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The Telephone Doctor
"If you
know your party’s extension....blah, blah, blah."
Ever heard the term
BVM? That stands for BEFORE VOICE MAIL. Can you
remember those days? Believe it or not....there was
a time when there was no voice mail. Before
automated attendants. Before, "I’m not at my desk
right now." Just good, old-fashioned human beings
talking to each other.
People often tell
me, "I HATE VOICE MAIL!" As we talk further, I find
that it’s not really VOICE MAIL they hate, it’s the
AUTOMATED ATTENDANT. That dull, monotone, recording
chip that is suppose to "welcome callers."
Is there anyone
reading this that will disagree that the first voice
one hears when you call a company sets the tone -
starts the process and is the voice that should
"welcome" the caller into the company? Why on earth
do companies put a dull, monotone, robotic message
on their voice mail to represent their goods and
services?
In our recent
survey of ‘What bugs you on the telephone?’, the
automated attendant is now the 2nd most frustrating
‘bug’ to the American public; coming in right after
"being put on hold" which remains the number one
frustration!
Let’s get your
system up and running to satisfy, not aggravate your
callers.
There are three
parts to what is referred to as "voice mail."
- THE AUTOMATED ATTENDANT -
Affectionately labeled ‘the groaner’ because
that’s what most people do when they hear the
lethargic: "Thank you for calling XYZ. If you know
your party’s extension, please press it now. Blah,
blah, blah."
If you’re the caller, it’s important to realize
the moment you hear the "Th...." in "Thank you for
calling," you can normally press zero and bypass
the dull, robotic, monotone introduction to the
company. In most cases, you’ll reach a person.
Although, as the caller, if you make repetitive
calls to one person or company, learning the
‘extension number’ will expedite your call.
If you’re using the automated attendant at your
company, please remember that you’re not married
to the ‘voice’ that came with the machine. It can
be recorded to reflect the mood and style of your
company, which by all standards should be upbeat,
bright and friendly. (Most robotic, monotone,
digital chips are not any of these.)
So, one of the first things you need to
consider if you’re using the automated attendant
is to re-record the initial greeting that came
with the machine. Have one of your bright, happy,
friendly sounding employees be your ‘voice of
choice.’ Make it an American Idol contest.
The recording should be as conversational and
friendly sounding as possible. And yes, recorded
with a BIG SMILE. Also, consider hiring a
professional voice-over expert to record your
opening message to your callers. It’s worth it.
A friend of mine recently wrote her own
automated attendant message and recorded the
opening message to her callers herself. She made
it sound as though you were on a theme park ride.
Very clever. Part of the problem with the
Automated Attendant is the dull, somber sounding
voice. Call your own system and then ask yourself
if that’s the voice that you want welcoming your
callers. If not, re-record!
- THE GREETING - Feel as though you’re
missing a few messages on your voice mail? It
could be the way you greet your callers. Your
greeting to the caller needs to give USEFUL
information. If you’re using the standard: "Hi,
this is Bob and I’m not here right now," well DUH,
that’s a hot lot of news. Re-think the process and
your greeting.
When your personal voice mail message greets
the caller, you’re obviously away from your desk
or on the phone. So use those very precious
moments to be creative and give the caller
pertinent information. No one wants to hear where
you’re NOT. They need to know where you ARE.
Here’s a sample: "Hi, this is Nancy Friedman,
in the sales department. I’m in a staff meeting
till 3 p.m. Go ahead and leave a message. I do
check messages often and calls will be returned.
If you need me sooner, please call my assistant,
Valerie, at extension 41 and she’ll find me for
you. Thanks and have a super day!"
Most important on a greeting is to let the
callers know: WHEN YOU WILL RETURN. It’s nice to
know where you are, but callers NEED to know when
you’ll return. And it’s a good idea to always
leave an escape valve. Otherwise, your callers get
what is affectionately labeled ‘voice mail jail.’
(NOTE: This particular tip does mean you’ll
need to re-record your greeting daily - about an
eight-second job that can be done from anywhere in
the world.)
If you’d prefer NOT to do a daily recording of
where you are that’s OK too. Use a generic
message. Start your message off with the positive:
"Hi, This is Nancy in Sales and I am in the office
all week and will return all messages."
The phrase "I’ll return your call AS SOON AS
POSSIBLE" is not necessary. It’s obvious.
And there are many folks who just don’t return
calls. Then you’re fibbing!!! So if your Voice
Mail greeting says: "I’ll return your call" - then
do it. Or don’t include it in the greeting.
