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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Britain: Union hotline reveals widespread exploitation of
call centre staff
By Robert Stevens
6 March 2001
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Callers have deluged a telephone hotline set up recently by
the Trades Union Congress to monitor the working conditions in
call centres across the UK.
The TUC set up the hotline for two weeks from February 12.
In the first week of its operation the hotline received almost
400 calls, and by February 21 had received 550. The calls were
mainly from staff who spoke about bullying, long working hours,
impossible sales targets and their general dissatisfaction with
their jobs in call centres.
The calls documented a sweatshop scenario, with employers in
the industry using numerous techniques to drive up the exploitation
of staff and in some cases openly breaking the law.
Some of the calls detailed the very harsh conditions faced
by call centre workers, who are forced to work under constant
surveillance, whereby every single hour, minute and second of
their working day is monitored and recorded.
* In one case a manager made staff sign a "toilet book"
to check how long they were spending away from their desks. He
warned that the workers who spent the most time in the toilet
would be forced to wear nappies/diapers.
* One caller said they had been forced to go into work to report
sick in person rather than phoning; had to put their hand up for
permission to go to the toilet and were only allowed three seconds
in between answering incoming calls.
* Another call centre worker told the hotline that he was disciplined
for leaving a six-second gap between calls.
* Other workers complained of suffering from "acoustic
shock" (damage to hearing caused by sudden loud noises during
phone calls) that had left them suffering from depression and
other health problems.
* In another case, a worker related how call centre managers
would not allow Christmas decorations to be displayed, claiming
they were a health and safety hazard.
* Other callers told the hotline that they had to pay for their
own headsets or had wages withheld while they served "probationary"
periods.
Prior to the hotline campaign the TUC issued a report on call
centres entitled "It's Your Call," which documented
more grotesque examples of exploitation and the inhumane humiliation
of workers.
One example in the report was of a worker who fainted at his
desk and then had the time it took him to be driven to hospital
deducted from his wages. In another case, a health representative
at a call centre was suspended for using the company's phone to
contact the health and safety executive about a gas problem. The
report cited the case of a female employee who wanted to start
her shift three-quarters of an hour late because of the time it
took to get her children to school. The woman had to produce a
letter from her child's school before her employees would consider
the "concession".
The ongoing development of computer technology and advanced
monitoring facilities enable call centre managers to monitor every
aspect of an employees' working day. One software company has
even used the slogan Total Control Made Easy to advertise
its call centre monitoring package.
Systems such as Automatic Call Distribution (ACD) enable managers
to view a print-out of call handling times as well as an employee's
wrap (the time spent dealing with a customer's problem
after they ring off). They also have access to the statistics
showing the exact time spent away from the phone, such as toilet
breaks or getting drinking water from the water cooler. Some contracts
stipulate that such breaks must not exceed 10 percent of the working
day.
Alongside the emphasis on an individual's performance at work,
many call centres also operate rigid "team" structures.
The teams and individuals within them are then encouraged to compete
against other teams, and against one another within their team,
to reach the highest possible target levels set by management.
Some companies set a minimum number of hours "talk time"
each day that an employee must be actually talking to customers,
and will also set a minimum number of calls that must be taken
each day or on each shift pattern. Failure to meet such, often
impossible, targets may result in a worker being disciplined or
even dismissed.
This intimidation and harassment intensifies the stress that
call centre staff face every working day due to the sometimes
abusive nature of the calls that they must routinely deal with.
Some of these issues are being aired in a TV series that is
currently showing called "Get Me The Manager". Although
the tone of the programme is to show call centre employment in
a somewhat light-hearted manner, it still reveals the intolerable
level of abuse that can be directed at staff from those on the
other end of the phone lines and the constant pressure they are
placed under by management.
The call centre phenomena
In the last decade, call centre employment in Britain has sky
rocketed. There are now more than 400,000 call centre employees,
and accounts for 1 in 50 of the British workforce. By 2008, that
figure is expected to reach 1 in 30. About 70 percent of call
centre employees are women. Call centres are now the fastest growing
employment sector in the UK, and the industry employs more than
the combined number presently working in coal mining, steel and
car production.
A survey by market analysts Datamonitor published in January
2000 estimated that call centre employment throughout Europe would
increase by 12 percent over the next three years. Datamonitor
estimated that a total of 1.3m Europeans would be working in call
centres by 2003.
Many companies have established call centres to shift customer
services away from their High Street stores into a smaller number
of sites, and in the process cut costs. The advent of cheaper
lo-call phone calls has also meant that companies
can set up "Help Desks" where customers can talk to
staff on a local call rate.
The companies tend to locate their centres in economically
depressed areas with a surplus of cheap labour that can be employed
on casual, flexible contracts. Many companies receive government
subsidies and tax breaks for doing so. First Direct, a subsidiary
of the HSBC bank, initially set up its call centre operations
in Leeds, West Yorkshire. The company has now opened a new centre
in Hamilton, Scotland, where employment costs are more than £2,500
($4,000) cheaper per employee.
Call centre workers are among the worst paid employees in Britain,
with some earning less than 60 percent of the national average
wage. Call centre pay averages £12,850 - £9,000 per
year less than the average wage. In many cases, wages include
"bonus" elements that can change drastically from month
to month, meaning that a steady wage cannot be attained.
Due to the stressful nature of the industry there is a very
large turnover (30 percent) of staff, with workers staying at
a firm less than 18 months on average.
See Also:
Working
conditions inside telephone call centres: "They will monitor
anything we do on that phone"
[18 December 1998]
Telephone
call centres expand worldwide
[9 December 1998]
Computerization
& the Internet
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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