Planning the utilities contact centre — price caps, vulnerable customers, winter peaks
Utilities contact centres — energy especially — carry the heaviest vulnerable-customer load of any major sector. Winter peaks, price-cap announcements, and meter-read cycles drive predictable surges; cost-of-living pressure since 2022 has reshaped the entire baseline. The planner who hasn’t recalibrated is staffing for a workforce that no longer exists.
Winter peaks and bill-shock cycles
Utilities demand has structural seasonality. Energy peaks Oct–Mar (heating); water peaks Jun–Aug (drought, leaks). Bill-shock cycles after price-cap changes drive 2–4 week call spikes that don’t map to weather.
The planner’s discipline: layer the seasonal pattern, the bill-shock event, and the regulatory communications schedule. Each is forecastable in isolation; combined, they produce predictable peaks the operation can actually staff for — if leadership commits to the recruitment lead time.
Vulnerable customer load — the structural shift
Cost-of-living pressure has made vulnerable customer handling the dominant workload share for many utilities CCs. Financial difficulty, fuel poverty, prepayment-meter issues, debt management — AHT 3–5× standard handling, regulated decisions, sensitive judgement.
A specific planning discipline: vulnerable-customer capacity as a separate forecast and roster track. Senior agents, debt-specialist training, regulator-readiness. Not in the general queue. Outcomes tracked separately. Not legal advice — validate with compliance.
Smart meter and field-coordination workload
Smart meter rollout has reshaped utility CC workload in two ways: a long tail of installation and exception calls, and a new ongoing stream of meter-reading queries, billing-anomaly disputes, and remote-disconnect questions. Neither is large per-contact, both are substantial in aggregate.
The planner’s contribution: forecast smart-meter exception volume as a separate stream, with its own AHT profile, and coordinate with the field-installer schedule. Repeat-contact rate on smart-meter installations is a sharp planning signal.
Regulatory engagement — Ofgem, Ofwat, equivalents
Utilities regulators (Ofgem in UK energy, Ofwat in UK water, sector equivalents elsewhere) increasingly require evidence of customer outcomes, vulnerable customer handling, and complaint resolution. The planner’s contribution: capacity for the reporting, capacity for the audit, capacity for the regulator-driven case reviews when they come.
A failure pattern: the planner treats regulatory work as "compliance’s problem" and doesn’t staff it. Then a regulator visit lands and the operation discovers it can’t produce the evidence. Plan capacity for the regulatory rhythm explicitly. Not legal advice.
The honest utilities planning posture
Layer the seasonal pattern, the bill-shock event, the vulnerable-customer dominant load, and the regulator’s rhythm. Vulnerable-customer capacity as a separate track, not a general queue. Outcomes evidenced. The planning function that does this carries the operation through winter; the one that doesn’t fails publicly.
See also
- Voc Consumer Duty Evidence
- Voc Sampling And The Unheard