"What gets measured gets managed." In contact centers, this adage is especially true. The right metrics illuminate problems, reveal opportunities, and guide improvement. The wrong metrics—or too many metrics—create confusion and misdirected effort.

This guide covers the essential contact center metrics, organized by category, with benchmarks and practical guidance on how to use them.

The Metrics Hierarchy

Not all metrics are created equal. Think of them in three tiers:

Focus on a small set of North Star metrics for executive reporting, while giving operational leaders access to the full range for optimization.

Customer Experience Metrics

Customer Satisfaction (CSAT) Customer

The most direct measure of customer happiness. Typically measured through post-interaction surveys on a 1-5 or 1-10 scale.

CSAT = (Positive responses / Total responses) × 100
Industry Benchmark: 75-85%

Net Promoter Score (NPS) Customer

Measures customer loyalty and likelihood to recommend. "How likely are you to recommend us?" on a 0-10 scale.

NPS = % Promoters (9-10) - % Detractors (0-6)
Industry Benchmark: 30-50

Customer Effort Score (CES) Customer

Measures how easy it was for customers to get help. Low-effort experiences correlate strongly with loyalty.

CES = Average rating on "How easy was it to resolve your issue?"
Target: < 2.0 (on 1-5 scale)

Efficiency Metrics

Average Handle Time (AHT) Efficiency

Total time from call answer to completion, including talk time, hold time, and after-call work.

AHT = (Talk Time + Hold Time + ACW) / Total Calls
Varies by industry: 3-8 minutes typical

First Call Resolution (FCR) Efficiency

Percentage of calls resolved without the customer needing to call back. The single most impactful efficiency metric.

FCR = Calls resolved on first contact / Total calls × 100
Industry Benchmark: 70-75%

Service Level Efficiency

Percentage of calls answered within a target time. The classic "80/20" means 80% of calls answered within 20 seconds.

Service Level = Calls answered within X seconds / Total calls × 100
Common Target: 80% in 20 seconds

Abandonment Rate Efficiency

Percentage of callers who hang up before reaching an agent. Inverse indicator of service level.

Abandonment Rate = Abandoned calls / Total inbound calls × 100
Industry Benchmark: < 5%

Quality Metrics

Quality Assurance Score Quality

Average score from call evaluations against quality criteria. Foundation of coaching and development.

QA Score = Total points earned / Total possible points × 100
Target: > 85%

Transfer Rate Quality

Percentage of calls transferred to another agent or department. High rates indicate routing or training issues.

Transfer Rate = Transferred calls / Total calls × 100
Target: < 10%

Financial Metrics

Cost Per Contact Financial

Total contact center costs divided by number of contacts handled. The bottom-line efficiency measure.

Cost Per Contact = Total Operating Costs / Total Contacts
Industry Range: $3-12 per call

Agent Utilization Financial

Percentage of time agents spend handling contacts vs. available time. Balances cost efficiency with agent burnout risk.

Utilization = Handle Time / (Handle Time + Available Time) × 100
Target: 80-85%

AI-Specific Metrics

When deploying AI voice agents, track these additional metrics:

85%
Containment Rate
92%
Intent Accuracy
180ms
Response Latency
4.2
AI CSAT Score

Building a Metrics Dashboard

An effective dashboard presents the right information to the right people:

Executive Dashboard

High-level view with North Star metrics:

Operations Dashboard

Real-time and daily operational metrics:

Agent Dashboard

Individual performance metrics:

Common Metrics Mistakes

Using Data to Drive Improvement

Metrics are only valuable if they lead to action:

  1. Set clear targets: Every metric needs a goal to measure against
  2. Review regularly: Daily for operations, weekly for trends, monthly for strategy
  3. Drill down on variances: When metrics miss targets, understand why
  4. Connect to actions: Every insight should lead to a specific improvement
  5. Close the loop: Measure whether changes actually improved outcomes

The best contact centers are data-obsessed. They measure constantly, analyze deeply, and act decisively based on what the numbers tell them. Start with a small set of metrics you can truly act on, then expand as your analytics maturity grows.