As a contact center manager, you know the importance of delivering exceptional customer service to build strong relationships with your clients and customers. Recording and storing customer interactions can help you reach this goal while also providing several other advantages, including quality assurance, dispute resolution, compliance, customer insights, and more. However, with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in effect, you must ensure that your recording and storage practices comply with the GDPR's requirements for the lawful processing of personal data. In this blog post, we'll explore the importance of recording and storing customer interactions in European contact centers (which will most probably also apply to other fields of work) and provide a compliance guide to help you ensure that your practices are GDPR-compliant.
Recording and storing customer interactions can provide several advantages for your contact center, including:
The GDPR has a significant impact on the recording and storage of customer interactions in a contact center. Under the GDPR, the recording of customer interactions is considered processing of personal data. Therefore, you must ensure that you comply with the GDPR's principles for the lawful processing of personal data, including obtaining customer consent and ensuring that you have a legitimate reason for processing this data.
Customers must be informed that their interactions will be recorded, and you must provide them with the option to actively opt-out of the recording. The information provided to the customer must be in a concise and transparent language. It must be easily accessible and should include the following:
You must have a legitimate reason for processing the data, such as complying with a legal obligation, performing a contract with the customer, or pursuing a legitimate interest. You must ensure that the reason for processing is clearly communicated to the customer, and it should be documented in your privacy policy.
You must implement appropriate technical and organizational measures to protect the personal data that you process, including customer interactions. This includes implementing appropriate security measures to prevent unauthorized access, accidental loss, destruction, or damage to personal data. You must also ensure that personal data is securely erased when it is no longer needed.
Personal data should not be retained for longer than necessary for the purpose for which it was collected. You should establish a process for retention periods of different types of personal data. Also ensure that personal data is securely deleted when the retention period has expired.
Recording and storing customer interactions can provide several advantages, including quality assurance, dispute resolution, compliance, customer insights, and training and coaching for contact centers. However, with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in effect, contact centers must ensure that their recording and storage practices comply with the GDPR's requirements for the lawful processing of personal data. Contact centers must obtain customer consent, provide a legitimate reason for processing, implement appropriate data security measures, and establish a process for retention periods of different types of personal data. Personal data should not be retained for longer than necessary for the purpose for which it was collected.