Senior Living Call KPI Dashboard: What to Track Daily, Weekly, Monthly - ONSCREEN, Inc.

Senior Living Call KPI Dashboard: What to Track Daily, Weekly, Monthly

Surprising fact: communities lose trust fast—one study showed a single missed phone interaction can cut prospective move-ins by double digits.

You need a simple, scannable command center to stop that loss. A call center view turns scattered reports into instant insight. It surfaces agent and call-level indicators so teams fix problems before families notice.

Think of this tool as your daily mission board: queue health each day, coaching trends each week, and satisfaction plus business impact each month. Dashboards only help when they’re quick to read.

call KPI dashboardWhat this guide delivers: a clear KPI checklist, practical baseline targets, and design tips your staff will use. More metrics isn’t the goal—better decisions are. Faster answers. Fewer missed calls. Clear accountability.

Later, we show how AI support can reduce misses and steady service during peaks without losing the human touch. Learn more about JoyLiving here: https://onscreeninc.com/pages/joyliving-ai-for-senior-living and Talk to Joy, our AI Receptionist now: 1-812-MEET-JOY.

Key Takeaways

  • Your daily view should flag queue health instantly.
  • Track coaching trends weekly to keep staff consistent.
  • Measure satisfaction monthly to link service to outcomes.
  • Scannability beats volume—make the screen actionable.
  • AI can reduce missed interactions while preserving warmth.

Why a call center KPI dashboard matters for senior living communities today

Every inbound interaction is a chance to ease a family's worry — and you need instant sightlines to protect that moment.

A modern call center interior designed for a senior living community, showcasing a spacious, well-lit environment. In the foreground, a diverse group of call center agents in professional business attire, focused on their computer screens and headsets, engaging in conversations. The middle ground features rows of sleek workstations with ergonomic chairs and high-tech equipment, emphasizing organization and efficiency. In the background, large windows let in natural light, creating an inviting atmosphere, with greenery visible outside to evoke a sense of calm. Use warm lighting to enhance the atmosphere, and shoot from a slightly elevated angle to capture the entire space harmoniously. The mood should be energetic yet professional, reflecting teamwork and dedication.Real-time visibility changes how you serve residents and their families. When you can see queue spikes, long waits, or rising missed calls, you act immediately. That protects customer experience and keeps customer satisfaction steady.

How real-time visibility improves customer experience and resident-family satisfaction

Surge events happen around tours, meals, weather, and shift changes. Without live data, teams react too late. With it, you reroute lines, add overflow, or reassign staff in minutes.

Faster decision-making for managers when volume, wait times, or missed calls spike

Managers get a common language for action. Clear performance indicators let front desk, nursing, and sales fix root causes—not just symptoms. The result: fewer escalations and happier customers.

  • Connect every interaction to your mission: reduce stress, not add to it.
  • Spot early warnings: long waits, missed calls, rising abandonment.
  • Enable immediate responses: reroute lines, extend coverage, add overflow.

Issue

Real-time signal

Manager action

High wait times

Average wait > threshold

Reassign staff; open overflow line

Missed interactions

Spike in missed calls per hour

Enable after-hours routing; deploy AI receptionist support

Surge around events

Sudden volume increase

Temporarily shift coverage; notify teams

Next, we'll define what to include in an effective view, then map daily, weekly, and monthly metrics to practical decisions you can take today.

What an ideal call KPI dashboard includes

Start with two clear lenses: the center view for demand and the agent view for coaching.

Agent performance vs call center performance

Center performance views show overall health: volume, wait times, and missed interactions. They answer whether you are staffed right and where bottlenecks form.

A modern call center environment, showcasing a spacious, well-lit room with rows of ergonomic desks and high-tech computer monitors displaying call KPI dashboards. In the foreground, diverse professionals in smart business attire are engaged in conversations with headsets, focused on their screens. The middle ground features various monitors, some displaying vibrant graphs and metrics, illustrating daily, weekly, and monthly KPIs with clear visuals. The background includes a glass-walled meeting room, where a team discusses performance insights. Natural light streams in through large windows, creating an inviting and productive atmosphere. The overall mood is dynamic and focused, exemplifying efficiency and teamwork in a professional setting.Agent views focus on individual work: who needs coaching, who handles first-contact resolutions, and who is overloaded. Use these for targeted training and fairness.

