On February 1, 2017 Donna Fluss, president of DMG
Consulting, posted an article on destinationcrm.com entitled “Workforce
Optimization is Under Siege.” DMG
Consulting, among other services, issues extraordinary lengthy questionnaires
to contact center vendors every year and seeks to identify the features and
functions of the software solutions those vendors provide. DMG Consulting also goes to great lengths to
shed light on the revenues those vendors generate from their solutions.
The February article is well worth a read. Fluss reveals that total company first half
revenue for 2016 was about $1.67 billion, down nearly $6 million from about
$1.68 billion in the same period of 2015.
This is the first period over period decline ever experienced. Some vendors did better than others. She states that two companies accounted for
the majority of the WFO sector’s revenue decrease in the first half of 2016:
Verint and Aspect. Verint’s total
company GAAP revenue dropped by $58.1 million, a reduction of 10.3
percent. Aspect’s WFO revenue is
estimated to have decreased by $12.3 million, or 5.9 percent.
NICE revenue grew $14.4 million in the period, an
increase of 3.3 percent. She writes that
this increase was likely due to inorganic growth via the acquisitions of VPI
and Nexidia during the year. Interactive
Intelligence grew $22.3 million or 12 percent.
InContact increased by $21.8 million or 20.9 percent. And Calabrio increased $11.3 million or 40.2
percent. It should be pointed out that
Interactive Intelligence was acquired during the year by Genesys and InContact
was acquired by NICE.
Fluss finds that when viewing contact center WFO revenues
exclusively, she sees a drop of 3.7 percent, from $714.3 million in the first half
of 2015 to $688.1 million in the same period of 2016. The reasons why are a bit illusive. Fluss cites buyer confusion caused by many
mergers and the fact that adoption of newer analytics products is slower than
expected. Fluss also writes that she believes
the market will improve as new vendors enter, bringing new science and
practices that will drive revenues up.
Maybe so. This
isn’t the first time that DMG has predicted that new vendors with new, easier
to use solutions will transform the WFO market.
Several years ago DMG made a similar prediction with
respect to the workforce management (WFM) market. DMG said that existing WFM solutions were too
difficult to use thereby limiting their uptake.
I wrote an article in the newsletter I produced back then reacting to
DMG’s prediction. In that article I said
that WFM was inherently difficult for plenty of good reasons not the least of
which is the fact that the solution attempts to simulate a complex, dynamic environment
that involves peoples’ work preferences while meeting stringent performance
criteria. An analogy, I wrote, is the
game of chess.
Each of two players starts with 16 pieces: one king, one
queen, two rooks, two knights, two bishops, eight pawns and they all move in
different ways. It has been estimated
that there are millions of discreet games that can be played. That said, there is a way to make chess very
simple: have only one type of piece and have them all move the same. Of course, the game wouldn’t be chess
anymore. It would be checkers. My point was and remains that WFM is
inherently difficult.
Fluss writes that innovative WFO vendors will expand from
pure contact center solutions to solutions that span the enterprise to include
back-office and branch operations. Let’s
be clear about this: there is no way WFM solutions will get simpler if they
need to solve scheduling problems in three very different environments. They will only become even more complex.
Fluss also says that users will adopt analytic solutions
in greater numbers when the expertise needed to produce a return on investment
migrates from the vendor ranks into the end user ranks. On this note, I think she’s right. Analytics has largely been oversold by
vendors. For example, they suggest that
applying speech analytics to all the conversations recorded in the contact
center will unearth actionable customer dissatisfaction issues. They imply that all you need to do is pour
all those recording through the speech analytic software and out pops issues.
But the reality is that customers do not speak with a
single voice. Given a product experience
or a company policy, it is likely that some customers will be pleased and some
will be unhappy. How is that in any way
actionable?
Analytics is a tool.
And like any other tool the user needs some degree of skill in order to
use it to purpose and advantage. In a
sense, this is much like the early days of WFM when finding skilled people was
difficult. It took many years for WFM to
become main-stream. I expect the same
will be true for analytics.
For what it’s worth here’s my take on the WFO
market. It’s going to continue to
contract. Why? For the simple reason that the number of employees
in the contact center, back office and branches will continue to shrink because
of brilliant self-service applications using smart phones, artificial
intelligence and robotics. Less humans
working means less WFO revenue. Nothing
lasts forever. Ask the buggy whip maker.
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