Impact of Web Portal on Call Center: An Impirical Analysis
journal contribution
posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00authored byAnuj Kumar
Firms are investing millions to deploy web based self-services at their call centers primarily to reduce operating
costs. The rationale is that the firm’s cost of interacting with customers through web based channel is an order of
magnitude cheaper than the assisted channels like telephony. However, the interaction among competing
channels of customer service at call center is not empirically validated so far. We conduct a field study at the call
center of a prominent US health insurance firm to examine the cost saving rationale of web based self service.
On one hand, the low cost- low quality web channel may substitute high cost-high quality telephony channel in
some cases. Interestingly on the other hand, the web also exposes customers to more information that at times
aggravates their concerns and thus leads to more telephone calls. We designed a quasi-natural experiment in our
field setting and used diff-in-diff specifications to show that web based self service usage leads to 14% increase in
telephone calls. We conduct several checks to show that our specifications are robust to any potential selection of
customers in web self-service usage. However, we further show that the impact of web portal is moderated by the
web portal characteristics and individual customer characteristics. We find that if information is unambiguous
and easily retrievable on web, calls in respect to such information go down by 29%. Likewise, we also find that
the absolute increase in calls due to web usage for younger customers (age<40 years) and older customers
(age>60years) are much higher than the middle aged customers (age 40-60 years). In all, our research gives
concrete prescriptions to managers in multichannel customer service management, web portal design and
customer segmentation.