← ccPlanning Academy · Channel planning track
Outbound & dialler planning
Slides done? Here’s the same idea in a bit more depth — the part worth keeping.
In depth: when you make the calls, the problem turns inside out
Inbound planning is about having enough agents for demand that arrives; outbound flips it entirely — the work is a list you choose to call, and the constraint is how efficiently you can connect agents to live, useful conversations. Different problem, different levers. The dialler mode sets the first trade-off: preview (agent sees the record, then dials), progressive (one dial per free agent), or predictive (over-dials to keep agents busy), each trading agent idle time against the risk of calling more people than you have agents to take.
The predictive gamble and its legal ceiling
Predictive diallers ring more numbers than there are free agents, betting most won’t answer — which maximises talk time but, when too many answer at once, abandons the call on the customer. That trade-off is the heart of outbound planning, and it isn’t purely commercial: in the UK, Ofcom caps predictive-dialler abandoned calls at 3% of live calls over 24 hours with a mandatory recorded message, and other regions have their own rules. It’s a legal ceiling, not a target you choose, and it constrains how aggressively you can dial.
Plan the funnel and the depleting list
Most dials never reach a person, so you plan on the funnel — dials to connects to right-party contacts (RPC) to outcomes — and RPC, reaching the actual person you wanted, is the number that matters, because connects to answerphones are wasted. RPC varies hugely by time of day, list age and data quality, so it must be forecast, not assumed. And unlike inbound, the list is finite: early passes catch the easy-to-reach people and connect rates fall as you work down it, so planning has to account for a list ageing, depleting, and needing refresh. Layer on regulated calling windows and time zones, and blend with inbound as a release valve — agents taking calls when it’s busy, dialling when it’s quiet — with the real-time control to keep neither channel starved.
The principle to remember: plan the funnel, respect the cap, work the list. Choose the dialler mode, stay under the legal abandonment ceiling, forecast connect and RPC rates, plan for a depleting list, call when people answer, and blend with inbound to mop up troughs.
Quick quiz
Five questions. Pick an answer to each, then check your score.
1. How does outbound planning differ fundamentally from inbound?
Inbound waits for work; outbound creates it from a finite list — different levers entirely.
2. What does a predictive dialler do?
It maximises talk time but abandons calls when too many answer at once.
3. What is the UK regulatory limit on predictive-dialler abandoned calls?
It’s a legal ceiling (with a mandatory message) that constrains how aggressively you can dial.
4. Which metric really measures outbound productivity?
A connect to the wrong person or voicemail is wasted — RPC is the real measure, and it must be forecast.
5. What happens to connect rates as you work down a list?
An outbound list is finite and depletes — plan for ageing lists and when to refresh.