Your clients deserve a consistent branding messaging throughout their phone system. Here’s how to give it to them.
Think of the astounding amount of money and time that went into your branding when you were launching your business. Logos, website design, social media; even stationery, business cards, brochure, trade show graphics. It’s all a cohesive statement, it’s unified in its appearance, and together these aspects of your business tell the story of your company and gives the public a clear idea of what it will be like to transact with you. These decisions weren’t arrived at casually or lightly.
If you are a reseller, distributor, or installer of telephony platforms, your end user’s corporate branding and identity is as valuable and hard-won as your own. It’s your responsibility to make sure that your customer’s phone system accurately and mindfully reflects their company’s branding message.
But how?
The phone system is often put together on the fly. Your customer purchases the best system for their needs, and they just want to get it up and running. This causes them to just grab an office admin to voice their outgoing message; they enlist their reseller to voice their prompts (I talk to many resellers who have voiced their client’s auto attendant message as a stop-gap measure – still playing 20 years later!) or the client themselves will voice their own messages, just to have a “place marker” prompt on their system (again, sometimes there 20 years after this “temporary prompt” was implemented.)
So, the #1 tip to get your customer thinking about branding their telephony system:
Hire a Pro.
I know – I’m a professional voice and obviously, I’m going to recommend hiring a pro to voice your customer’s messages. But think about their website (did they just design a rough website with turnkey design program “just to get something up there”? No.) Think about their logo (is that just a doodle on a cocktail napkin they uploaded onto a printing website? Not likely. They probably got a graphic designer to come up with their logo.) And so it should be with their IVR prompts.
The outward-facing prompts on their system are too important to just put up a “place-marker”, “stop-gap” or completely thrown-together voicing on their prompts. These messages set the tone; they tell the callers a great deal about the level of professionalism they can expect – and if they hear a tired staffer, reading scribbled down copy in a robotic way, that’s just not going to cut it. Hire a pro.
Don’t Confuse Your Customers With a Muddy Branding Message.
You run the risk of creating an altogether confusing message to your customer’s client base if the prompts don’t match the messaging of their website. An example: a very forward-thinking SEO company, with a slick, state-of-art website displaying clean lines, contemporary graphics, and impressive logos of companies they’ve worked with. A potential customer decides to call in with questions and they encounter: Doreen from accounting who was snagged into the task of just recording their auto-attendant messaging. Doreen’s a lovely person (and a great accountant!) but her heart is just not in this voicing of the auto-attendant prompt – and it shows. Create a clear and consistent message about your end user’s company by having the IVR show the same clean lines and modern touch as their website. Their messaging needs to be uniform across all platforms.
Keep It Up To Date.
A company’s outward-facing IVR is not a “one-and-done”. This is a fluid thing and needs to be re-assessed and re-vamped regularly. Especially if you’re talking about something like a staff directory – with staff moving to different departments, changing extensions, or moving on – the temptation to grab someone in the office just to “record something quick over the handset” will be prevalent, and will create a patched-together montage of a bunch of different voices. Nothing sounds more amateur, inconsistent or unprofessional. The need to keep the phone messaging current – and to have all updates done in the same, consistent voice, leads us back full circle to pint #1: Hire a Pro. And hire the same pro.
It's important to keep your brand consistent across all platforms, and that your customer's platforms tell the full story of their company's identity.