Filters that make data usable

Good dashboards let you slice by date range, phone line, and single or multiple agents. Common ranges: today, last 7 days, last 30 days.

  • Phone line: sales vs resident services to avoid masking issues.
  • Per-agent drill-down for coaching and load balancing.
  • Department split so resident-family issues are not lost under inquiries.

This structure reduces blame. Everyone sees the same facts. Teams align on what to fix first.

Next: a practical daily/weekly/monthly metric set that matches how managers actually work.

Daily call center performance metrics to monitor

Start your day with a compact set of tiles that show whether access and responsiveness are healthy. These are the numbers that stop problems before they snowball.

A modern call center office environment, featuring a sleek desk with multiple computer monitors displaying colorful charts and graphs representing daily call performance metrics. In the foreground, a diverse team of three professionals—two women and a man—are intently analyzing data on screens, wearing business attire. The middle ground reveals a large digital dashboard on the wall showcasing key performance indicators, such as call volume, response time, and customer satisfaction rates. The background includes large windows allowing natural light to flood the space, creating an energetic and productive atmosphere. The scene is captured from a slight angle to emphasize teamwork and focus, with soft lighting enhancing clarity and minimizing shadows. Overall, the mood is professional, focused, and forward-looking, reflecting a commitment to service excellence.

Total, inbound, and outbound calls

Track total calls, inbound volume, and outbound follow-ups. Total shows overall load. Inbound signals demand from families. Outbound reveals your follow-up discipline.

Missed calls and hourly reasons

Missed calls are both a service and revenue risk. Log missed-call reasons by hour—lunch gaps, shift changes, routing errors, or IVR friction—to spot patterns fast.

Average wait time and first response time

Average wait time measures queue friction. First response time shows how quickly someone answers. Keep both visible all day to prevent complaints.

Service level, abandonment rate, and same-day actions

Use an 80/20 service level as a baseline, then tune to your community. Abandonment rate = (abandoned calls / total calls) x 100. When it rises, add short-term coverage, adjust routing, or offer call-backs the same day.

Tile

What it shows

Same-day action

Total calls

Overall load

Shift resources or open overflow

Missed calls by hour

Coverage gaps

Reassign breaks; fix routing

Average wait time

Queue friction

Prioritize live answer or call-backs

Abandonment rate

Silent loss of trust

Trigger immediate staffing or AI support

For a short guide on which metrics to focus on, use these daily signals to keep your service steady and humane.

Weekly agent and team performance KPIs for coaching and training

Use a weekly rhythm to turn agent trends into targeted training. Weekly review keeps you focused on patterns, not single bad days. It creates a steady coaching flow that improves service and reduces repeat work.

A modern office environment showcasing a diverse group of professional agents engaged in a coaching session. In the foreground, a woman with short dark hair and glasses, wearing a smart blazer, analyzes performance metrics displayed on a sleek digital dashboard. In the middle, a man in a crisp dress shirt passionately explains a KPI trend to his team. The background features large windows allowing natural light to fill the space, highlighting charts and graphs on the walls that illustrate weekly performance metrics. The atmosphere is focused and motivational, with warm lighting and a clean, minimalistic design that emphasizes the professionalism of the setting. Use a slightly elevated angle to capture the interaction and engagement among the team members.

Average talk time and average handling time

Talk time measures the live conversation length. Average Handling Time (AHT) = (talk + hold + follow-up) / total calls. AHT shows the true workload per interaction.

Track both. Talk time shows quality of conversation. AHT shows total effort. Don’t push speed at the cost of thoroughness.

First contact resolution and repeat contacts

First contact resolution asks: did we truly help on the first call? Aim for 70–75% as a healthy target. Higher FCR means fewer repeat calls and less stress for staff and families.

When repeats rise, dig into training gaps: policies, scheduling, routing clinical questions, or unclear scripts.

Average time to resolution

Benchmarks: good <12 hours, average 12–48, poor 48+ hours. Long times often point to cross-team handoffs or ticket backlog.

