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Raising standards in call center jobs Challenges and solutions

Raising standards in call center jobs Challenges and solutions. Virginia Doellgast Professor of Comparative E mployment R elations London School of Economics and Political Science v.l.doellgast@lse.ac.uk. Research projects.

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Raising standards in call center jobs Challenges and solutions

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  1. Raising standards in call center jobsChallenges and solutions Virginia Doellgast Professor of Comparative Employment Relations London School of Economics and Political Science v.l.doellgast@lse.ac.uk

  2. Research projects Global Call Center Project (Rose Batt, David Holman, Ursula Holtgrewe, coordinators) • Surveys in 20 countries: over 2500 centers surveyed, with 475,000 employees http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/globalcallcenter/ Union impact on job quality in the USA and Germany • Telecommunications call centers and their subcontractors • Disintegrating Democracy at Work (Cornell University Press) http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/book/?GCOI=80140100916220 Restructuring of call center and technician jobs in 10 incumbent telecommunications firms • USA, UK, Denmark, Sweden, Austria, Germany, France, Italy, Czech Republic, Poland http://www.academia.edu/4498267/Alternative_routes_to_good_jobs_in_the_service_economy_Employment_restructuring_and_human_resource_management_in_incumbent_telecommunications_firms

  3. Outline • Background on the global call center industry • What do good call center jobs look like? (Where do we want to raise standards to?) • Where are standards (currently) better? • Challenges to raising standards – and how they can be overcome

  4. The global call center industry Global Call Center Project survey findings • 83% call centers served a national (not international) market • 2/3 in-house – 1/3 subcontractor • 78% inbound • Collective bargaining coverage highest in Europe • in many countries >50% of centers • much lower union presence in subcontractors

  5. Raising standards: to where? Good jobs in call centershave: • Good pay • Job security • Limits on monitoring (intensity, how it’s used) • Employee control over pace of work and working time • ‘Fair and reasonable’ targets – ‘income security’ Example: Deutsche Telekom in Germany (circa 2005)

  6. Where do we find good call center jobs? • Segment of the industry • In-house better than outsourced better than offshored • High value customers and markets • Laws, regulations, and collective bargaining make a difference • Jobs better in ‘social Europe’ – best in Germany and Sweden • In these countries: call centerswith collective bargaining had better jobs than those without • Importance of ‘encompassing’ laws and collective bargaining

  7. Closing off the low-road: challenges How employers escape laws and collective bargaining: • Temporary agency work • Outsourcing • Subsidiaries Examples: • Escaping equal pay rules for temporary agency workers in the UK • Outsourcing and subsidiary creation at Deutsche Telekom

  8. Estimated % of call center employees “externalized”

  9. Closing off the low-road: strategies Union responses to employer escape: • Agreements to bring work back into unionized companies: reduce costs and improve flexibility/productivity in-house • Extend collective bargaining: organize new industry segments and job types • Improve legal regulations, close loop-holes: minimum wages, equal pay rules, transfer of undertakings, freelancers, etc.

  10. Germany UK Denmark USA France Italy Czech Republic Sweden Austria India & Maghreb Hourly pay for call center employees: in USD ($) based on purchasing power parity

  11. Challenge: raise the bottom • Research shows: Best outcomes for workers where high collective bargaining coverage and strong bargaining rights • But: Employers use a range of strategies to escape from minimum standards in laws and union agreements • Creates growing pressure to reduce pay & conditions in line with the external “market” • Unions face different political “opportunity structures” across countries: • Different starting points and power resources • Building vs. holding onto encompassing rules/protections • Increased importance of global solidarity in a globalized industry: reduce pressures for worker-to-worker competition

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