How Customer Service Representatives Lose Control Of The Call: A Metafunctional Analysis

The contact centre industry has been growing rapidly in the Philippines over the last two decades and now boasts over one million customer service representatives (CSRs). Outsourcing work to this destination, where English may not be the first language, can lead to communication difficulties. Proble...

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Main Authors: Cruz, Priscilla Angela T, Lockwood, Jane
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2021
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/english-faculty-pubs/141
https://journal.equinoxpub.com/JALPP/article/view/20368
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.english-faculty-pubs-11332021-11-04T06:25:12Z How Customer Service Representatives Lose Control Of The Call: A Metafunctional Analysis Cruz, Priscilla Angela T Lockwood, Jane The contact centre industry has been growing rapidly in the Philippines over the last two decades and now boasts over one million customer service representatives (CSRs). Outsourcing work to this destination, where English may not be the first language, can lead to communication difficulties. Problems of locally recruited CSRs ‘losing control of the call’, leading to customer frustration and poor feedback, have previously been attributed to poor grammar and incomprehensible accents. However, more recent research has suggested that such communicative problems actually stem from a more general inability to build relationships and appropriately select, explain and describe information about the product or service and, if needed, instruct the client on what to do. This paper therefore examines ‘losing control of a call’ in terms of the overall exchange. Specifically, two calls were examined to analyse how information was organised, packaged and developed to the satisfaction (or not) of the client. We argue that discrete grammatical inaccuracies and regional accents do not result in losing control as much as the way overall meaning is managed by the CSR. The implications of these initial findings could be of importance to the recruitment, training, coaching and appraisal of CSRs in an industry where the nature of communication breakdown remains poorly understood. 2021-06-18T07:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/english-faculty-pubs/141 https://journal.equinoxpub.com/JALPP/article/view/20368 English Faculty Publications Archīum Ateneo business process outsourcing; business English; communication breakdown; contact centre; Systemic Functional Linguistics; workplace communication Communication English Language and Literature Linguistics
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic business process outsourcing; business English; communication breakdown; contact centre; Systemic Functional Linguistics; workplace communication
Communication
English Language and Literature
Linguistics
spellingShingle business process outsourcing; business English; communication breakdown; contact centre; Systemic Functional Linguistics; workplace communication
Communication
English Language and Literature
Linguistics
Cruz, Priscilla Angela T
Lockwood, Jane
How Customer Service Representatives Lose Control Of The Call: A Metafunctional Analysis
description The contact centre industry has been growing rapidly in the Philippines over the last two decades and now boasts over one million customer service representatives (CSRs). Outsourcing work to this destination, where English may not be the first language, can lead to communication difficulties. Problems of locally recruited CSRs ‘losing control of the call’, leading to customer frustration and poor feedback, have previously been attributed to poor grammar and incomprehensible accents. However, more recent research has suggested that such communicative problems actually stem from a more general inability to build relationships and appropriately select, explain and describe information about the product or service and, if needed, instruct the client on what to do. This paper therefore examines ‘losing control of a call’ in terms of the overall exchange. Specifically, two calls were examined to analyse how information was organised, packaged and developed to the satisfaction (or not) of the client. We argue that discrete grammatical inaccuracies and regional accents do not result in losing control as much as the way overall meaning is managed by the CSR. The implications of these initial findings could be of importance to the recruitment, training, coaching and appraisal of CSRs in an industry where the nature of communication breakdown remains poorly understood.
format text
author Cruz, Priscilla Angela T
Lockwood, Jane
author_facet Cruz, Priscilla Angela T
Lockwood, Jane
author_sort Cruz, Priscilla Angela T
title How Customer Service Representatives Lose Control Of The Call: A Metafunctional Analysis
title_short How Customer Service Representatives Lose Control Of The Call: A Metafunctional Analysis
title_full How Customer Service Representatives Lose Control Of The Call: A Metafunctional Analysis
title_fullStr How Customer Service Representatives Lose Control Of The Call: A Metafunctional Analysis
title_full_unstemmed How Customer Service Representatives Lose Control Of The Call: A Metafunctional Analysis
title_sort how customer service representatives lose control of the call: a metafunctional analysis
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2021
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/english-faculty-pubs/141
https://journal.equinoxpub.com/JALPP/article/view/20368
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