  • Position weekly KPIs as your coaching rhythm—spot patterns, don’t overreact to one day.
  • Interpret outliers with empathy: long AHT can mean complex needs, new hires, or documentation burden.
  • Weekly flow: choose 1–2 metrics, review sample calls, update scripts, set a measurable goal for next week.

For practical reading on metrics and how they fit together, see a short guide to the best call center metrics.

Monthly customer satisfaction and business impact KPIs to report

Monthly reports tie daily service work to long-term reputation and occupancy trends. This is where you prove how front-line interactions affect referrals, move-ins, and costs. Monthly rhythm gives context that daily views miss.

A visually engaging scene that captures the essence of customer satisfaction in a senior living context. In the foreground, a diverse group of elderly residents, all dressed in smart casual attire, are gathered around a table, interacting warmly with each other and a staff member, who is presenting a colorful dashboard on a tablet. In the middle ground, a large window reveals a lush, vibrant garden, symbolizing a welcoming atmosphere. The background features softly lit, modern facility interiors, suggesting comfort and care. The lighting is warm and inviting, casting gentle shadows, enhancing the overall mood of contentment and positivity. The angle is slightly elevated, offering a clear view of the group's joyful expressions, embodying satisfaction and community spirit.CSAT is your reliability measure. Ask a 1–5 survey: "How satisfied were you with this interaction?" Calculate the CSAT score as (positive ratings 4–5 ÷ total responses) × 100. Benchmarks for phone support: high 95%, average 87%, low 76%—set goals to match your service promise.

Net Promoter Score and loyalty

NPS measures loyalty beyond a single interaction. Group respondents: detractors 0–6, passives 7–8, promoters 9–10. NPS = % promoters − % detractors. Use it to predict referrals and reputation changes, not just whether a single call went well.

Cost per call and employee turnover

Cost per call = total cost of handling ÷ total calls handled. Use it to align staffing and tech investments with service goals. Reducing repeats and resolution time lowers cost per call over time.

Track employee turnover rate as an early warning. High turnover (reference: ~58% yearly in 2021) often precedes slipping satisfaction and inconsistent service.

What a clean monthly report looks like

  • One-page summary with CSAT, NPS, cost per call, turnover, and trend lines.
  • Top drivers and the three actions you will take next month.
  • Context for business impact and resident-facing outcomes. For practical templates, see customer-service metrics at customer-service metrics.

Benchmarks and context that make KPI data actionable

Raw numbers only become useful when you know what “good” looks like for your community.

Numbers without context are just noise. A single metric — like average time to answer — tells you little alone. Compare it to industry baselines and your own historical trends to turn raw data into clear insights that guide action.

Why speed of answer and abandonment rate need a reference point

Is 2 minutes fast enough? It depends. Your service model, call types, and family expectations set the bar. Without a reference, you’ll argue over numbers instead of fixing the underlying issue.

Compare industry baselines to your own trends

Use industry baselines as your starting point. Example: if your ASA is 6 minutes and abandonment is 5%, but the industry sits near ASA 3 minutes and 2.5% abandonment, you have a real access problem. That gap points to staffing, routing, or tech fixes.

Build your reference points like this:

  • Collect industry baselines for core metrics.
  • Layer in monthly and seasonal historical trends from your center.
  • Track rolling averages to spot steady drift or sudden spikes.

Benchmarks sharpen conversations with leadership. They turn data into a clear case for time-bound investments — staffing changes, routing updates, or technology upgrades — that deliver measurable success: fewer frustrated families, fewer repeat interactions, and faster resolution time.

How to design dashboards that managers actually use

A useful operations screen tells you what needs action in under ten seconds.

Start simple. If your dashboard isn’t opened every morning, it’s just stored data. Design for a fast read—then managers will act.

At-a-glance tiles for high-level call statistics

Place a single top row of tiles that show total calls, inbound, outbound, missed calls, average wait time, abandonment, and service level.

Instant signals: green/yellow/red thresholds, a 7-day rolling average, and trend arrows so managers can decide fast.

Hourly and day-part views to spot high-load windows

Show volume by hour and by day-part. Lunch peaks, shift handoffs, and after-hours surges become obvious.

