We’ve been obsessed with how fast agents can finish their after-call work, but that shouldn’t be the point anymore.
Real-time transcription “writes down” everything during the call, so agents don’t have to do it afterwards. That means they can focus on the conversation — and help customers better in the moment.
Instead of asking, “How fast can we wrap up?” the question becomes, “How effectively can we use the insights generated?”
For decades, call wrap-up time has been a cornerstone metric in customer service. It measured how quickly agents could finish after-call work like documenting notes, updating CRM systems, or scheduling follow-ups.
But in the era of real-time transcription and AI-powered customer service, this obsession with reducing call wrap-up time is losing its relevance.
Traditionally, wrap-up time focused on documenting what happened during the call. But with real-time transcription, value creation now happens during the conversation.
Key advantages of real-time transcription:
This shift transforms traditional after-call work into automated processes, freeing agents to focus on delivering in-call value.
The goal isn’t to minimise wrap-up time anymore—it’s to maximise the value that each call generates.
Historically, an emphasis on short call wrap-up times often led to:
Managers rely on accurate records to make decisions, but agents can’t document everything.
A new Salesforce Customer Service Report shows contact centre agents spend only 39% of their time servicing customers. The remaining 61% is spent on administrative duties, including manually logging case notes.
This misallocation of time doesn’t just impact operational costs—it directly affects an organisation's ability to spot trends, identify opportunities, and adapt to changing customer needs in real time.
Real-time transcription flips this paradigm:
While real-time transcription offers clear advantages for reducing call wrap-up time, post-call transcripts still play a valuable role.
Both options have their place, and the choice depends on the needs of your team. Real-time transcription can populate CRM fields, or flag follow-ups before the call even ends, while post-call transcripts provide robust data for post-conversation analysis.
Call wrap-up time isn’t useless—but it’s no longer the north star of customer service metrics.
Forward-thinking organisations are already shifting their focus from post-call metrics to measuring value created during conversations: problems prevented, opportunities identified, and insights gathered.
The question isn’t how quickly we can wrap up anymore—it’s how much value we can create during calls and after.
Curious how this works in practice? Explore the full list of features behind our real-time call transcription.