Smiling support agent with headset, chat and five-star rating icons.

Agentforce Contact Center Management: A Complete Guide

Raise the standards for your service and business. Discover the strategies, KPIs, and best practices that lead to exceptional customer service across all channels.

Katie Clark , Product Marketing Director - Contact Center, Salesforce

February 23, 2026
Smarter Contact Centers Start with Connected Data
See how unified service powers contact centers.

Connecting data, digital channels, and AI helps teams resolve issues faster and deliver seamless customer experiences.

Decorative
When you talk, service pros listen.

Service leaders need reviews they can trust. Review Service Cloud on G2 today.

Salesforce mascot Einstein showcasing the title slide of the State of Service report.
Read the latest in customer service research.

Top service teams are using AI and data to win every customer interaction. See how in our latest State of Service report.

Contact center management FAQs

Contact center management directly impacts customer satisfaction, operational costs, and business outcomes. Well-managed contact centers resolve customer issues more quickly, reduce service costs through efficient operations, and provide valuable insights that inform product development and business strategy.

Contact center management requires several key roles to run efficiently. Contact center managers oversee daily operations, set performance targets, and lead agent teams. Workforce management specialists handle call-volume forecasting and agent scheduling. Quality assurance analysts monitor interactions and support managers and team leads with coaching information for rep feedback. Team leads provide frontline supervision and real-time support. Operations analysts track metrics and identify areas for improvement.

Service rep turnover remains a significant challenge, leading to continuous recruitment and training needs and increasing operational costs. Omnichannel support also involves considerable complexity, especially without a unified, intelligent solution. Contact center managers today must balance automation with human support, which requires careful coordination and oversight to meet rising volume and high customer expectations.

Calculate ROI by comparing cost savings and revenue gains against implementation and subscription costs. Cost savings come from reduced average handle time, lower turnover, decreased overtime expenses, and improved first contact resolution rates. Revenue gains include increased customer retention, upsell opportunities identified through interaction analysis, and new business generated via your customer support.

Contact centers use AI and automation across workflows (intelligent routing, real-time transcription, and call summaries) to generate data-driven insights (real-time customer sentiment and predictive analytics to forecast volume) and to deliver fully automated customer service for inquiries that don’t require human intervention. These are just a few examples; there are many opportunities to apply AI to improve the speed and quality of your service.

Contact center managers must orchestrate various aspects of customer service. Key responsibilities include ensuring contact centers are resourced to align with volume patterns, monitoring real-time dashboards for performance, coaching reps to improve their service delivery, and developing quality assurance programs that uphold service standards and SLAs.

Contact center managers also serve as strategic partners across the organization by analyzing customer interactions and direct feedback, which can reveal trends or issues related to products, policies, or processes. They also work with IT teams to implement new contact center software, like new orchestration capabilities or AI assistance tools that support human reps.