A shared agent works on several clients’ campaigns from a pooled team and is billed against shared hours. A dedicated agent is assigned only to your program for the duration of the engagement, trained on your script and product, and stays put. The right choice between them is decided less by which costs less per hour, and more by how complex your script is, how much your brand reputation matters on the call, and how long the program runs.
In This Article
If you’re evaluating a telemarketing service or trying to figure out which agent model fits your campaign, the framework below is the same one a campaign manager would walk you through if you called us this afternoon. It is not a sales page for either model. Both exist because both solve real problems. The goal is to give you a defensible answer you can take into a budget conversation.
The Short Answer: How the Two Models Actually Differ
The difference between the two models is exclusivity, and exclusivity is the thing every other tradeoff cascades from. A shared agent splits their time across multiple client programs in a single shift. A dedicated agent does not. Everything that follows (cost, continuity, ramp time, brand consistency, reporting depth) is downstream of that one structural fact.
People sometimes describe this as a quality difference. It is not. The agents themselves are usually drawn from the same training pipeline and held to the same performance standards. What changes is whether the agent’s working day is yours, or whether it is divided across several clients.
What Is a Shared-Agent Telemarketing Model?
A shared-agent model pools trained agents across several client programs at once and rotates them based on demand, dialer load, and skill match. You get lower per-hour cost and faster ramp, because the cost of the agent’s seat is spread across multiple clients and the team is already in production when you arrive. The tradeoff is continuity: the agent working your list this morning may not be the same agent working it tomorrow afternoon.
In practice, that looks like this. Your list goes into a shared queue. Agents pull from it during their assigned blocks. They follow your script, log dispositions, and hand off to the next agent on shift when their time expires. If a prospect calls back the next day, they are very likely talking to a different person. The model works well when the call is functionally interchangeable from one agent to the next. It works less well when the call rewards memory.
What Is a Dedicated-Agent Telemarketing Model?
A dedicated agent is assigned exclusively to your campaign, trained on your script and product, and stays on the program for its full run. You pay for the full hours whether the dialer is busy or idle. In exchange you get accumulated account knowledge, a consistent voice on every call, and a team that learns your buyers over time.
The operational shape is different too. Your agent (or your agent team, on larger programs) is briefed on your product the way a new internal hire would be, not the way a contractor cycling onto a shift would be. They build a working memory of which accounts are responsive, which gatekeepers are approachable, and which objections keep recurring. They notice when something in the script is misfiring and they say so. After two weeks they often know your buyer profile better than someone who just joined your sales team.
Shared vs. Dedicated Agents at a Glance
The table below summarizes the core operational differences. If you’re scoping a telemarketing program or briefing a partner, use it as a quick checklist for which model your campaign profile points to.
Dimension | Shared agents | Dedicated Agents |
|---|---|---|
Agent Assignment | Pooled across multiple client programs | Exclusive to one client program |
Per-hour cost | Lower | Higher |
Ramp time | Faster (team already in production) | Slower (training and onboarding required) |
Continuity on callbacks | Same agent or team | Different agent likely |
Account knowledge | Limited to current shift | Compounds across the program |
Brand consistency | Brand consistency | Built into agent familiarity |
Best fit | Short, simple, high-volume, transactional | B2B, complex, named-account, brand-sensitive, long-running
|
What You’re Actually Paying For: The Cost Difference
You are not choosing between two prices. You are choosing between two cost structures.
Shared-agent programs run lower per hour because the cost of the agent is spread across multiple clients. Dedicated programs run higher per hour because you are buying that agent’s full attention. That comparison ends right there if you stop at hourly rate. It usually shouldn’t.
The number that matters is cost per qualified outcome, not cost per hour. A shared agent at a lower rate who needs three calls to accomplish what a dedicated agent does in one is not actually cheaper. On simple, transactional, repeatable work that comparison favors shared, because the outcome per call is roughly the same regardless of who picks up. On anything that requires recall, rapport, judgment, or familiarity with the account, the comparison usually swings the other way. For a fuller breakdown of how outsourced telemarketing pricing actually works, see our in-house vs. outsourced telemarketing cost comparison.
