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Student Loan Servicer ECSI Finds Value in CCaaSStudent Loan Servicer ECSI Finds Value in CCaaS

Cloud platform eased overnight transition to WFH for agents, while allowing company to fast-track a voice service that solved call connectivity issues.

Dana Casielles

January 18, 2021

2 Min Read
Student Loan Servicer ECSI Finds Value in CCaaS
Image: Feodora - stock.adobe.com

As universities head into what’s shaping up to be another semester of primarily virtual classes, academic call centers remain busy answering calls from students, many of whom have troublesome tuition, loan, and other payment questions. Educational Computer Systems (ECSI), an outsourcer for university call center services, will be at the center of much of this outreach, as it has been since the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic when campuses began shutting down and students headed back home for virtual learning.

 

Besides its role as an outsourcer for university call centers, ECSI services the Department of Education’s Federal Student Aid (FSA) program. In that role, ECSI has the responsibility of facilitating conversations between students and FSA; in the early days of the pandemic, this often meant making sure students knew about forbearance options, Mike Bowman, director of servicing operations, ECSI, shared in a call with No Jitter.

 

As a designated essential service provider, ECSI had to keep lines of communication open no matter that it, too, faced operational challenges as shelter-in-place orders came down and it needed to move agents from an office to their homes. Fortunately for ECSI, it already ran its contact center on a cloud platform — NICE inContact’s CXone — and was able to make that transition, Bowman said.

 

However, ECSI did run into problems with its softphones, which began to fail, Bowman reported. This wasn’t acceptable, he added.

 

Like other CCaaS providers, NICE inContact had put in place a limited-time free offer to help smooth the agent WFH transition, and ECSI was able to take advantage. To address ECSI’s softphone issue, NICE inContact expedited implementation of its Voice as a Service optimized connectivity suite; the implementation happened within hours, Bowman said. ECSI’s agents noticed the difference immediately, he added. “My reps are saying, ‘Hey, Mike, something changed. The voice quality is way better, and I’m not having any login problems….’ So that was a tremendous help and really improved our situation during a tough time,” he said.

 

Outside of its pandemic response, Bowman credits the CCaaS platform for improving operations in general. After implementing Advanced Chat for CXone in 2019, for example, ESCI saw chat abandon rates fall by 86%, while customer satisfaction rose by 13%, NICE inContact shared. Additionally, agents are able to do their jobs more efficiently with automation capabilities, seamlessly moving from one call to another and surface canned responses for frequently asked questions, for example. And, with co-browsing, agents can view the same webpages as the students they’re helping out. “That has saved so much time and frustration,” he added.

 

ECSI now expects NICE inContact to keep it “at the leading edge of technology,” Bowman said. “We have the technology available [that allows us] to do more work and be there for [our clients],” he said. “We’re happy to be in a position to help them out.”

About the Author

Dana Casielles

Dana Casielles is an associate editor and blogger for No Jitter, Informa Tech's online community for news and analysis of the enterprise convergence/unified communications industry.

Before transitioning into this role, Dana worked as a digital content specialist to help a small business rebrand and build a better reputation. Prior to this, she briefly held a position as a copywriter for Career Education Corporation, where she served as a point of contact for marketing and strategic communications for three separate brands. 

Prior to testing the waters of the higher education and genetic testing industries, she was a copywriter for Internet Brands, a company that operates online media, community, and e-commerce sites in vertical markets. Here, she led the development of content and social media initiatives to drive new business, social engagement, website traffic, lead nurturing, and lead generation. 

Dana earned her Bachelor's degree from Columbia College Chicago. In her spare time, you'll find her freelancing, journaling, keeping her Hemingway cat entertained, or whipping up something in the kitchen.