Designing a Call Center with Impatient Customers
The most common model to support workforce management of telephone call centers is the M/M/N/B model, in particular its special cases M/M/N (Erlang C, which models out busy signals) and M/M/N/N (Erlang B, disallowing waiting). All of these models lack a central prevalent feature, namely, that impatient customers might decide to leave (abandon) before their service begins. In this paper, we analyze the simplest abandonment model, in which customers' patience is exponentially distributed and the system's waiting capacity is unlimited (M/M/N + M). Such a model is both rich and analyzable enough to provide information that is practically important for call-center managers. We first outline a method for exact analysis of the M/M/N + M model, that while numerically tractable is not very insightful. We then proceed with an asymptotic analysis of the M/M/N + M model, in a regime that is appropriate for large call centers (many agents, high efficiency, high service level). Guided by the asymptotic behavior, we derive approximations for performance measures and propose "rules of thumb" for the design of large call centers. We thus add support to the growing acknowledgment that insights from diffusion approximations are directly applicable to management practice.
Year of publication: |
2002
|
---|---|
Authors: | Garnet, O. ; Mandelbaum, A. ; Reiman, M. |
Published in: |
Manufacturing & Service Operations Management. - Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences - INFORMS, ISSN 1523-4614. - Vol. 4.2002, 3, p. 208-227
|
Publisher: |
Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences - INFORMS |
Subject: | Tele-Queues | Erlang C | Erlang A | Telephone Call and Contact Centers | Multiserver Exponential Queues | Workforce Management or Staffing | Queues with Abandonment | Diffusion Approxiamtion |
Saved in:
Online Resource
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
Telephone Call Centers: Tutorial, Review, and Research Prospects
Gans, Noah, (2003)
-
Adaptive Behavior of Impatient Customers in Tele-Queues: Theory and Empirical Support
Zohar, Ety, (2002)
-
Huber, Kathrin, (2006)
- More ...