home Contact Centre & Channels, Customer Experience Your contact centre is a potential goldmine – how to unlock it for 2026

Your contact centre is a potential goldmine – how to unlock it for 2026

Does your organisation’s contact centre provide swift, seamless service to customers whenever and however they choose to get in touch?

If you’re not able to answer with a resounding ‘yes’, you’re missing a golden opportunity to build the trust and loyalty that’s become the sine qua non of every successful commercial enterprise, irrespective of the industry in which it operates.

In today’s times, the contact centre is much more than merely a place where customers’ enquiries are answered. For many organisations, it’s a vital hub for service delivery and their chief interface with partners, customers and prospects.

Resolve their queries and issues efficiently and well and you’ll leave a positive impression.

Make it tricky for them to engage with you, and to get the answers and outcomes they seek, and the reverse is true.

Recent years have seen Australians become accustomed to frictionless interactions with the likes of Amazon and eBay – digital first suppliers and providers that are ultra focused on delivering intuitive, personalised service – and they’re quick to mark down organisations that don’t set the bar as high.

So much so that, in many industries, customer experience has become the key differentiating factor determining consumers’ and businesses’ choice of supplier.

Understanding the status quo

Not sure if your contact centre is trucking or trailing in the customer experience stakes? Developing a ‘current state journey map’ is the surest way to tell.

It’s a process that entails visualising how customers interact with your products, services and organisation via your contact centre.

Mapping your existing user experience from end to end will enable you to obtain a sense of what customers are thinking and feeling when they engage with you.

Complete this exercise thoroughly and objectively – preferably drawing on data such as customer interviews, surveys and user analytics – and you’ll likely be able to identify several aspects of the journey that are less than satisfactory.

Exploring use cases for change

Having done so, determining which of these pain points should be addressed first is your next challenge.

Smart operators will take a methodical approach; detailing everything that needs improving and focusing on fixing problems that have the greatest impact on customer sentiment and revenue first.

That requires having clarity about what it is your business is trying to achieve, and the role customer experience can play in achieving it.

While the value you’re hoping to realise may not be quantifiable, it should be possible to specify the benefit you expect to derive from eliminating an identified point of friction.

Staying focused on the big picture

It’s important to realise that optimising only a couple of aspects of the customer journey isn’t the way to achieve the sort of change that moves the needle in a major way.

Fragmented actions typically deliver limited benefits and, in a worst-case scenario, can result in further degradation of the customer experience.

Rather, what’s needed is a unified approach, one which draws on the resources and capabilities of different parts of the business to drive end-to-end improvement.

It sounds simple but, for many organisations and their internal change management teams, it can be anything but.

That’s why it can pay to draw on the expertise of seasoned specialists; customer experience consultants who can share invaluable insights into how other organisations have addressed and overcome similar challenges to your own.

Enlisting their services can help your business derive the maximum return from the investment it makes in optimising its contact centre experience.

Turning your contact centre into an A grade asset for your business

In today’s challenging economic times, Australian businesses are having to work harder than ever to attract and retain customers. Delivering a consistently excellent experience via your contact centre will help your enterprise position itself as a high quality, trusted brand that puts its customers and their needs front and centre. If you’re a mid-sized player, it can provide the edge you need to keep pace with larger, better resourced competitors.

If becoming the long-term supplier of choice for more consumers and businesses is your aim in 2026, it’s time to ensure you’re meeting and exceeding expectations in this vital area of operations.