Add a "missed calls by hour + reason" view. That separates staffing gaps from routing or process issues.

Pivot-style views to compare teams and drill down

Include pivot tables that let you compare teams and then expand to per-agent rows. Use averages, volumes, and resolution rates.

View

What it shows

Action

Who uses it

Top tiles

Total/inbound/outbound/missed/wait

Open overflow; reassign shifts

Managers, leads

Hourly heatmap

Volumes by hour and day-part

Extend coverage; schedule breaks

Operations

Pivot per team

Team and agent comparisons

Targeted coaching; balance load

Coaches, managers

Missed-by-reason

Reasons mapped to hours

Fix routing or staffing

Leads, ops

Usability tip: keep three focused views—one for today’s ops, one for weekly coaching, and one for monthly reporting. Each has a single purpose so managers use them every day.

For a practical setup guide, see the KPI dashboards guide.

Turning dashboard insights into better staffing, routing, and quality assurance

When data points light up, you need clear steps — not more charts — to fix staffing and service gaps.

Using wait times and service level to forecast staffing needs

Watch wait times and service level together. High waits with a falling service level usually mean understaffing or a routing problem.

Translate those signals into action: add short shifts, open overflow, or change break schedules. Predict staffing needs by mapping peak hours to past trends. That keeps your center responsive and steady.

Identifying training opportunities from AHT, talk time, and repeat-contact patterns

Average handling time includes talk, hold, and follow-up. Use AHT and talk time to spot where agents need more training.

Repeat contacts are a red flag. They point to knowledge gaps, unclear policies, or handoff breaks between teams. Target training on those scenarios. Practical training focuses on scripts, tools, and confidence-building.

Balancing efficiency with customer satisfaction to avoid “fast but unresolved” interactions

Efficiency is important — but not at the cost of quality. Reward first-contact resolution and positive feedback, not just short calls.

  • Translate KPIs into actions: the view should tell you what to do next.
  • Staffing forecasts: use wait times + service level to plan extra coverage.
  • Routing fixes: move lines or backup coverage where missed interactions cluster.
  • Coaching focus: use AHT and talk time to tailor training for better performance.
  • Quality assurance: flag “fast but unresolved” and coach toward customer satisfaction.

Outcome: You free staff to be both efficient and caring. The result is steady performance and higher customer satisfaction across your call center.

How JoyLiving’s AI receptionist supports senior living call center performance

JoyLiving is a voice AI receptionist built for senior living that answers calls, handles common requests, routes to staff, and logs everything in a searchable dashboard.

Fewer missed interactions. Faster responses. During peak hours, JoyLiving keeps coverage consistent so families get an instant, helpful reply. That reduces missed calls and speeds first response when your team is busy or understaffed.

How it protects customer service and satisfaction

AI handles routine questions—dining, maintenance, visits—so staff focus on care. Families feel heard quickly. Your team gets cleaner handoffs and fewer voicemail chases.

Impact

Operational benefit

Result

Missed calls

Immediate voice answer

Reduced abandonment; steadier satisfaction

First response time

AI triage & routing

Faster resolutions; fewer repeat contacts

Documentation

Logged, searchable transcripts

Clear follow-up; better accountability

Get started with JoyLiving: https://onscreeninc.com/pages/joyliving-ai-for-senior-living.

Talk to Joy, our AI Receptionist now: 1-812-MEET-JOY.

Conclusion

Finish strong: focus on a short set of daily, weekly, and monthly metrics that make staffing and service decisions simple.

Recap: use daily metrics to protect access, weekly metrics to coach and improve, and monthly metrics to prove satisfaction and business value. Keep the set small. Set targets. Review them on a steady cadence.

Why it matters: phone contact is part of safety and trust for families. When your team shares the same data and insights, you align faster and reduce friction.

Measure what matters: first call resolution, true satisfaction, and reliable follow-up—not just speed for speed’s sake.

If missed contacts and long waits still cost you, explore JoyLiving: https://onscreeninc.com/pages/joyliving-ai-for-senior-living. Talk to Joy, our AI Receptionist now: 1-812-MEET-JOY.

For a quick reference on essential metrics, see this essential metrics guide for voice teams.

