...
Got questions? Click here to chat

Building a 24/7 Nearshore Call Center in Central America

In this episode of The Nearshore Cafe Podcast, host Brian Samson, founder of Plugg Technologies, sits down with entrepreneur Joe Helleny, founder and CEO of Court Money, to break down how U.S. companies can successfully build and scale call center operations in Central America for the first time. Joe shares his journey as a fourth-generation entrepreneur from Southern Illinois and how he built a diversified portfolio of businesses, from ATM networks to government payment software and SaaS platforms. He dives into the early challenges of hiring in a rural U.S. market, the tipping point that forced him to adopt 24/7 customer support, and the realities of managing outsourced call centers.

The conversation explores Joe’s transition from a U.S.-based call center to a nearshore solution in Latin America, including his initial concerns around English proficiency, professionalism, and cultural alignment. Joe explains how working with a Nicaragua-based team not only met but exceeded expectations, highlighting the importance of clean English, adaptability beyond scripts, and strong communication systems.

Brian and Joe also unpack key operational insights for founders, including when to step away from customer support, how to design scalable call center systems, and why nearshore talent can provide a competitive advantage over traditional outsourcing models like the Philippines.

The episode wraps with a forward-looking discussion on AI, automation, and how evolving technologies may reshape customer support and SaaS business models while still reinforcing the value of human-driven service.

This episode is sponsored by Plugg Technologies, helping U.S. companies connect with top talent across Latin America.

Frequently Asked Questions​

What is the difference between outsourcing and nearshore call centers?

Outsourcing refers to hiring support teams in distant countries, often in different time zones, while nearshore call centers are located in nearby regions like Latin America, offering better time alignment, communication, and cultural fit.

Is nearshore outsourcing better than offshore call centers?

Nearshore outsourcing is often better for U.S. companies because it provides real-time collaboration, stronger English communication, and more flexibility compared to offshore call centers in regions like Asia.

Why are companies moving call centers to Latin America?

Companies are shifting to Latin America for cost savings, bilingual talent, time zone compatibility, and higher-quality customer interactions compared to traditional offshore outsourcing models.

Can nearshore call centers replace offshore teams like the Philippines?

Yes, many companies are replacing or supplementing offshore teams with nearshore call centers in Latin America to improve customer experience, reduce friction, and handle more complex support scenarios.

Full Episode

Full Transcript

Brian Samson (00:01.662)
Welcome everyone to another episode of the nearshore cafe podcast I’m your host Brian Sampson and Here we talk about all things nearshore doing business in Latin America Before we get into our show. I want to thank our sponsor plug Technologies PLUGG.tech Great way to connect talent from all over Latin America with US companies

Today we are gonna get into call centers, Central America, and how companies go about doing this for the first time. Dipping their toe in and building a whole operation. So the person we’re gonna do it with is a dear friend of mine, one of my oldest closest friends. His name is Joe Helene. He’s the founder and CEO of Court Money. Joe.

So happy we could put this together.

Joe Helleny (01:01.35)
Good to see you online, Brian. It was nice to see you a couple weeks ago when you came into town. Really appreciate that, by the way. But I watch your podcast and it’s been a long time coming to be able to do this with you, so I look forward to it.

Brian Samson (01:16.098)
Good, good. Well, Joe, you’ve been an entrepreneur really ever since I can remember. This goes back to college days, know, 20 plus years ago. I think it’s important to kind of set the scene, you know, of like where you grew up, what it means, you know, to do business in Southern Illinois and building businesses from there, the kind of businesses that you built. I think that’s really going to help set context for the rest of the show.

Joe Helleny (01:46.834)
Okay.

So a little history, I’m fourth generation entrepreneur from what I know of, all the way back to my great grandfather who came over from Syria, Lebanon in the early 1900s. So I grew up in a privately family owned business family. We were in furniture and banking. My father started a commercial modular construction company, which I now run. And then straight out of college,

kind of assumed that I was also going to own a business. Didn’t know what it was yet. My college background was business management, marketing, and MIS. So right at the beginning of the internet boom is when when I started college. So computers were part of my my collegiate upbringing.

but always kind of knew that I was going to own a business and fell into ATMs first, shockingly enough, which led me into the building of an online payment website, as you mentioned, Court Money. We were doing cash bail transactions with Creditor Debit Card in 2004 for Illinois sheriffs.

And that has led us down the road to utility billing payments, other government run softwares, and then even buying a municipal software company a couple years back. And now in full software development, not just payments also.

