QUALITY OF LIFE OF CALL CENTER EMPLOYEES IN INDIA
Changes Via Education
Ananda Mitra
Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC 27109, U.S.A.
Keywords: Call Center, Training, Web.
Abstract: This paper reports on a qualitative study conducted in the summer of 2007 in Delhi, India where nearly 60
call center employees were interviewed in focus group settings to evaluate issues related to the quality of
life of the workers. The findings suggest that a this scenario presents an opportunity to develop Web-based
training tools for process and culture training of the workers to ensure that they remain with their job and
improve the quality of the work experience. Based on the data collected, one of the key opportunities is to
develop Web-based training tools that will allow for better acculturation of the employees.
1 INTRODUCTION
This paper focuses on a specific and unique work
environment that has minimal to no training for its
employees. Yet the work environment requires
training, and the workers are well accustomed to the
Internet and the Web. The paper offers developers
of Web-based training tools an opportunity to
consider how tools could be developed to address
the unique circumstances described here.
The advent of inexpensive and reliable Internet-
and satellite-based telephone technology allows
private enterprise in the US and Western Europe to
transfer a significant part of their phone service
operations to India and China (Davies, 2004;
Kobayashi-Hillary, 2004). Nasscom estimates that
by 2008, 1,000,000 will be employed in Indian call-
centers (Varma & Sasikumar, 2004), and others
estimate 2,830,000 by 2008 (Pathak, 2004). Reliable
data on the number of call-center employees and
Western entities using them are lacking, but back-
office companies in India are currently estimated to
export approximately $3.6 billion worth of services
annually. The people working in this industry often
come with a basic high school diploma and are at a
point where they have had minimal work experience
or higher education. This study demonstrates that
there is a significant need for education for this
population of workers and several computer
mediated systems can be used to help train the
employees for a better quality of work and quality of
life. To begin with, it is useful to consider the way
in which outsourcing has been the key motivator for
the needs for training and educating the new class of
workers.
2 BACKGROUND
Outsourcing has two significant outcomes. First, a
new class of employees is developing in India. Some
data suggest that typical Indian call-center
employees are urban, evenly distributed between
men and women, usually in their 20s, with annual
salaries ranging from $4000-$6000 (Pathak, 2004;
Naughton, 2006); 90% are college graduates or
postgraduates (Naughton, 2006). They usually do
not remain in the business very long; call-centers
experience employee turnover at a rate of 75%-
100% every year (Mann, Bindra, & Lister, 2004;
Scheiber, 2004).
Second, given the need for real-time direct
interaction, the workers’ conditions must match
those of customers, and they must have a cultural
orientation similar to the customers’. Like people
who have to move from one country to another to
find employment, the technological diaspora
produces a sense of displacement (Brazziel and
Mannur, 2003; Sheffer, 2003) and other kinds of
stress.
Western companies generally assume that
customers feel more comfortable interacting with
support personnel who are acculturated to the West.
Strategies for workers, such as adopting a new name
185
Mitra A. (2009).
QUALITY OF LIFE OF CALL CENTER EMPLOYEES IN INDIA - Changes Via Education.
In Proceedings of the International Conference on e-Business, pages 185-190
DOI: 10.5220/0002170701850190
Copyright
c
SciTePress
or a different accent, remaining up-to-date with the
customers’ popular culture, and generally hiding
their own nationality, are common (Dudley, 2004),
yet evidence suggests that customers are still
dissatisfied with foreign workers’ service (McPhate,
2005). Systematic research exploring customers’
perceptions is lacking, but workers report that
customers can become hostile and abusive as soon
as they realize that the service provider is foreign. In
addition, because call-center work must respond to
customer needs, hours are adjusted to suit customers.
In India, most call-centers operate from late evening
to early morning because of the 5-10 hour difference
between India, Western Europe, and the United
States (Joseph, 2002). Emerging research and media
reports indicate that the odd hours, self-effacing
acculturation strategies, subjection to customer
abuse, and diasporic lifestyle have had characteristic
consequences for call-center employees, but to date,
no reliable, systematic data have been gathered or
analyzed on this increasing practice. Eventually,
these conditions all potentially bear on the quality of
life of call-center workers.
