home Contact Centre & Channels How CDM Direct is humanising BPO through AI

How CDM Direct is humanising BPO through AI

In the traditional world of Business Process Outsourcing (BPO), the industry was long defined by ‘bums on seats’ and labour arbitrage. Success was measured by how many calls you could churn through and how cheaply you could do it. But for CDM Direct, a specialist operating in high-stakes sectors like automotive, Aged Care, and the NDIS, that legacy model is no longer fit for purpose.

According to Kris Ram, CEO of CDM Direct, the industry is hitting a critical inflection point where the boundary of service is defined by the difference between transactional logic and emotional complexity.

He says, “In high-stakes sectors like the NDIS, Aged Care, and Automotive, traditional outsourcing—the old ‘lift and shift’—simply doesn’t fly. At CDM Direct, we’ve replaced the ‘juggling act’ of the past with a sophisticated ‘operational apparatus’.

Here’s how we maintain a seamless brand voice across borders:

  • The co-sourcing model: We don’t just take over; we become a bespoke extension of the brand.
  • Country-agnostic onboarding: By using a unified knowledge base (hosted in Zoom) with real-time AI guidance, location becomes irrelevant. An agent in Fiji delivers the exact same premium experience as one in New Zealand.
  • Client-led training: No one knows the brand better than the client. We provide the tech and the guardrails; they provide the heart and the voice.

We’ve removed the guesswork so that the customer on the end of the line gets a consistent, premium experience—every single time”.

Maintaining a consistent brand voice for multiple clients

Maintaining a consistent brand voice for global giants like Toyota or Mazda across different regions used to be a frantic juggling act. CDM Direct solved this by moving away from the ‘lift and shift’ outsource model toward a co-sourced model.

In this framework, the BPO becomes a bespoke extension of the brand. “Our clients provide the heart of the brand or the voice. No one knows their brand better than they do, so we invite them to train us. We provide the technology and the guardrails; they provide the soul”, says Ram.

By using a native, unified knowledge base—hosted within the Zoom CX ecosystem—training becomes country-agnostic. Whether an agent is in Auckland or Fiji, the “operational apparatus” ensures the experience is identical.

The rise of the ‘super agent’

The goal of this technological shift isn’t to replace humans, but to create ‘Super Agents’ by offloading the cognitive burden to AI.

“When an agent is preoccupied with data retrieval, their ability to be mentally present and empathetic is heavily compromised. By leveraging AI to handle the cognitive heavy lifting, we liberate our agents to focus their full mental energy on the customer”.

“However”, says Ram, “we are realistic about the demands of this new model. Because our agents now handle a higher density of complex, high-empathy interactions, we are hyper-focused on preventing compassion fatigue. To match our technical support, our L&D team is bolstering a comprehensive wellness program, including a real-time wellness dashboard. We don’t just want our team to provide empathy from 9-to-5; we want to ensure they have the emotional support to do so sustainably”.

Killing the silo

One of the greatest pain points for  organisations is the data silo problem. Ram reflects, “The decision to overhaul our systems wasn’t driven by a single factor, but by the realisation that our information was trapped in silos and manual documents. This fragmented approach wasn’t just inefficient—it was a barrier for our frontline teams”.

“The real catalyst for our transformation was a deep-dive analysis of the end-to-end customer journey. We discovered a massive ‘low-hanging fruit’ – our agents were spending two to three minutes at the start of every call just performing administrative data collection—identifying the caller and the reason for the inquiry. In our world, three minutes is an eternity”.

Partnering with Zoom

To build the capabilities CDM required,  they decided to partner with Zoom,. Ram says,“The most critical factor in our partnership with Zoom was a fundamental alignment in our AI strategies. We were never interested in using AI as a tool for replacement; our vision was always one of liberation. We believe in “making humans more human” by allowing them to focus on what they do best: applying deep empathy and navigating complex nuances. By offloading the administrative heavy lifting to AI, our agents are free to be truly present for the customer”.

“From a technical perspective, we wanted to avoid the bolt-on approach. Adding disparate AI tools to an existing stack naturally increases costs and creates operational friction. Instead, we sought a native, unified platform that could provide an integrated knowledge bank and AI toolset within a single DNA. This ensures a seamless flow of information without the technical debt of fragmented systems”.

The transformation at CDM Direct signals a permanent departure from the “bums on seats” era of outsourcing. By shifting the technical and administrative burden to a unified AI ecosystem, the company has successfully pivoted from transactional efficiency to emotional resonance.

As Kris Ram suggests, the goal of modern BPO is not to automate the human out of the conversation, but to use technology as a shield against the friction of data silos and legacy systems. This ‘operational apparatus’ does more than just ensure brand consistency across borders; it creates a sustainable environment where agents can act as true brand ambassadors.

Mark Atterby

Mark Atterby has 18 years media, publishing and content marketing experience.