Brian Samson (03:31.5)
Yeah, amazing. I love watching from a distance as you built this really integrated portfolio of a bunch of different companies. How have you, you know, maybe we will save the Nicaragua part for a second and just talk about how you looked at staffing, you know, for most of your business career, you know, and where your talent base was, how you thought about hiring them.

managing challenges, plus some of the good stuff too.

Joe Helleny (04:06.877)
You know that that’s a good question because as you mentioned, I’m in southern Illinois, not a lot of high tech individuals in southern Illinois, very rural area. You know more more farming, agriculture, blue collar work. A lot of the white collar work is medical banking. And that kind of thing.

So staffing was interesting, especially when I got started. I got very lucky. I did have some friends in the programming field that were doing programming and websites for Fortune 500 companies, believe it or not, in southern Illinois. And as we grew, we realized we needed a 24-hour-a-day staff for our call center stuff. And of course,

Not a lot of that in southern Illinois. And so we started searching the internet for call centers. Ended up finding one, believe it or not, back in your hometown of Chicago, Illinois. And I appreciated the ability to do business in my home state. The owner and I talked a number of times, really kind of hit it off. She was a privately held company also, not large, which I liked.

you family owned, to talk to the owner. And we worked very well with them for a long, long time until unfortunately she passed away and her family took over. And of course, as typically happens when a founder is gone, things change. And that’s literally what happened. And that’s about the time that you and I started talking.

Brian Samson (05:46.797)
Mm.

Joe Helleny (05:52.967)
You know, you became a problem solver for me.

Brian Samson (05:53.186)
Yeah.

Yeah. Well, I want to just for fun, take a quick side for this audience. Cause I think, I think this is kind of interesting with your ATM business. Cause you, know, maybe that was your first four into banking transactions, kind of understanding, you know, how others were worked. And I remember you telling me, you know, about all the fees you were making and all the ATMs around, but you know, just, just like a fun quit for the audience.

Joe Helleny (06:14.803)
Yep.

Brian Samson (06:26.216)
is Joe and I would go to the bars together in Southern Illinois. And, you know, it would be my turn to buy a round and cash for college student, you know, I’d have to hit the ATM. Well, who owned the ATM? It was Joe. So, you know, it’s not like I’m taking hundreds of dollars, I have very little in my account. you know that I’d withdraw 20 bucks and

Joe Helleny (06:29.993)
You

Brian Samson (06:53.23)
and then it would be a $3 fee. So those $6 beers, $3 a piece for beers, instead of $6, it was $9 throwing a tip. $10 for the beers for me and Joe and then Joe also got an extra $3 out of that in fees. Yeah, so I’ve always, as much as it cringed for me to do that.

Joe Helleny (07:09.92)
You

Joe Helleny (07:13.833)
I was profiting off the beard.

Brian Samson (07:21.198)
I always admired your entrepreneurship. What did you learn just about entrepreneurship way back then, from your dad, from your first, I guess it was the ATM business, one of the first that you fully owned and had your name on, and maybe some of those early lessons.

Joe Helleny (07:40.734)
Yeah.

I’ll tell you what I learned from my father first was that the buck stops here. If there’s a problem, you have to solve it. If a client wants to talk to you about a problem, then you’re the guy.

both, you you take the good with the bad on that one. I watched, got to watch my father solve some problems in interesting ways. He taught me that occasionally you have to fire a client. That’s not something you hear someone say very often, but every so often you do have to fire a client. And I’ve kind of learned that lesson.

And I can in my 22 years now of running my payments company, I’ve literally had to fire, I think two clients because one, were not profitable, but two, they were impossible to deal with. They did not have my best interest at heart. They did not care about my business at all. And I think when you’re in business, it’s a partnership. You have to care about each other.

and come to the table and discuss things that need to be resolved. So, you know, even in the ATM business, I learned that it’s a 24-hour business. If your ATM runs out of money at 10 o’clock at night on a Saturday and you’re not at the bar, guess what you’re going to do? You’re going to get out and you’re going to go to the bar to fill the ATM. And that’s the same thing with even the payments company.

Joe Helleny (09:19.681)
If a jail needs help with a cash bail transaction at 2 a.m., I’m awake. That’s the way it works. The sheriff appreciates that, that knows that his correctional officers who are up at 2 a.m. are gonna get great customer service because the owner of the company is gonna help when we get everything done.

Brian Samson (09:42.412)
Yeah, yeah, I agree. The initial call center team, could you rewind on the clock a little bit? When did you first know you needed a call center?