Quality of life is a contested construct, and the
heterogeneity of Indian society complicates
developing a definition. Moreover, the unique
conditions of call-center work also challenge the
useful application of existing definitions, as
demonstrated by a survey on the industry in North
America (Batt, et al., 2003). Some researchers have
focused on emotional exhaustion as a key factor in
call-center workers’ quality of life (e.g., Deery, et
al., 2002). Media reports about call-center
employees in India also address the emotional
component, which, in the Indian scenario, is related
to family, religion, language, gender, loss of
indigenous culture, and the influence of the West on
Indian culture. This project will base its definition of
quality of life on these constructs and develop the
focus-group protocol and the questionnaire on this
definition.
While several studies have dealt with the
economic impact (e.g., Grossman and Helpman,
2003; Hummel, et al. 1998) of call centers, few have
sought to systematically measure and to understand
their other impacts discussed earlier which is vital to
making effective recommendations for worker well-
being. To begin that process, the various
components and extent of the problem must be
measured by placing them within a conceptual
framework that would have sufficient heuristic value
to address some of the issues that are being faced by
call center employees and could be faced in the
future.
The conceptual framework of the study
described here is derived by looking at the call-
center work experience through the lens of diaspora
studies. There are many important and striking
similarities between the experiences of the
traditionally diasporic and those working in call-
centers. Typically, the diasporic condition has been
considered to be a political, social and cultural issue
and the scholarship has considered the diasporic
condition from the perspectives of race, oppression,
otherness and similar concerns. In the case of the
call-center employees the research has focused on
the issue from economic and psychiatric
perspectives because a key component of diaspora –
movement from one place to another – is absent in
the case of the call-center workers. In this study it is
argued that people now live in a technological
environment where experiences that mimic the
diasporic condition can be produced in the absence
of physical movement. Assuming that a core
component of the diasporic condition is the crisis
related to culture where the individual has to be able
to adopt a new culture either by completely
relinquishing another or by striking a balance
between two, it is surely possible that such situations
can arise in the new spaces call-center workers dwell
in. Eventually this condition leads to having to
negotiate a new identity when experiencing
electronic diaspora (e-diaspora). In the case of e-
diaspora that identity negotiation is only temporary
since the e-diasporic experience is not all
encompassing. The e-diasporic experience is an
incomplete process because the interaction, and all
the cultural baggage of the interaction, is interrupted
the moment the person is off the phone and has
walked out from the Westernized environment of the
call-center into the early morning streets of
Bangalore. In some ways this results in the e-
diasporic having to shape themselves and their
environments in different ways so the duality of
their existence can be managed. This is a much
greater challenge for the e-diasporic because their
lived experience remains very foreign from their e-
diasporic work place. The very fact that their most
busy time of work is at an unusual time poses some
interesting challenges. For those who move from
one country to another and thus experience the
diasporic condition, the quality of life is related to
the rhythm of life in the country they are in. For the
call-center worker living in e-diaspora the
experience is markedly different as noted here: “It is
10.45pm, and in the dark streets outside preparations
are being made for Diwali, the Hindu festival of
light, but EXL works to English rhythms and even
ICE-B 2009 - International Conference on E-business
186
training sessions are conducted according to London
time (Gentleman, 2005).” To these workers it is far
important to be aware of events such as the
American Super Bowl or the weather in Leeds to be
able to do their job. In many ways their e-diasporic
condition becomes more challenging because their
real surroundings never change but every night they
are virtually somewhere else and struggling to fit in.
To be sure, this e-diasporic work center can have
profound impacts on the call enter worker.
A significant component of the e-diaspora
experience is learning to become a person of another
culture. In the case of the traditional diasporic
experience, the learning component is achieved via
an immersive process where the new comers become
acculturated through engagement in the real life
cultural practices of the host system. The learning
opportunity through cultural engagement is
completely absent in the case of the e-diaspora
experience. In this case, the learning is obtained by
computer mediated processes where the call center
workers need to immerse themselves in a virtual
space produced around the Web-based and similar
discourses that result in the dissolution of real spaces
by allowing the learner to engage with the practices
of a new culture by a cybernetic process. In this
process, the call center employee remains embedded
in one real space while learning about another real
space via the digital representation of the other
space. This living in e-diaspora is significantly
influenced by the amount of time spent by the
workers in the cybernetic space defined via web-
based interactions. Many of the acculturation
processes, like learning about specific client sets, is
accomplished by visiting Wed sites about the
client’s cultural milieu. However, there is little
evidence that the web is being used in a significant
way to manage the-diaphonic identity which is
primarily produced by a digital discursive manner.
This creates an interesting set of impacts on the
people being acculturated.
