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Outsourced
Customer Support Directory:
Caleris
Focusing on smaller ISPs, Caleris offers affordable support
with a small town flavor.
Caleris, Inc. was founded in 1990
as Enterprise Corporation International, or ECI, to develop software and
testing devices for the compact disc industry. According to Vaughn Christensen,
the company's Corporate Accounts Manager, ECI began offering call center
services when a prospective customer asked for outsourced tech support
along with the software.
ECI's first call center was set up in the Bay Area in 1995, but the company
moved to Des Moines, Iowa soon after. "It's a lot more expensive to hire
people in California," Christensen says. "It's also a lot easier to get
people who will actually stick around, and care about people, in Des Moines."
A few years later, ECI began looking for a rural area in which to open
a new tech support facility, and found the small town of Manning, Iowa,
with a population of 1,500. "They were looking for a high tech company
and we were looking for a small town, and it worked really well," Christensen
says. "They've got fiber optics through the town, so they had the infrastructure
that we needed."
ECI began providing outsourced technical support for ISPs in late 2000.
"In Iowa, there are over 100 independent telephone companies, and most
of them offer Internet service," Christensen says. "You have one or two
people running a local telephone company, taking phone calls all weekend
long for ISP tech support-so there was a very large demand, and we've
had some success."
In 2004, ECI's helpdesk division was purchased by Rick Grewell and Sheldon
Ohringer, and renamed Caleris. ECI's software division continues to operate
as ECI Software.
Rapid growth
Since the acquisition, Caleris has expanded enormously, adding another
call center in Jefferson, Iowa in early 2005 and increasing the company's
client base by 50 percent within the first year. Caleris now serves over
30 ISPs, including dialup, DSL, wireless, and VoIP providers.
Grewell and Ohringer have also expanded the company's focus to include
services like product fulfillment and outbound follow-up calls. Tom Hargens,
the company's Director of Sales, says that for one ISP client, Caleris
now follows up on every tech support call with an outbound call one or
two hours later to make sure the customer is up and running.
All of the company's support techs go through an initial 90 day training
program, as well as ongoing workshops on both technical issues and customer
care. "Each quarter, two or three techs are assigned to lead the customer
service training," Christensen says. "It's fun, because they get creative
and everybody enjoys it."
Daily and weekly performance reports are provided to the ISP, as well
as monthly summary and statistical reports. The ISP client also has web-based
access to Caleris' Customer Relationship Management system at any time
to monitor trouble tickets on an ongoing basis or to download reports.
Pricing can be structured per subscriber, per call, per minute, or per
issue. "The costs of people, infrastructure, and facilities are a lot
less in the Midwest, so we're able to keep our costs low and pass that
along to the Internet service providers," Christensen says. "We allow
small ISPs to offer 24/7 support like the bigger ISPs can."
Small town flavor
Caleris' new tag line is distinctive: Outsource to IowaNot India.
"One of our strengths, and one of the things that we'll continue to focus
on, is that when you call our tech support it's like calling down the
street," Christensen says. "It's got a down home flavor, and people recognize
that. You get that kind of feeling when you call: that they care. You
don't feel the person just wants to get you off the phone."
Janell Hansen is General Manager of The Marne & Elk Horn Telephone Company,
or METC, which was incorporated
in 1903. The company's Internet Service Provider division, Marne
Elk Horn Internet, has been working with ECI (and now Caleris) since
February of 2001.
According to Hansen, one of the biggest selling points of Caleris' service
was the company's proximity. "Manning is about 20 miles north of Elk Horn,
where we're at, so I was familiar with the community," she says.
Sticking with a local provider, she says, has proved to be a great benefit.
"I know there are some tech support places that are even outsourced outside
of the country, but you answer the phone and they know immediately that's
the case," Hansen says. "With these people, my customers have developed
relationships with them. They'll say, 'Oh yeah, I got Bobby last time.'
That means a lot."
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