Business Monday

Global Response call center broadens vision

 

Margate-based Global Response evolved from a small firm with a dozen workers to a multimillion call center with more than 1,500 employees.

Global Response Corp.

Business: Family-owned call center that conducts customer service and ordering for worldwide clients.

Stock exchange: Privately held

Owners: Herman and Dorothy Shooster and children Stephen, Michael and Frank Shooster and Wendy Shooster-Leuchter.

Established: 1974

Employees: 1,500 fulltime, part-time and home agents

CO-CEOs: Stephen, Michael and Frank Shooster and Wendy Shooster-Leuchter.

Headquarters: 777 S. State Road 7, Margate

Additional locations: Global Response North, Iron River, Mich.; Global Response Marquette, Guinn, Mich.

Revenue: In excess of $30 million annually

Website: www.globalresponse.com

SOURCE: Global Response Corp.


Special to The Miami Herald

The trend continued, with an economic effect on pricing in the industry. “What we can charge is much less because of overseas competition,” Max Leuchter said, adding there’s also a higher value-added on customer service.

Global Response client Diana Golden, customer service manager at New York City retailer LittleMissMatched, prefers the U.S. location to overseas locales.

“It’s important for us to have a location we can get to easily,” she said. “I can get down there easily and the cost isn’t astronomical.”

Despite industry changes, some things have remained the same at Global Response: It has continued as a family-owned private company. The octogenarian Shooster’s four children are now in control as owners and co-CEOs. Wendy is also chief marketing officer; her brother Frank is chief legal officer; Stephen, chief technology officer; and Michael, chief financial officer.

Their spouses all hold positions and Global Response’s more distant future is in the hands of Herman’s 15 grandchildren.

“The good part about the company is family. The bad part is the family,” Herman Shooster says, laughing. He learned that proactive discussion of issues that affect the business and family – which live within a mile of each other – was critical to smooth operations.

“Everyone has their own space,” Shooster said. Wendy adds, “We’ve been doing it for 25-30 years.”

It’s been longer for Herman Shooster, who was born into an entrepreneurial family. His father owned the landmark Shooster’s restaurant in Chester, Pa. His brother Harry started Festival Flea Market Mall in Pompano Beach. Herman Shooster actually purchased Ding-a-Ling after he built and took public Cherry Hill Foods.

Global Response’s Margate headquarters has a family feel to it, starting in the lobby with a greeting on a video screen and the welcoming smile of 17-year employee, receptionist Renata Salandy. Global Response celebrates its customers there, even holding festivities including a wedding for David’s Bridal.

“They choreographed a song and dance for us,” said Golden of LittleMissMatched. “They never forget a birthday.”

Golden previously worked for 15 years in call centers and said the difference in the atmosphere at Global Response is “night and day” compared to many.

“It’s such a warm, warm company — and they get the job done,” said Golden.

The center, with walls full of family and employee photos is segmented by client signs hanging from the ceiling and products on nearby shelves. A doll in a wedding dress sits on the ledge near agents who talk over headsets to David’s Bridal customers. Merchandise including apparel and globes clutter the National Geographic section. Crate & Barrel’s corner features colorful house wares.

Customer service agents man their stations night and day. “The building operates 24/7 and hasn’t been empty for 30 years,” including staying open through hurricanes, said Majeski.

Agents work closely with client representatives to become familiar with products. In Michigan, where Global Response has two call centers, agents toured the state’s parks when the company won that business.

LittleMissMatched’s Golden travels to the call center at least twice a year to train agents on its ‘tween apparel brand, particularly before the busy holiday season, in order for Global Response to better represent the retailer’s product.

The trick for Global Response is beyond meeting the needs of its customers, said Max Leuchter. “We become our customers.”

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