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Jacada was one of the first vendors to provide a unified desktop for contact centers. It simplified the agent’s desktop by replacing several application views with a single view that better followed customer conversations. It also interfaced between those applications so agents didn’t have to worry about which fields to update, where to find data or how many applications they had to use. The unified desktop also enabled agents to address customer issues more efficiently.
Being early in the market, Jacada enjoyed considerable business success. However, the last couple of years have not gone so smoothly, as there have been several changes at the top of the company and it has been challenged by new entrants and removing its analytics offering. Many of these provide most of the same features as Jacada and others as well that help agents make better decisions and provide more detailed information, such as the answer to a specific request, or a prompt that helps make a sale. Recently company founder Giddy Hollander has once again taken an active role as chairman and is working alongside CEO Tom Clear in an effort to turn the company’s fortunes around.
Recently Giddy told me that on his return to an active role, he noticed that customers had done more exciting things with the company’s product than Jacada had, taking the basic features and building new features to address specific business problems. His first step therefore was to work with these customers and update the product by building some of these features into the core product. This has been done with two intents – to make the product functionality richer and to make it easier to deploy. The new release, called Jacada Workspace Agent Desktop, is built around the concept of “widgets.”
In the Jacada world, a widget is a prebuilt piece of code that addresses a specific business issue. For example, an instant message widget allows agents to chat with a supervisor; a customer search widget helps the agent search for customer information based on a defined key; and a “help on hand” widget pops information, based on the current conversation, onto the agent desktop to help resolve the issue being discussed. One important overall feature is that data collected by one agent in a widget can be passed to another agent if the call has to be transferred, enabling the receiving agent to carry on from the same point and not repeat what has already been covered (a source of customer irritation). Widgets can be embedded into a desktop to meet individual agents’ requirements, effectively giving all agents their own desktop. This concept allows users to quickly select and build in functionality they require. As well, the user interface now is easier to use and the environment is dynamic in helping users respond to changes. Jacada aims to build more widgets and also invites its customers or third parties to build their own.
The other major move has been to upgrade the Jacada Interaction Manger and rename it Jacada Agent Scripting (JAS). Despite the name, this is not just a tool to develop scripts so agents can provide fixed answers to customer queries. Instead it allows users to model call flows. It works in a way similar to some process automation products, allowing users to drag and drop activities (greet the customer, ask what the issue is and so on) and decision points (what is the value of this customer?) into a process map thereby defining how conversations should flow for different call types. The maps can be annotated with text that relates to each activity in the map such as what to say when greeting a customer. Alternatively the maps can be used to specify which widgets appear and when on a particular agent’s desktop, thereby controlling the flow of conversations and the tasks that agent does during each interaction. JAS includes a reporting and analysis tool that includes the ability to analyze the most common routes different types of conversations take. The enables companies to optimize the flow for different call types and train agents to follow the best practice route through calls.
The agent desktop is a key technology to help agents improve the way they handle customer interactions. The market has become more competitive since Jacada launched its first product, and the technology has matured from being a unified desktop to what I term a smart desktop. These advanced tools help agents be not only more efficient but also more effective by guiding them through the best way to handle interactions. These developments elevate Jacada into the smart desktop category and should help get its fortunes back on track. Follow its fortunes by collaborating with me on…
Regards
Richard Snow – VP & Research Director
My latest research into contact center analytics shows how important it has become for companies to improve the way they monitor and assess the performance of their centers. In fact 41% said they could significantly improve the performance of their centers by using analytics, and 47% think they could improve somewhat. Their main requirements are to have more real-time operational analysis and metrics – that is, better insights into what is going on in their centers at the moment people need to know it and a more balanced set of metrics that mixes pure efficiency metrics (such as queue lengths and hold times) with effectiveness or outcome metrics such as first-call resolution, up-sales and customer retention rates; they also want capabilities that are simple to use but effective.
Therefore it seemed appropriate that Jacada, a longstanding supplier of applications for the contact center, entered the analytics market with its Insight product. This used existing capabilities to extract data from numerous business applications, not only to simplify the agent desktop but also to provide the input to Insight. At the time it wasn’t clear that this product hadn’t been developed in-house but was based on a third-party product Jacada had licensed. The more observant of you will have spotted that Insight is no longer referenced on the Jacada website and no longer supported. Apparently the licensing deal didn’t work out, leaving the vendor with no choice but to withdraw the product.
These things happen, but it is a timely reminder that when purchasing products you should carefully establish whether the solution is based on in-house developed and owned software or on a third party’s product. In the latter case, make sure to understand who is responsible for supporting the solutions you purchase and where you stand with regard to future use and support.
Keep in mind also that as more vendors move their solutions to the cloud, many are building solutions on a cloud-based development environment such as force.com from salesforce.com. It is equally important to acquire the same information regarding cloud-based solutions.
Fortunately for companies looking to improve performance by deploying contact center analytics, there are other vendors in the marketplace and more developing solutions. That said, we have to add that various acquisitions, such as Cisco buying Latigent and Genesys buying Informiam, have left only a few specialist, stand-alone solutions such as Enkata, HardMetrics, Merced Systems, Symmetrics and Upstream Works. In addition some suite vendors include analytics, among them inContact, Envision, NICE Systems, Verint and VPI.
I have been covering the contact center market for over seven years, and at last it seems that companies are beginning to see the benefit of analytics and adoption rates are climbing steadily. And vendors are responding – not just those mentioned above but also more specialist solutions based on desktop, speech, social media and text analytics. In these uncertain economic times my research shows that centers are still under cost pressures but now have the added task of raising customer satisfaction levels. To do both, executives, managers and agents all need better information. In my view analytics are the only way to get it. Has your company seen the light?
Let me know your thoughts or come and collaborate with me on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter.
Regards,
Richard Snow – VP & Research Director

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