapter investigates structure
and staffing choices while determining how these influence call center budgets.
- Call Center Performance Measurement - Surprisingly, metrics tracking is a
largely under-utilized practice in medical information call centers. In this
threatening environment, however, the first step toward improvement is
tracking and measuring call center metrics. This chapter examines what
measures companies currently track -- and which ones all centers should be
tracking. Benchmarks help call centers compare themselves against centers at
top pharma companies.
- Call Center Process Improvement - Pharmaceutical companies that focus on
making their call centers efficient, available and easy to navigate will earn
customer raves. To ensure that customers have good experiences, medical
information leaders build sound processes into their call centers. This
chapter provides details of call center processes such as answering systems,
agent availability, triage systems as well as response methodologies and
internal communication.
Table of Contents
Chapter 1: Medical Information Structures, Headcounts and Budgets
- Percentage of companies with centralized structure
- Ratio of internal vs. outsourced call centers
- Percentage of outsourced call center operations in US vs ex-US
- Call center staffing
- Levels of education represented in call centers
- Mix of education levels represented in call centers
- Medical information budgets
- Source of medical information budgets
- Percentage of budget allocated to salaries
- Brand-level medical information spending
Chapter 2: Call Center Performance Measurement: Tracking Key Metrics
- Call center metrics tracked
- Average total number of inbound and outbound calls per center
- Average total number of calls per FTE (monthly and annually)
- Ratio of inbound vs. outbound calls
- Expected vs. actual turn-around time
- Percentage actual turn-around time exceeds expected
- Average on-hold times
- Average abandonment rates
- Customer satisfaction rating
- Cost per call
- Number of written responses disseminated annually
Chapter 3: Call Center Process Improvement
- Sources of medical information inquiries
- Percentages of companies with IVR systems in place
- Days and hours individual call centers are open each week
- Percentage of companies with medical information personnel available
during business hours
- Utilization of external medical experts
- After-hours availability of medical information specialists
- Ratio of written to verbal responses
- Percentage of companies with specific types of written documents available
- Ratio of response delivery (fax, e-mail, mail)
- Percentage of departments offering written material on investigational
products
- Percentage of companies with websites for FAQs and/or standard letters
- Stakeholder feedback mechanisms
|

|