Joe Helleny (09:56.582)
I think when I realized that transactions needed to have phone support 24 hours a day, and I think I was in business maybe three years. And while I still handled support calls, my call center would take payments. So when we started getting into more court related things and utilities that

would need support. Not everybody has a PC, not everybody has a laptop. And this was back before smartphones had really taken over. So people would need to make a utility bill or even a court related payment at 2 a.m. because while I might be eight to five, you might be eight to five, our time zones don’t even interact. We’re five hours apart. And so…

my call center would handle those late night calls or early morning calls when I wouldn’t be awake. And I realized I didn’t want to be awake taking those phone calls.

Brian Samson (11:06.924)
Yeah, yeah. Was there a, was it purely about hours or was there like a number of calls, like a threshold that was hit? You’re like, okay, I think I can afford this now or it’s worth it to me to have this.

Joe Helleny (11:24.657)
Yes, it was a number of calls, but we also added a call fee to that. we attempted to at least offset a decent amount of that monthly cost in our call fee. We’ve never been able to do it.

We’ve never fully offset Typically, we’re around 40 to 45 percent of that monthly cost in our call fees But what we realized more than anything is that we weren’t getting payment calls all the time we got a lot of calls asking about maybe a court date or what’s my utility bill or How when is court we end up getting a lot of phone calls I never anticipated I anticipated we were only gonna get

payment base calls that were going to be revenue generated. That’s not the case at all. We became the information base for things that we knew nothing about.

Brian Samson (12:21.966)
Yeah. Can you tell us about that Chicago call center and how you thought about your role? Because I guess it was technically an outside agency that was running it. Your role in training them, your role in evaluating the talent, making sure that they took care of your customers, but you’re not on the call of those calls. How did you think about that?

Joe Helleny (12:49.097)
So first off, when we build our systems, we build them to be very intuitive, very easy to figure out. So we had created a how-to system, not only for our clients, but then we had to build, we’ll call it a call center portal.

to access only payment forms instead of our administrative side. So we had built that, and which was very easy to look up a client to then find the exact payment form for that client to access what they needed instead of having to search for it in our administrative side. Now, the thing that I learned from them was that they also outsourced. They didn’t…

have like a typical room, like you would see the cubes of people, right? They outsourced all over the country also. So they were in different time zones. So that’s where it kind of got me thinking, wait a minute, okay, if we’re not in a room full of cubes, we can be remote based.

We can be outside of just that, you know, the old stodgy room of, you know, a call center. You can be at a home. And that was my first introduction to remote based employees. You know, they had people in California and Florida and Texas and East Coast covering every time zone. So it was easy to train. We’ll call it train the trainer to then they trained their individual people when they would bring them on.

Brian Samson (14:02.488)
Mm-hmm.

Brian Samson (14:16.6)
Yeah.

Brian Samson (14:25.59)
Yeah. From my experience, the Philippines have really become the world’s call center. You know, whether it’s United Airlines or whoever, you often get routed to staff in the Philippines. Was that ever on your radar? Did you ever think about that or were you mostly focused on where can I get the best value in the States?

Joe Helleny (14:51.785)
I think before you and I had talked, I was attempting to really try to stay in the United States. I was cognizant and sensitive to the fact that a lot of Americans don’t want to deal with an accent outside of the United States. What’s interesting about that is the amount of Americans who have very thick accents.

who then will say, know, pot calling the kettle black, you get somebody from the South and go, I don’t want to deal with one of them Yankees. I’m like, come on, folks.

Brian Samson (15:15.118)
Drew.

Brian Samson (15:23.694)
you

Yeah, yeah. Well, I think that’s a good segue into, so for transparency, as Joe was telling me about his problem one day, and we talk about all sorts of stuff, baseball, family, everything, I was always sensitive to not, like, I do business with lot of acquaintances, but I’m careful about mixing it with

my closest friends, because sometimes if you go south, so does the friendship, right? And I think you were cognizant of that too. So I think I just kind of casually said, hey, have you ever thought about Latin America? And if we could go back in time two years, what do you remember maybe from like that first call or two, just as that idea, you know, resonated?

Joe Helleny (16:21.853)
I think that when, if I remember back then, one of the things that kind of struck me was, it’s close to home. Are the accents going to be what I really want? And I’ll be honest, I’m just not very knowledgeable about Latin America. The closest I’ve ever been is Cancun off a cruise ship. So, you know, even thinking about Mexico.