The Decision Framework: Six Questions That Determine the Right Model
The right model is decided by six questions about your campaign, not by which model costs less per hour. Run through them honestly and the answer almost always becomes clear before you finish the list.
1. How complex is your script?
A script that consists of a confirmation, a date, and a callback time is functionally interchangeable across agents. A script with discovery questions, branching objection handling, qualification logic, and product nuance is not. Complexity rewards continuity.
2. Is the campaign B2B or B2C?
B2C transactional outreach often works fine on a shared model because the calls are short, the scripts are tight, and the buyer rarely needs to be re-engaged. B2B almost never works that way. B2B calls reward agents who recognize accounts on a callback, remember which gatekeeper said what last week, and can speak to a decision-maker without sounding like they parachuted in.
3. Are you targeting named accounts?
Named-account targeting and shared-agent rotation are structurally incompatible. Named accounts require an agent who knows the account history, the prior touches, and the relationship status. A pooled queue cannot deliver that.
4. How brand-sensitive is the call?
If your agents are speaking to C-level decision-makers about a product worth tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars, every call is a brand event. Continuity and depth become non-negotiable. If they are confirming an appointment for a free in-home estimate, the brand stakes are lower and a clean script in any trained agent’s mouth will do the job.
5. How long does the program run?
Short programs (a few days, a single blitz week) do not give a dedicated agent enough time to amortize the ramp-up cost. Long programs (months, recurring blocks, ongoing pipeline work) do. Anything running longer than three or four weeks starts to favor dedicated on continuity alone.
6. What is your regulatory exposure?
Both models operate under the same baseline compliance framework. The question is whether your campaign has program-specific compliance nuance (PEWC capture, state-specific disclosures, regulated-industry scripting) that benefits from agents who are trained once and stay current, versus agents working from a broader baseline and relying on script enforcement to catch the edge cases. Higher regulatory complexity favors continuity. If you are still mapping your TCPA exposure, our TCPA compliance consulting service starts there.
If most of your answers point in the same direction, you have your model. If they split, the next two sections walk through the cleaner cases on either side.
When Shared Agents Are the Right Call
Shared agents are the right call for short, simple, high-volume programs where any trained agent can execute the script cold and where brand nuance is minimal. The work is functionally the same call after call. Continuity adds nothing because there is nothing to remember between calls.
The clearest cases:
- Inbound overflow. Your in-house team handles the steady-state load and a shared pool absorbs the spikes. The script is short, the goal is to handle the call cleanly, and the next call has nothing to do with the last one.
- Appointment confirmations. Reading from a script, confirming a date, logging the response. Interchangeable by design.
- Survey fielding. Ask the questions, record the answers, move on. Continuity is irrelevant.
- Basic transactional consumer outreach. A single offer, a clean disclosure, a yes or a no. Volume matters more than depth.
The shared model is honest work and it serves these programs well. The mistake is using it for anything outside that band, because the cost savings evaporate the moment the call starts rewarding memory.
Not sure which agent model fits your campaign?
Walk through your program with a campaign manager who has run both, and get a straight answer before you commit budget.
When Dedicated Agents Are the Right Call
The call gets better the second, third, and fourth time the same agent makes it.
Dedicated agents are the right call whenever the campaign rewards continuity. That covers more ground than most buyers expect. B2B outbound, named-account work, complex discovery scripts, regulated verticals, brand-sensitive outreach, and any program running longer than a few weeks all sit on the dedicated side of the line.
The pattern in all of those cases is the same. They stop reading the script and start having the conversation. They recognize an account on callback. They learn which objections are real and which are stalls. They flag when the script needs a tweak, because they have made the call enough times to know.
Specific situations where dedicated almost always wins:
- B2B appointment setting for considered purchases. Multi-touch outreach, gatekeeper navigation, decision-maker conversations. None of this works on rotation.
