Business

Call Centers Discover WFH Doesn’t Work for Them

Concern about data security, power outages, and poor internet service fuels a return to offices.

Safety tape is placed across work areas at a call center in Manila on June 8.

Photographer: Veejay Villafranca for Bloomberg Businessweek
Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

For Americans with questions about their bank accounts, mobile phone service, or e-commerce orders, getting answers has long involved talking on the phone with someone in the Philippines, where English-speaking operators handle queries, complaints, and other calls. U.S. companies outsourcing this kind of customer service benefit from lower labor costs while counting on their Philippine operators to keep customers’ confidential information safe within the walls of the call centers.

Now the coronavirus is testing that arrangement. After the Philippine government imposed a strict quarantine in March, call centers had permission to keep skeleton crews at their offices, but they had to send thousands of other employees to work from home. Even as lockdowns end in the island nation, social distancing rules remain in effect. Many staffers won’t be returning to call centers and instead will be answering customer questions from their residence.