The impact is related to the fact that the
successful operation of call-centers in India depends
on the cultural competence and morale of the phone
operators, who, in an e-diasporic condition, work
outside their country, while living in it (Mitra,
2006a, 2006b, in press). Ongoing, systematic
evaluation of the acculturation processes and the
workers’ quality of life is urgently needed to
formulate training and professional development
opportunities to benefit them and to help call-centers
operate efficiently. This leads to the following
research questions:
1. What are the critical acculturation
2. processes that call-center employees
experience?
2. What are the critical effects of
acculturation strategies?
3. What methods can be developed to address
these effects?
This study tackles some of the questions through
a pilot project conducted in Delhi, India.
3 METHOD
The study was conducted as a series of focus group
meetings in Delhi in the summer of 2007. An
independent research organization based in Delhi
was utilized to recruit focus group participants
drawn from current and past employees of call
centers in the Delhi area. The key criterion used in
the selection process was that the participant had to
have some degree of experience in working in call
centers where the employee had direct contact with a
Western customer. A total of 43 people participated
in the four hour-long focus groups sessions. The
participants were offered a small gift at the end of
the meeting as well light snacks and transportation
to and from the meeting places. The participants
included people in the ages ranging from 18 to 41
and about equal number of men and women. The
focus groups were moderated with a standard
protocol that consisted of the following items:
Elaboration of the specific training and
acculturation methods used by call-centers to
prepare phone operators for their work, especially
name change, language modification, accent
management, and immersion in digital discourses
related to the client’s culture, etc.
Probe the effects of working in call centers in
terms of quality of life issues.
Probe specific ways to resolve some of the
tensions produced by acculturation and diasporic
conditions.
The information gathered from the focus group
meetings are reported here and the information from
the focus groups was also used to conduct a
questionnaire using a Web-based data collection
method.
4 RESULTS
The focus group members indicated several different
QUALITY OF LIFE OF CALL CENTER EMPLOYEES IN INDIA - Changes Via Education
187
methods that were utilized by the call center industry
to train the employees to mimic the cultural
attributes of the customers. These methods include:
Pronunciation training to ensure that the
call center employees would neutralize their heavy
Indian accent into a more Standard English accent
that would camouflage the ethnicity of the
employee. These included details like training to
“roll the r’s” so as to make sure the phonemes were
correctly enunciated. In some cases the training
would be provided by Westerners but in general the
training was done by senior members of the call
center. The members indicated that the training was
not sufficient. The process was facilitated by
directing the employees to listen to digital video
sites providing language training as well as other
Web-based resources that show how the client
culture speaks.
Names of the call center employees would
be changed to Western-sounding names so that the
customers would not be greeted with a non-familiar
name.
The employees would receive some
amount of “cultural training” to familiarize them
with the customs and practices of the customers, this
would make extensive use of Web-based resources
that provide background information of specific
places.
Call center employees would be
encouraged to familiarize themselves with the
popular media products of the West so that they
would be aware of the key popular cultural practices
of the customers much of which is available via
digital video resources.
The participants also indicated that they spend a
significant amount of their time “surfing the Web”
when they are at work. This is related to the fact that
they have greater access to fire tools required to be
connected and utilize that fact.
Most of the participants agreed that there was a
lack of sufficient training to acculturate them to the
Western practices. At the same time, there was an
expectation that the call center employees would be
able to operate as “Westerners” when they were on
the phone with the customer. One of the participants
said, “You have to be a Westerner when working in
the office.” The discussions suggested that those
who are able to acculturate themselves better than
others were often rewarded by the employers. There
was also some concern that the call center
employees were more concerned with maintaining
their accent than ensuring that the customer’s
specific questions were resolved.
The findings also suggest that working in call
centers lead to a set of issues related to the everyday
life of the workers. There was general agreement
that some of the main effects include:
A sense of separation from the general
social milieu because of the “graveyard shift”
working hours which led to the need to rest during
normal day-time socializing periods. Much of the
eventual socialization was manufactured through
instant messaging, social networking methods and
other digital interaction tools.
Development of a sense of community
among call center employees because of the
similarities in life-style with some of the
relationships becoming romantic connections and
some resulting in marriages. Here too the people
used existing digital methods such as Facebook,
MySpace and Orkut to create a sense of community.
Concern over the negative representation
of the call center job in the popular media with
newspapers and television in India creating a
negative image of the workers and the workplace.
These impressions often take on a “viral” component
with reports about the call center workers circulating
in cyberspace.