- Lead qualification with branching logic. Qualification scripts that depend on conditional questioning are too easy to misfire when agents are not deeply familiar with the framework.
- Regulated-vertical campaigns (financial services, insurance, healthcare). The scripting nuance is too specific and the consequences of error too high to rely on baseline training.
- Long-running programs. Anything past the four-week mark accumulates context that a rotating pool cannot retain.
- Campaigns where the agent is, in effect, an extension of your sales team. If your prospects should not be able to tell whether they are talking to your employee or your outsourced partner, you need dedicated.
The premium per hour is recovered (and usually exceeded) by the lift on conversion, retention, and brand integrity. That is not an argument for dedicated as a default. It is an argument for dedicated whenever the campaign profile calls for it, which in our experience covers most B2B work and a meaningful share of B2C.
Questions to Ask a Telemarketing Service Provider Before You Sign
Whichever model you lean toward, the vendor’s answers to a short list of operational questions will tell you whether they can actually deliver it. The model on the page and the model in practice are not always the same thing.
For a shared-agent program, ask:
- How many concurrent client programs does each agent typically work in a given shift?
- How is my list prioritized in the shared queue when other clients are also in production?
- What does the disposition handoff look like when a prospect calls back and reaches a different agent?
- How do you enforce script and disclosure consistency across the pool?
For a dedicated-agent program, ask:
- How long is the ramp before my dedicated agent (or team) is in full production?
- What happens when an agent is out sick or leaves the company mid-program?
- How is the agent trained on my product and script, and who signs off on readiness?
- What does my reporting cadence look like, and which agent-level metrics will I see?
For either model, ask how they handle the moments their model is weakest. A vendor who can answer that without flinching is a vendor who has run the model honestly.
The model you pick should be the one that fits your campaign profile, not the one with the lower line item. The vendor you pick should be the one whose answers to those questions match what they put on the proposal.
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between a shared agent and a dedicated agent in telemarketing?
Are dedicated telemarketing agents worth the extra cost?
For most B2B campaigns, named-account work, complex scripts, and brand-sensitive outreach, dedicated agents produce enough lift in conversion and call quality to recover their per-hour premium and then some. For short, simple, transactional programs where any trained agent can execute the script cold, the math usually favors shared. The deciding factor is not hourly rate. It is cost per qualified outcome.
When should I use shared versus dedicated call center agents?
Use shared agents for high-volume, low-complexity programs: inbound overflow, appointment confirmations, surveys, and basic consumer outreach where the call is functionally the same every time. Use dedicated agents whenever the campaign rewards continuity, judgment, or brand stewardship: B2B outbound, regulated verticals, complex discovery scripts, and any program running longer than a few weeks.
Which agent model is better for B2B telemarketing campaigns?
Dedicated agents are almost always the better fit for B2B. B2B calls reward agents who recognize accounts, remember prior touches, navigate gatekeepers consistently, and represent the brand to decision-makers. Pooled agents rotating across multiple clients rarely accumulate that depth on any one program.
How do shared agents handle compliance differently than dedicated agents?
Both models operate under the same regulatory framework, including the TCPA, state mini-TCPA laws, DNC scrubbing, and recording disclosures. The rules do not change. What changes is the depth of campaign-specific compliance knowledge. Dedicated agents are trained on the disclosures, consent language, and edge cases of one program and rarely drift. Shared agents are trained on a broader baseline and rely more heavily on script enforcement and live monitoring to catch program-specific nuance.
Can I switch from shared to dedicated mid-campaign?
Most reputable telemarketing service providers will let you transition between models, but it is not seamless. Moving from shared to dedicated requires a ramp period for the new agent team to learn your script and product, and you should expect a brief dip in volume while that happens. The cleaner move is to choose the right model upfront based on the decision framework, not to course-correct later.
Pick the model your campaign actually needs.
Bring us your script, your list, and your timeline. We will tell you honestly which model fits and what it should cost.