Surveys indicate most people will leave a
message if they hear you check your machine. Our
surveys also show callers respond to a friendly,
happy greeting much better than a blah, blah, dull
one. So be sure you’re SMILING when you record
your greeting.
If you’re going to be out of the office for
longer than a day, we suggest you let your callers
know that. We’ve seen salespeople lose important
clients because calls weren’t returned in a timely
manner. They had left a generic "I’ll return your
call as soon as possible" and didn’t.
And when you call someone and hear the "I’ll
return your call as soon as possible," you might
consider zeroing out and finding out if the person
is actually in the office. We’ve done that several
times and found that the person left a ‘generic’
message but was in Hawaii for a 2 week vacation
and didn’t bother to fix his greeting or check his
messages.
- THE MESSAGE - This is your opportunity
to be GREAT. Leaving a message on voice mail for
someone is your electronic business card. You’d
probably be pretty embarrassed to hand someone
your business card with the wrong phone number, or
one that was all messed up, wouldn’t you? Then why
leave anything but a GREAT voice mail message?
Remember, when someone goes out to lunch, to a
long meeting or is gone for a few days and comes
back to their office, they hear something like
this: "Hello, you have 52 NEW messages." And yours
is somewhere in there. It needs to stand out. You
have a lot of competition.
There are three kinds of messages to leave. A
POOR, AN AVERAGE and A GREAT. Let me explain all
three.
Have you ever had this one?
POOR: "Hi, this is Bob, give me a call."
You probably have. It’s maddening, too. Bob
who? I know 3 Bob’s. And from where I’m calling,
I’m unable to bring up his phone number. The
poorest of the poor.
AVERAGE: "Hi, this is Bob, call me at
291-1012. I need to ask you something."
So ask it....on the message you leave. Voice
mail is asynchronous communication. Since so much
information flow these days is one way, use your
message to get the ball rolling, leave enough
information to move a process forward. Chances are
when the call is returned the answer will be
included.
GREAT: "Hi, Nancy. This is Bob Smith,
Acme Distributors. I’d like to get together with
you to discuss the proposal I sent over the other
day. There are some new ideas to talk about. I’m
in and out of the office myself, but please call
my voice mail and leave me a time we can meet, or
call my secretary Debbie at extension 22, and let
her know the time. Either way is fine. Look
forward to seeing you. Again, it’s Bob with Acme
at 291-10-12. That’s 291-10-12."
The GREAT message has all the meat necessary to
do business. And the phone number is repeated at
the end, twice and slowly. Notice too, it’s
clustered. We didn’t say 1-0-1-2. We used 10-12.
It’s an important technique that makes it easier
for the other person to remember your number.
Remember, the person you’re calling gets a lot
of voice mail messages, so in order for yours to
be ‘heard,’ be GREAT - not average. Also, upbeat,
friendly messages are far more apt to be returned
first. So again, remember to smile when you leave
a message.
Exercise your options. Various voice mail
systems will allow you to play back what you
recorded and offer an opportunity to re-record.
Take that option. Don’t hesitate to use these
options because it can save you a lot of
aggravation.
Also, remember, sometimes people go on vacation
and forget to say so in their greeting. Or their
mailbox may be full. Check in with the operator
and ask if the person is in the office, or ask the
operator if your contact has an assistant you can
talk with. Whenever possible, do leave a voice
mail message, too. Since voice mail is obviously
here to stay, we might as well make it work for
us, not against us.
TIPS
- Expect to encounter voice mail. Be prepared.
(Only 30 percent of all calls are connected to
those you need to talk with, on the first try.)
- Don’t "wing" a message you’re going to leave.
Be prepared. Have an objective. Know what you’re
going to say. Messages without thought will sound
amateurish.
- Return all calls...or have them returned on
your behalf. There’s little value to having voice
mail unless a message is returned. If your
greeting says you will return all calls....then by
gosh, do it! Or remove the part that says you
will.
- Avoid leaving bad news messages on voice mail.
Example: "Hi Nancy. This is the veterinarian’s
office calling. Remember you dropped off Trixie
this morning? Well...." (You get the picture.)
- Ask for a call back time when leaving
messages. A simple "I need to hear from you by
‘such and such’ can help. Not fool proof, but does
help. It gives direction to the listener.
- Smile, smile, smile. And then smile some more.
Visit the Telephone Doctor at
The Telephone
Doctor
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