5 Tips for Employing Disabled Contact Center Agents

Written by KOVA Corp

Thanks to the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, today it is understood that workplace accommodations must be made in order that disabled workers can join the nation’s workforce and do their jobs just as easily as anyone else.

In order to comply with this act and make a job at a contact center possible for disabled workers, there are several simple steps contact center managers can take.

1. Make sure your contact center is wheelchair friendly. This doesn’t simply mean designated parking spots, wide doors, elevators, and ramps. While those features are important aspects of any public building, it’s the inside set-up of a contact center that can pose the greatest challenge to a wheelchair-bound employee. Navigating through a maze of desks or cubicles can be tricky unless the aisles are wide enough. And don’t forget to create easy access to the break room, copy machine, restroom, and any other areas your employees need to visit in the course of their day. If major changes need to be made, and reconfiguring the entire office is not possible, the areas to which the wheelchair-bound employee will need access can be rearranged first, with the rest of the office following as soon as it is feasible.

2. Create a comfortable work station. Disabled employees may need to use a special desk that accommodates their wheelchair, or, if they are able to move to an office chair during the day, they may require a special chair that provides additional support. Talk to your employee about their specific needs to determine what the best set-up for their individual work station will be.

3. Consider employing disabled workers as remote agents. If major changes to the workplace are needed in order to accommodate a disabled worker, but cannot be made right away due to budgetary constraints or other reasons, one option to consider is to allow disabled employees to work from home. It is a simple matter to connect remote agents to the contact center through internet and phone, and this enables the employee to work from the comfort of home until changes can be made to the configuration of the workplace.

4. Invest in screen-reading software in order to employ blind workers. There’s a simple fix for the issue of a blind employee not being able to read the computer screen: screen-reading software. Computer software is now available that interprets and reads what is on the screen in one ear of the agent’s headphones, while the call comes through on the other ear. There is even software available that translates what is on the screen into Braille for easy reading by the employee during calls. And since this software is available to purchase or as a free, open source package, it does not have to cost a thing to accommodate a blind employee.

5. Provide an interpreter for a deaf employee. Deaf workers can easily take on the email, social media, and online chat work necessary in a contact center, and may not even need an interpreter for in-office communication with coworkers, if they can read lips. However, it may be necessary to find an interpreter who knows sign language to help facilitate understanding of team meetings, training, and conversations in the office.

The most important step any contact center manager can take, however, when hiring a disabled worker, is to sit down and have an in-depth meeting with that employee, to ascertain what they will need in order to make the workplace accessible and comfortable for them as an individual.

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