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How to handle help-desk overload

The following riddle was recently posed to the Best Practice Exchange of CIO magazine in the U.S.: Your help desk is staffed by productive workers. You expect your call volume to increase because of a new system implementation that affects a good chunk of your user base. But your budget doesnโ€™t allow for additional headcount. What do you do? Exchange members agreed that while the conundrum is hardly an enviable one, it isnโ€™t the end of the world. In fact, they offered smart ways to get out of the bind.

1. User, help thyself. โ€œPut together a sample group of affected users, help-desk technicians and project team members to brainstorm a sizable list of FAQs, and post the results on the help-desk Web site as part of the launch communication,โ€ suggests Robert Urwiler, CIO of Macromedia Inc. โ€œAnd strongly encourage the use of online knowledge bases and self-service ticket management capabilities.โ€

2. Keep it simple. โ€œMake sure your online knowledge base is simple and easy to use by focusing on the 10 percent of problems that account for 40 percent of the calls,โ€ says Hank Zupnick, CIO of GE Real Estate.

3. Work those metrics. โ€œMake sure youโ€™ve got very clear metrics around average handle time and average speed-to-answer, and train your team to use these metrics effectively,โ€ advises Bill Wray, CIO of Citizens Financial Group Inc. โ€œYouโ€™ll get more calls handled by the same number of people; even those you already assumed were productive.โ€

4. Bring on the superusers. Enlist some great business users early on in the project, and train them alongside the help desk, suggests James Emanuelson, VP and CIO of Land Oโ€™Lakes Farmland Feed LLC. โ€œThey can help with the surge of calls for weeks after implementations at their respective sites,โ€ he says. โ€œNot only will this help you deal with the call surge, but it can also build a team environment between IS and the business at another level in the organization.โ€

5. Show your support. Good morale boosts help-desk productivity. โ€œThis is the perfect opportunity for the CIO to spend some quality time in the area, showing his support for the help desk,โ€ suggests Roger Coville, CIO of Abercrombie & Fitch Co. โ€œMost people leave a little in the tank each day, but help-desk crunch time is when the staff needs to go home on empty.โ€ Showing how much you value your team will go a long way.

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