Brian Samson (16:47.374)
Yeah.

Joe Helleny (16:50.875)
had me a little scared. You know, I don’t know about their culture. I don’t know about their education level. I really don’t know much about it. And so it kind of worried me that we weren’t going to get the professionalism or the English speaking that I really needed. And you really educated me on that and kind of got me and pushed me along to thinking, hey, you know, this might fit your need.

This might be what you’re looking for.

Brian Samson (17:22.54)
Yeah. Was time zone a key factor too, having them on your time zone or was it really more about they could be anywhere as long as they were professional and spoke clean English.

Joe Helleny (17:36.433)
They can be anywhere, really. Yeah, as long as they spoke a clean English with very little accent. I had spoken to some companies that had people all over the world, so time zone really didn’t bother me. As long as they’re willing to be up at the middle of the night or the middle of the day, their time, know, whatever it might be. That really didn’t bother me.

Brian Samson (17:50.22)
Yeah. Sure. Sure.

Sure. Sure. So I think this is really, really interesting because as other people are listening, a lot of other founders are listening, they’re thinking about, there’s almost two key pieces here of like when I as founder need to get out of the way so I can worry about higher level tasks and not be on support calls all day. So I think that’s kind of part one that you talked about.

And then part two is looking at Latin America as a key leverage piece for your business. So we quickly got me out of the way because I wanted our solution to stand on its own, not be, well, if Brian’s a friend of mine, so I guess I’ll throw him a bone. So we were very, very adamant about that. So you met a few people from our team.

and they helped to talk through the solution, design the solution. Can you talk more about the concerns that you had and how you were vetting the solution and maybe even designing the solution collaboratively?

Joe Helleny (18:55.625)
Thank

Joe Helleny (19:09.605)
So when we moved over to your staff, first off, they’re wonderful. They took a lot of time to listen to what I was worried about, what I needed to be educated on. They did a really good job of understanding that first off, I needed a payment solution. I needed someone to be able to take a credit and debit card payment. I needed somebody who could be background checked.

I need somebody who could be professional. They understood that very quickly that I had very specific needs and I wasn’t going to deviate from those because I know my clients also. And while it’s interesting that

You know, my operators with you now are a lot of times more educated than some of the clients or my clients and even the credit and debit card clients who they talk to. They’re always very professional. We have interacted very well with them and your staff has always listened to what I need. The communication is very good.

Brian Samson (20:21.196)
Yeah. How about the, the English, the clean English, huge concern for you going in. What has that been like for you?

Joe Helleny (20:30.633)
It’s been great. It’s been great. I’ve always been able to speak with one of the employees before they hired on. We have if you ever talk to one of those employees, I will spend 30, 40 minutes with them occasionally. When I’m driving on the road, I’ll call in and I’ll get one of them. The next thing you know, it’s 40 minutes we’ve been on the phone getting to know each other. So it’s been great getting to know the people down in Nicaragua.

They’re wonderful souls, wonderful individuals.

Brian Samson (21:03.682)
Yeah, you know, something that I hammer on a lot about, you know, and I think the Philippines is excellent for many, many things, but back to my United Airlines example, and I think this will resonate with you. When I have a very straightforward issue, it’s no problem. You know, like I need to change the date on the ticket, but if I need to change the date on a ticket and reroute through a different city,

and I want to use miles for part of it to upgrade a seat. Oh my God, know, like it might as well, you know, be trying to, you know, uh, build a, build a satellite, you know, it’s just way outside of the box, way outside of the scope. And you can just kind of feel their panic of what do I do? This is outside of my script outside of my box. And the way you’re talking, Joe, I don’t want to put words in your mouth, but it feels like, um,

you’re confident that this Nicaragua team can go off script and can think creatively and go outside the box if they need to because business is kind of like 80 % the same stuff. But then there’s that 20 % that you just don’t know what you’re going to get with that situation.

Joe Helleny (22:22.089)
I would agree with that. One of the things that I’ve also given the staff the leeway of is I don’t tolerate somebody calling in and berating or treating one of my staff inappropriately. And I told them when they came on, said, listen, if you have somebody like that, feel free to hang up the phone on them.

They’re calling you for help. They’re not calling you to get upset and be mad at something. At the same time, they’ve appreciated that. If there’s something, we’ll say it inside that 20%, that they need that they’ve never handled before, my administrative staff is available to them right away.

