The cost of your service level
Slides done? Here’s the same idea in a bit more depth — the part worth keeping.
In depth: the service level is a cost decision, not a tradition
The 80/20 service-level target — 80% of contacts answered within 20 seconds — is one of the most-quoted numbers in the contact centre, and one of the least examined. It has no scientific basis; it’s a convention inherited from early telephony that hardened into a default. That doesn’t make it wrong, but it does make it a starting guess rather than an answer. The only way to know the right target for a given queue is to treat the service level as what it actually is: a balance between two costs that move in opposite directions.
The two costs, and the valley between them
Raising the service level means answering faster, which means more agents waiting and ready — so labour cost rises as the target climbs, and rises fastest near the top, where you’re paying for staff who are idle most of the time. Lowering the service level saves that staff cost but lets more callers abandon, and every abandoned contact carries a value: a lost sale, a customer who churns, a complaint that escalates. As the target falls, that lost value grows. Add the two together and the total cost forms a U — high at both ends, lowest somewhere in the middle. That bottom point is the cost-optimal service level, and it’s the target you can actually defend.
Why it differs by queue, and what to do
The location of the valley depends almost entirely on the value of a contact. A sales line where each call might be a £200 order has an expensive downside to slow answers, so its optimum sits high; a low-value query line has a cheap downside, so its optimum sits lower. Running one blanket target across every queue therefore over-serves some and under-serves others — spending money where it isn’t valued and skimping where it is. The practical method is to sweep the staffing for each queue, add labour cost to the value of abandoned contacts at every level, and read off the minimum. More often than not it lands somewhere other than 80/20 — which is exactly the point.
The principle to remember: the service level is a cost decision. Find where labour cost plus the value of lost contacts is lowest, set that as the target, and do it per queue — don’t inherit 80/20 and hope.
Quick quiz
Five questions. Pick an answer to each, then check your score.
1. Where does the 80/20 service-level target come from?
80/20 is an inherited convention, not a law. It’s a starting guess you should cost, not a given.
2. As you raise the service-level target, what happens to labour cost?
Faster answers need more agents waiting and ready, so labour cost climbs — steeply near 100%.
3. What is the cost-optimal service level?
It’s the bottom of the U — where the two opposing costs balance, not the highest or cheapest.
4. Why might a sales line and a low-value query line have different optimal targets?
High-value contacts make slow answers expensive, pushing the optimum up; low-value contacts pull it down.
5. What’s the problem with chasing 99% service level?
Diminishing returns are brutal at the top: you pay for idle agents to buy service beyond the cost optimum.
Find your own optimum with the cost-optimal service level calculator, or read As Much Art as Science.
You’ve finished the metrics track. Ready for your certificate? Take the final exam →