Behavioral problems particularly related to
increased use of tobacco and alcohol. The job is
perceived to be a “high stress” work based on the
demands of acculturation as well as the fact that
“target reaching” was one of the key metrics to
measure performance. The employees feel a need to
“release the stress” and often turn to substance abuse
as a method of release.
An increased “Westernization” of the
people because of the need to be acculturated with
the customers. One of the upshots of the
Westernization was the increased material
consumption among call center employees partly
because of the increased economic affluence at a
relatively young age.
The call center employees felt that the job
was offering them an opportunity to improve their
communication skills which could be a valuable
asset for future employment in other industries.
Overall, even though there were concerns about
the job, the participants felt that the call center
employment was providing a positive experience for
them. This was related to the primary motivation for
taking the job – earning a relatively large amount of
money at a very young age. The average pay of the
call center employee is considerably higher than
what a person of similar age and qualifications
would earn in other industries in India. At the same
time, the increased access to money has also led to
altered consumption patterns that are similar to what
would be seen amongst the Western culture. The
respondents indicated that the money they earned
from their job was rarely used for saving for the
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future or to support a family. Instead the money was
spent in obtaining material goods ranging from
electronic gadgets to motorcycles and cars, to
designer clothes and accessories. The money was
also used for entertainment and leisure activities
such as going on trips, throwing expensive parties,
and frequently eating at restaurants and drinking at
pubs.
The participants in the focus group meetings also
indicated that their work conditions could be
improved by making some changes to the way in
which the industry operated. These suggestions
included:
Allowing the workers to use their real
names as opposed to the Westernized names. The
name change was considered burdensome by many
of the participants.
Allowing the workers to speak in their
own accent as long as the customer was able to
understand them. Most participants felt that the
ability to “speak naturally” would allow them to
concentrate on the process issues related to their job
without being preoccupied with maintaining an
accent.
Better regulation of the industry with
greater assurances of security of employment, better
benefits, and the availability of health insurance.
These changes would attract more people to the
industry and reduce the negative popular image of
the industry.
5 DISCUSSION
The finding from this study indicate that a sub-
culture of people is developing within India who feel
disconnected from their actual place of dwelling
because of the requirements of their place of work.
On the other hand, these workers feel that they need
education and training to become better workers to
serve their clients better. The industry is
increasingly relying on the use of digital tools, from
the cell-phone based communication methods to
digital representation of the client’s culture, to
acculturate, educate and train the employees. These
methods need better management and delivery so
that the issues faced by the employees can be tackled
more effectively to reduce the reported stress and
quality of life issues faced by the workers. This is
where the Web offers some significant opportunists.
As suggested earlier the call center employees
are usually well connected to the Web. They spend a
good amount of time on the Web and are
technologically adept. They are also often employed
by corporations that have a high degree of
technological competence. As the data from this
study suggests, a primary need for call center
employees is better training and education with
specific foci as discovered in this study. Further
exploration could be used to develop Web-based
training tools that allow the employees to be better
acculturated and be able to interact with other
similar workers thus developing a Web-based
learning community which not only assists the
workers but also allows for the development of a
social network for the e-diasporic.
Many of the issues pointed out by the
participants are reminiscent of what migrant workers
would experience as they went through the diasporic
condition of living and working in a place that was
not their own. There are numerous studies that show
that the immigrant communities rely of Wet-based
tools to create a sense of community as well as use
the Web to become acculturated to the new place. In
the case of the call center employee the matter is
complicated by the fact that there is no movement of
the people and there is no immersion in the culture
in which they work. The acculturation has to
happen in a surrogate manner with the use of trainers
and digital tools. Among those tools, The Web
offers one of the best options because it can be used
for immersive training where the worker can
periodically obtain trains about the cultural they
have to work in since such tracing is particularly
critical for these employees. Simultaneously, the
call center workers have to negotiate a dual identity
where their everyday practices need to be balanced
between the expectations of the culture of where
they live and the culture where they work. Loss of
this balance could result in harmful behavior which
is evident in the increased incidence of substance
abuse.
These issues need a more broad-based
examination. As such, a questionnaire was
developed to do Web-based data collection from a
large cross-section of call center employees. That
data obtained from the questionnaires would throw
more light on the way in which there could be
variations in perception and behavior based on
demographic attributes of the call center employees.
It is important to continue to collect that data to have
a better sense of the quality of life of the employers
and to develop specific training – both in real life
and in virtual space - to ensure that the employers
are better able to cope with their e-diasporic
experience.
QUALITY OF LIFE OF CALL CENTER EMPLOYEES IN INDIA - Changes Via Education
189
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