A Ground-Level View (2021–2026)
If you’ve spent even a few months around sales floors or support teams, you already know one thing: salaries in voice processes don’t move the way people expect them to.
On paper, the industry has grown. Demand is still there. International processes still hire aggressively. But when you zoom in—especially over the last 4–5 years—the story is very different.
This is not a report. This is what it actually feels like on the ground.
Where We Stand Today (2025–2026)
- Entry-level voice support roles: ₹15,000 – ₹22,000/month
- Average roles (1–3 years experience): ₹18,000 – ₹30,000/month
- International voice / sales (with incentives): ₹25,000 – ₹75,000+/month
- Annual range for many roles: ₹2L – ₹4L
Even today, many freshers are still entering at around ₹15–20K/month, almost unchanged from pre-COVID levels.
That’s the first uncomfortable truth.
What Changed in the Last 5 Years?
1. Salary Growth Has Been… Flat
Across India, average salary hikes are hovering around ~9% annually, and even that is becoming more skill-based rather than role-based.
- That 9% is not evenly distributed
- BPO voice roles are not priority roles anymore
- Companies are optimizing cost per interaction, not cost per employee
So while tech roles saw jumps, voice roles saw stagnation.
2. Incentives Became the “Real Salary”
In sales and international voice processes, base salary hasn’t increased much—but incentive structures have exploded.
Why?
- Performance-based payouts
- Low fixed cost
- High output variability
This is why you’ll see roles offering:
- ₹18K fixed + “unlimited incentives”
- ₹25K base but heavy target pressure
On paper, salaries look high. In reality, earnings are volatile.
3. AI, Chatbots, and Voice Bots Changed the Game
Let’s break it down simply:
Earlier:
- Every customer issue = human call
- High headcount = normal
Now:
- FAQs → chatbot
- Basic queries → automation
- Tier 1 calls → voice bots
What’s left for humans?
- Complex issues
- Escalations
- Retention calls
- High-value sales
Which means:
Fewer jobs at the bottom, more pressure at the top.
The Hidden Shift: Job Quality vs Job Quantity
There are two parallel realities now:
Reality A: Entry-Level Compression
- More candidates
- Same or lower salaries
- Higher rejection rates
- Faster burnout
Reality B: Skilled Voice Roles Paying More
- Accent training
- Sales conversion skills
- Product knowledge
- Multi-channel handling
So the gap is widening.
Sales vs Support: A Clear Divergence
Support (Voice Process)
Pros:
- Stable income
- Lower pressure (relatively)
- Easier entry
Cons:
- Slower salary growth
- High automation risk
- Limited upside without switching roles
Sales (Voice Process)
Pros:
- High earning potential
- Fast growth for top performers
- Skill-based differentiation
Cons:
- Income instability
- Target pressure
- High attrition
What Most People Miss
Here’s something I’ve observed repeatedly:
People think experience = higher salary.
That used to be true.
Now it’s:
Skill relevance = higher salary
A 2-year experienced agent with:
- strong communication
- sales ability
- CRM handling
…can earn more than a 5-year support executive doing repetitive tasks.
Where This Is Heading (Next 3–5 Years)
What will likely decrease:
- Pure voice support roles
- Low-skill call handling jobs
- Large bulk hiring for basic processes
What will increase:
- Hybrid roles (voice + chat + email)
- Sales-focused voice jobs
- Process specialists and QA roles
- AI-assisted human agents
Practical Takeaways (From Experience)
- Entry-level salaries will stay under pressure
- Incentives will dominate compensation
- Skill stacking is no longer optional
- Top 20% will earn disproportionately more
Final Thought
The voice BPO industry is not shrinking—but it is evolving.
The mistake most people make is assuming:
“More experience will fix salary growth.”
It won’t.
The real shift is this:
From “handling calls” → to “handling outcomes”
And salaries are now aligned with that shift.
If you look closely, the opportunity hasn’t disappeared—it has just become selective.
And that’s where most people get caught off guard.
Source: Experience, Glassdoor, 6figr, Economic Times
