
Why Erlang C Always Understaffs Your Call Center (And What to Use Instead)
A.K. Erlang published his queuing formula in 1917 to figure out how many telephone circuits the Copenhagen Telephone Company needed. Over a century later, call center managers still plug three numbers into an Erlang C calculator from a website that looks like it was built in 2003, get a number, and treat it as staffing truth. Then they wonder why Monday at 9 AM has a 12-minute wait time and Thursday at 2 PM has six idle agents. The Erlang C formula is real math. It's correct math. It just answers the wrong question for a real call center. Here's what it assumes: calls arrive randomly (Poisson distribution), all agents are identical and interchangeable, no callers abandon, agents handle one call then immediately take the next, call arrival rate is constant, there's no wrap-up time between calls, and nobody takes breaks, calls in sick, or goes to lunch. Exactly zero of these assumptions hold in practice. But Erlang C is still where you start, because it gives you the mathematical floor —
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