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Quality and the plan

Deep-dive lesson · about 10 minutes · short quiz at the end

ccPlanning academy · quality · deep dive

Quality and the plan

QA isn’t someone else’s department — it sets the demand you forecast.

The usual divide

Quality and planning sit in separate worlds.

In most operations, QA reports through customer experience and planning through operations, and the two barely speak. That separation is a missed loop, because the behaviours QA measures are the same ones that set the volume and handle time the planner has to staff.

Lever one

Quality drives first contact resolution.

An agent who resolves the customer’s need the first time prevents a second contact. So the resolution behaviours QA scores feed directly into FCR — and FCR, as the metrics track showed, is a volume dial: every avoidable repeat is demand the planner has to forecast and staff.

Lever two

Quality shapes handle time.

Good quality isn’t always slower. An agent who listens, diagnoses correctly and resolves cleanly often handles the contact in less time than one who guesses, back-tracks and re-opens. Quality and AHT are not simple opposites — and QA insight tells you which way the trade really runs for your contacts.

Lever three

Quality reveals failure demand.

QA, especially at full AI coverage, is the richest source of why contacts happen — which are caused by an upstream failure, which are repeats, which are avoidable. That is the failure-demand picture the planner needs to size and challenge the work that shouldn’t exist.

The loop

Close it both ways.

QA improves resolution plan sees lower demand fewer repeats & failure demand

Better quality lowers demand; the plan that sees it frees capacity that funds more quality.

In practice

Put the planner and QA in the same conversation.

Share QA insight with planning as demand intelligence, not just a coaching tool. Feed FCR and quality trends into the forecast. And when QA finds avoidable demand, let the planner put the cost on it — the number that gets the upstream fix funded.

The takeaway

Quality is a demand lever, so close the loop.

QA sets FCR, shapes AHT and reveals failure demand — the inputs the plan runs on. Connect the two functions and quality stops being a scorecard and becomes one of the operation’s best ways to reduce the work it has to do.

Now test yourself ↓

1 / 8

Slides done? Here’s the same idea in a bit more depth — the part worth keeping.

In depth: the loop most operations leave open

Quality assurance and workforce planning usually live in different reporting lines and rarely talk, which leaves one of the most valuable loops in the operation open. The behaviours a good QA programme measures are precisely the ones that set the demand a planner has to forecast. Resolution behaviours drive first contact resolution, and FCR is a volume dial — every avoidable repeat is demand the plan must carry. Quality shapes handle time too, and not always in the obvious direction: an agent who listens, diagnoses correctly and resolves cleanly often finishes faster than one who guesses and back-tracks, so quality and AHT are not simple opposites, and QA insight tells you which way the trade really runs. And QA — especially at full AI coverage — is the richest available source of why contacts happen, which makes it the place where failure demand becomes visible.

Closing it both ways

Connecting the two functions turns quality from a scorecard into a demand-reduction engine. Better quality lowers repeat and failure demand; a plan that sees the change frees capacity; and freed capacity can fund the coaching and headroom that raise quality further — a virtuous loop instead of two disconnected departments. In practice that means treating QA output as demand intelligence and not just a coaching tool, feeding FCR and quality trends into the forecast as legitimate, quantifiable adjustments, and — the highest-leverage move — letting the planner put a cost on the avoidable demand QA surfaces, because a pound figure is what gets an upstream fix funded. The planner who sits in the quality conversation, and the quality lead who understands the plan, between them own a lever neither can pull alone.

The principle to remember: quality drives FCR, shapes AHT and reveals failure demand — the inputs the plan runs on. Close the loop between QA and planning and quality becomes one of the cheapest ways to reduce the work the operation has to do.

Quick quiz

Five questions. Pick an answer to each, then check your score.

1. Why should QA and planning be connected?

Quality drives the demand the plan runs on.

2. How does quality affect volume?

FCR is a volume dial; resolution behaviours move it.

3. Is better quality always slower?

Quality and AHT aren’t simple opposites.

4. What demand picture is QA uniquely good at revealing?

QA is the richest source of the “why” behind contacts.

5. What’s the highest-leverage way to close the loop?

A pound figure on avoidable demand is what gets the cause fixed.

You’ve finished the quality track. Ready for your certificate? Take the final exam →