FAQ

What should senior living operators track daily, weekly, and monthly on a senior living call KPI dashboard?

Daily: monitor inbound and outbound calls, missed calls by hour, average wait time, and first response time to keep queues healthy. Weekly: review agent averages for talk time, average handling time, first contact resolution, and repeat contacts to guide coaching.

Monthly: track CSAT, Net Promoter Score, cost per call, and employee turnover to measure business impact and long-term service quality.

Why does a call center KPI dashboard matter for senior living communities today?

It gives real-time visibility into resident and family experience, reduces missed or delayed responses, and helps managers spot spikes in volume or wait times.

When you see problems instantly, you act faster—preventing frustrated families, missed service requests, and avoidable escalation.

How does real-time visibility improve resident and family satisfaction?

Real-time tiles and alerts surface high wait times, abandoned contacts, or staffing gaps so you can reroute lines, add coverage, or escalate urgent requests. Faster response. Fewer missed commitments. Families feel heard. Residents get timely care and services.

What key elements should an ideal KPI dashboard include?

At-a-glance tiles for high-level metrics, hourly and day-part views, pivot-style filters by date range, phone line, and individual agents, plus drill-downs to agent-level logs and recorded interactions. Combine operational metrics with CSAT and cost figures for full context.

How can managers use filtering to get clearer insights?

Filters let you isolate specific phone lines, shifts, or agents to find root causes—whether a particular line floods at lunch or one team needs coaching. Date-range filters reveal trends and seasonal patterns for staffing and routing decisions.

Which daily performance metrics matter most for queue health?

Total calls, inbound vs outbound splits, missed calls by hour, average wait time, and first response time. Track service level targets (for example an 80/20 baseline) and abandonment rate to detect immediate staffing or routing issues.

How should missed calls and missed-call reasons be tracked?

Log missed calls with timestamps, reason codes (no answer, overflow, routing error), and the caller’s intent. Hourly breakdowns show when most missed calls occur so you can adjust coverage or enable overflow handling with AI receptionists.

What weekly KPIs help with agent coaching and training?

Average talk time, average handling time, first contact resolution, and average time to resolution. Use these to balance speed and quality—identify agents who resolve efficiently and those who need support with complex follow-ups.

How do you measure first contact resolution and why it matters?

Track the percentage of issues closed during the initial interaction and cross-check with follow-up tickets. High first contact resolution improves satisfaction and reduces repeat contacts—freeing your team to focus on new requests.

Which monthly KPIs should you report to leadership?

CSAT score and common phone-support benchmarks, Net Promoter Score for loyalty, cost per call to align budgets, and employee turnover rate as an early warning for service-quality risk. These metrics link operational performance to business outcomes.

Why do benchmarks and context make KPI data actionable?

Raw metrics mean little without reference points. Compare speed of answer, abandonment rate, and CSAT to industry baselines and your historical trends. That context tells you whether a number is acceptable or needs intervention.

How do you design dashboards managers will actually use?

Keep them scannable: high-level tiles, clear color cues, and quick filters. Include hourly and day-part views to spot load windows and pivot-style comparisons to drill into team or agent performance. Make insights actionable with recommended next steps.

How can dashboard insights improve staffing, routing, and quality assurance?

Use wait times and service-level patterns to forecast staffing needs. Spot training opportunities from high AHT or repeat-contact trends. Balance efficiency with satisfaction—avoid chasing speed at the expense of resolved outcomes.

How does JoyLiving’s AI receptionist support senior living call center performance?

JoyLiving reduces missed contacts by answering common resident and family requests, routing complex items to staff, and logging interactions in a searchable system. That consistency lowers wait times, protects CSAT, and frees staff for higher-value tasks.

Can JoyLiving help during peak hours and reduce missed calls?

Yes. The AI receptionist handles routine requests instantly and scales during spikes—so you see fewer missed calls, steadier service levels, and more predictable queue health during peak windows.

How do I get started with JoyLiving and speak to the AI receptionist?

See JoyLiving’s solution page and request a demo at https://onscreeninc.com/pages/joyliving-ai-for-senior-living. You can also reach out by phone to talk to Joy at 1-812-MEET-JOY for immediate questions and next steps.

 

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