Key Finding #1<\/span><\/h2>\nAutomating customer service is the top investment priority. <\/b>Over two-thirds (68%) of contact centers in the study rank automating customer service as the first criterion they will use to evaluate investments.<\/span><\/p>\nWhile automation was a priority for nearly every contact center in 2022, persisting economic uncertainty has made it an urgent need. For every new technology investment, stakeholders across operations, customer service, and finance will evaluate solutions on their ability to offload customer requests. The reason why is simple. Hiring agents is no longer a sustainable way to meet demand and Contact Center Automation has proven to give customers end-to-end service for tier 1 calls without harming CSAT.<\/span><\/p>\nKey Finding #2<\/span><\/h2>\nAlmost every center in this study is prepping in some way for a downturn. <\/b>93% of study respondents are preparing in various ways for an economic downturn in 2023.<\/span><\/p>\nWhile no one can predict the future, contact centers are preparing for a downturn in the event the market doesn\u2019t recover in 2023. This can mean investing in new solutions, prioritizing agents to reduce the risk of churn, and replacing legacy technologies that prevent efficiency.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\nKey Finding #3<\/span><\/h2>\nTechnology investments are the leading hedge against economic uncertainty. <\/b>Over half (61%) of primary decision makers or those highly involved in contact center strategy and planning are investing in technology to prepare for the possibility of an economic downturn.<\/span><\/p>\nCustomer service solutions like Contact Center Automation have the ability to optimize business processes throughout the contact center, and even across organizations. But for leaders, the predictable ROI of an automation solution is the biggest benefit in an uncertain economy. Contact centers can deploy a proven solution in weeks and begin realizing cost savings in just months by reducing outsourcing, temporary hiring, and training costs.<\/span><\/p>\nKey Finding #4<\/span><\/h2>\nCustomer satisfaction is the most important KPI. <\/b>82% of contact center leaders and strategists in this study state customer satisfaction is the most important KPI. Average handle time is a distant second at 55%.<\/span><\/p>\nIt\u2019s no surprise that CSAT remains mission critical to contact centers despite the uncertainty. Many industries, like travel and hospitality, are still experiencing massive spikes in demand as customer behaviors rebound from the pandemic. The result is an added focus on lowering hold times and freeing up agents to be more available for complex customer requests.<\/span><\/p>\n