And so we’re all on the same phone system. It’s very easy to put one of them, put a client on hold and say, you know what? I need to get you to an administrative staff member. And that handle, that happens very quickly. Yeah, it’s really nice. And my clients have really appreciated that also that while they know they’re calling a call center, they can get to somebody else very quickly. It’s not a five minutes on hold or something.

Brian Samson (23:26.542)
That’s awesome. That’s great. That’s great.

Brian Samson (23:40.15)
Yeah, I want to shift gears to some other tech stuff, but is there anything we didn’t talk about with this call center that you’d like to share?

Joe Helleny (23:54.46)
It’s been an absolute blessing. I’ll tell you that. It’s been really nice. As I said, they’re all great people. They’ve been very easy to get a hold of, very easy to talk to, get to know better, learn about their families and their culture. It’s really nice. It’s been really nice.

Brian Samson (24:13.752)
That’s good. That’s good to hear. Well, you’ve always been one of the more tech forward friends that I have. What are you thinking about for your own businesses with AI automation, all this other stuff that’s happening faster than we can, we can even react to it.

Joe Helleny (24:31.875)
It’s been interesting because you keep hearing the people that are going to lose their jobs because of AI and that SAS as a service is going to be gone. Well, shoot, that’s my business model. You start to read a lot more about bots being able to decide.

what you need based on your schedule and automatically ordering it for you. And so I’ve started problem solving going, all right, we’re in the utility billing. How is this going to affect us? How are we going to be able to research things? So we’re building a new utility billing software now that will be able to handle a lot of things. And we are building that in such a way that we will be able to outsource things. We may not be able to

automate every payment, but we’ll be able to do customer support differently. Maybe not in an AI sense, but we’re building things in such a way that people will not only be able to see what they owed, what they owe, or what they will owe at the beginning of the month, but what they, maybe we’ll say their water bill, what their water bill might be as of right now.

Brian Samson (25:51.234)
Mmm.

Joe Helleny (25:52.105)
And so it’s interesting the partners that we’re working with in the utility building space to be able to build that into our systems for later this year.

Brian Samson (26:03.084)
Yeah, yeah, that’s awesome. Well, Joe, this has been everything I hope for and more. I love just the story of as you’ve evolved your business, really portfolio of businesses, you’ve thought about staffing, you’ve thought about operations, taking care of your customers, professionalism and designing different solutions. And Latin America, thankfully was

was a problem solver for you.

Joe Helleny (26:34.575)
It is and you know, I don’t know if you know this or not, but I’m working with your team right now at a possible programmer in Latin America. So outside the call center. Yeah, you guys have been so good that we’re working on things outside the call center space now.

Brian Samson (26:43.054)
Amazing, we’ve done quite a few of those. Yeah.

Brian Samson (26:52.45)
Well, we’re honored to have your business. We appreciate that. Well, let’s start to wind this show down here. Plug Technologies is our sponsor. That’s PLUGG.tech. Great way to connect talent from all over Latin America with US companies. We’re so thankful to have our honored guest, Joe Helene, founder and CEO of Court Money.

Joe, if anybody were interested in your business or contacting you, what’s the best way to do that?

Joe Helleny (27:24.0)
My email is very simple, joe at courtmoney.com.

Brian Samson (27:27.796)
Excellent. You’re listening to the Nearshore Cafe podcast. I’m your host Brian Sampson and we will see you next time.

 

Brian Samson
Founder at Plugg Technologies

Brian Samson is the founder of Plugg Technologies and a veteran tech entrepreneur, with 10 years building successful nearshoring companies. Brian has helped to grow Plugg into one of the leading nearshoring agencies, connecting technical talent in Latin America; including Mexico, Argentina, Brazil, Nicaragua and Colombia with top U.S. companies. Plugg consistently hires and places over 100 LATAM resources each year. 

Plugg sponsors and Brian Samson hosts the leading podcast about doing business in Latin America with 70+ episodes, The Nearshore Cafe Podcast. In addition, Plugg brings insight and clarity to clients by supporting them with the details, big and small, to set their team up for success. Everything from currency, customs, hardware, and culture, Plugg provides advice and guidance based on first-hand expat experiences living and doing business across multiple Latin American countries. Plugg Technologies is a trusted partner for businesses seeking future-ready tech solutions including cloud infrastructure, cybersecurity, and digital operations positions

Brian holds an MBA from UCLA Anderson and prior, was an expat in Argentina and a VP of Talent for several San Francisco startups with multiple successful exits (IPO & acquisitions). In his free time he supports foster kids and is a dedicated family man.