Make Your Billing Strategy Work for You
By Peter DeHaan
There are likely as many billing plans as there are telephone
answering services. It seems that everyone has his or her own idea of
the right way to bill clients, with each answering service viewing its
method as superior. Yet privately, they comprehend its shortcomings.
In reality, there is no perfect billing philosophy and no single right
way to charge clients. Successful billing requires that TAS owners
understand their selected rate structure and operate their answering
service that enables them to capitalize on their billing structure’s
strengths and weaknesses. Here are some typical TAS billing plans:
Flat Rate:
Every client is billed the same fixed rate every month. Though not used
much any more, it was common when client expectations were uniform and
call-processing systems were manual.
Advantages:
Bills are easy to generate, explain, and understand; all revenue is
fixed; and clients know exactly what to expect and can budget
accordingly.
Disadvantages:
It is not fair – essentially half of the clients are profitable,
subsidizing the other half who are not. It also attracts high-volume
(unprofitable) accounts while discouraging low-volume (profitable) ones.
Possible abuses:
Revenue stays the same regardless if work is done; therefore, there is
no direct financial incentive to answer calls.
Strategy:
Seek low volume accounts; streamline and automate high volume accounts.
Modified Flat Rate:
Each client pays a flat rate, but that rate differs from client to
client based on his or her historical usage.
Advantages:
There are the same benefits as with flat rate billing, and the disparity
between profitable and unprofitable clients will be largely eliminated.
Disadvantages:
Knowing what to bill a new client is hard, it neglects seasonal
fluctuations, and you must continually review client traffic for changes
in usage.
Possible abuses:
The initial rate might be set too high or too low for new clients.
Failure to lower rates if usage drops significantly will result in
overbilling.
Strategy:
Analyze client profitability each billing cycle by calculating client
revenue per minute. Clients with a pattern of low revenue per minute
(unprofitable) may need their rate increased or their account
streamlined and automated.
Unit Billing:
Tracks and bills units of work, such as calls answered and calls made;
some services charge an additional unit if a message is taken. There is
usually a base rate that includes an allowance of units, with excess
units being billed additionally.
Advantages:
More work can be tracked and billed; high volume and active accounts pay
more.
Disadvantages:
Not all units of work require an equal amount of time and effort.
Possible abuses:
Performing unnecessary units of work under the guise of being thorough,
such as double dispatching.
Strategy:
Count every measurable unit of work. Automate time-consuming processes.
Time Billing:
The time operators spend working for the client is tracked and billed.
As with the unit billing, there is generally a monthly rate that
includes a block of time; excess usage is billed separately.
Advantages:
Billing will directly reflect the amount of time spent for that client.
Disadvantages:
Billing complaints are harder to resolve.
Possible abuses:
Talkative operators inflate bills.
Strategy:
Provide the client with the services they need, coach operators to be
thorough yet efficient, and make sure that all time is tracked and
billed.
Tiered Time Billing:
Agent time is billed the same way as time billing; any system time or
automated activity is also billed, but at a lower rate. System time
includes non-operator activity, such as automated dispatching, call
screening, IVR, voicemail, patching, and conferencing.
Advantages:
All of the benefits of minute billing; automated activity also produces
income.
Disadvantages:
There are more items to track; not all systems provide adequate
statistics.
Possible abuses:
Same as for time billing.
Strategy:
Be sure to track and bill all appropriate time elements.
Other items to be considered for any billing method are
ancillary charges (fax, email delivery, and on-call schedules),
pass-through charges (local, long-distance, and toll-free costs), or
surcharges (holiday fees). Other issues are the length of the billing
cycle (monthly versus twenty-eight days), late fees, and discounts for
early payment.
Regardless of which
method you implement, be sure you know its strengths and weaknesses,
follow it ethically, and pursue it strategically. With the right
approach, any of these methods can be successful.
Peter DeHaan is
publisher of TAS Trader and
Connections Magazine.
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