Thursday, July 26, 2012

Mobile Field Service Significantly Impacting Business


This morning I took a look at a great report from Aberdeen (Aberdeen Group Field Service 2011: Mobility and the Extension of the Service Enterprise)
Here are a few interesting stats gleaned fromt he report with some of my thoughts:
  • Average workforce utilization is only 57%
    This means your field service techs are idle or non-productive an average of 43% of the time.  Statistically most companies report the majority of idle time is spent driving back and forth between the office or waiting for their next service appointment. The conclusion is field service solutions provide an opportunity to decrease fuel cost as well as increase work force utilization.
  • Companies that implemented mobile field service management solutions increased workforce utilization  to 76%
    That's a 19% jump in utilization. This is accomplished through better planning, better scheduling and ensuring the service tech has the information, tools and parts needed for every job. What would a 19% increase in utilization do to your bottom line?
  • Companies that implemented mobile field service solutions gained a higher first time fixed rate - 82% versus 65%.
    This naturally leads to higher customer satisfaction rates. On the service side mobile field service solutions are enabling managers to assign the right technician, pre-load service vans with right parts, schedule service calls, etc.. An interesting note, in Aberdeen's report companies reported that 47% of the return visits are due to not having the right part on-hand.
I am seeing similar trends in my own business. One of my customers recently reported an 18% increase in their conversion rate from Estimate to Work Orders by using the "Call Back" feature in ZenTouch.

Field service management tools like ZenTouch provide access to information that enable service teams to improve work order assignment, lower operational costs, provide a better customer experience via reduction of repeat visits, provide real-time data for better communication between customers and the  service desk and more. This doesn't even account for the impact direct integration with backend systems like QuickBooks or Sage are having on the accounting side of the business.


Jody Sedrick
Follow me on Twitter: @jodysedrick and @zenewareinc

Monday, July 9, 2012

Google Maps Coordinate - A silver bullet for field service?

As you may have heard Google has officially entered the mobile workforce space with the launch of Google Maps Coordinate. If you haven't heard Google Maps Coordinate is a mobile workforce tracking system that efficiently allows dispatchers to deploy jobs to their service techs and even track them while in the field.


Google Maps Coordinate offers tight integration with Google Maps as you would expect makes assigning jobs to a technician based on his location very simple and appealing to service managers. Assigning and sending jobs to field service techs is an easy task for dispatchers. Service jobs are time stamped and techs even have the option to accept or reject jobs based on their current on-site status. With an introductory price of only $15 per user Google Maps Coordinate seems like a nice solution for service companies.

Sounds pretty good, Right? What's the downside?
  1. Google Maps Coordinate only works on Android. If your team currently uses iPhone, iPad, BlackBerry or any other web enabled SmartPhone you are out of luck.
  2. Google Maps Coordinate only offers real-time work force dispatching and tracking. Yes, it provides great insight as to where you service team members are now but you are not provided any true scheduling capabilities.  From the service techs perspective he only sees active jobs that are assigned to him enabling him to only focus on the jobs at hand.
  3. Integration into QuickBooks, Sage or other accounting systems is non-existent at this point. Given Google's influence I'm sure this will come in future versions. But for now there is no way to streamline and expedite the invoicing processes.
  4. Reporting - While Google Maps Coordinates provides information about a specific job there are now report functionalities that show you trends within your business; what service tasks are most common, which service tasks are most profitable, etc.
Clearly Google Maps Coordinate is  Google's first step into providing a cloud based mobile workforce management solution. I expect it to evolve quickly. But based on the service companies I've talked to it does not meet the needs of a field service organization that is dispatching, managing multiple schedules, managing preventative maintenance schedules, managing inventory, conducting data analytics on service call times, evaluating service margins and profitability and integrating with their back end systems.



If you are looking for a real-time tracking and dispatching solution Google Maps Coordinate could be right tool for you. It certainly gives small to medium-sized service business a competitive tool to help them more dynamically manage their service crews and respond quicker to service calls placed by customers.


Jody Sedrick
Follow me on Twitter: @jodysedrick and @zenewareinc

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Government and Mobile Apps

For the past couple of weeks I've enjoyed some very interesting discussions with Samantha Lapin, CEO of Pod, Inc. about government's adoption of mobile solutions. She found a great article from Information Week that highlights "14 Cool Mobile Apps from Uncle Sam". http://www.informationweek.com/news/galleries/government/mobile/231000240

Here is the list

· The Department of Health and Human Services' Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality's Electronic Preventive Services Selector (ePSS) aids primary care clinicians in identifying the best treatment for their patients based on an array of patient characteristics.
· NASA App
· FBI Most Wanted App
· The White House The official app of the Obama White House is mostly a vehicle for White House news, and provides users with news, blogs, photos, and both live streaming and archived video of White House events.
· US Post Office
· Smithsonian's MEanderthal app. Make yourself a Neanderthal.
· U.S. Army News & Information
· Lunar Electric Rover Simulator
· The FCC Mobile Broadband Test is a simple app that lets users test their mobile broadband connection's download and upload speed, as well as network latency. The app stores results of old tests, and differentiates between Wi-Fi and cellular signals
·  My TSA app gives travelers and their families, friends, and colleagues access to information about flight delays, checkpoint wait times
·  The Library of Congress' Virtual Tour app highlights the library's exhibitions, collections, and architecture with photos, video, and audio.
·  IRS2go, launched earlier this year, lets taxpayers check their refund status, follow the IRS' social media feeds, contact the IRS for support, and sign up for tax hints.
·  The National Institutes of Health's National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute's BMI Calculator aims to help users determine whether their weight may lead to health problems.

I'm off to download the Lunar Rover Simulator now.

I'm interested to see where else government is adopting mobility. If you have any favorite government apps or are aware of interesting mobile government solutions please let me know.


Jody Sedrick
Follow me on Twitter: @jodysedrick and @zenewareinc