I work with a wide variety of industries, and everyone wants a phone system that’s easy to use, engages callers, and reduces the waste of staff time by making sure that agents who are trained in a specific issue only deal with callers who need their expertise.
And a great majority of these clients would just like to write their IVR script, have a professional voice talent record it, have it installed on their system, and forget about it, like it’s a permanent fixture.
It isn’t.
Your company is an ever-changing, morphing entity – with changes to staff, shifts in company focus and direction, changes in hours (especially during and coming out of the pandemic.)
Nothing about your company is static or never-changing – so your IVR/Call center prompts need to adapt and update as well. As your company grows and adapts, so should your outward-facing phone identity.
How do you stay on top of your IVR and monitor it for effectiveness and to ensure there are not chronic bottlenecks or common areas of fault?
Use IVR Monitoring Software
There are many programs available that can help you assess call drop off, evaluate the amount of time callers stay on the line, and can also help identify bottlenecks in your system – common points where you seem to “lose” callers. Make use of these metrics and pay close attention to areas where callers seem to encounter difficulties.
Call In
It seems so basic, but calling into the IVR every now and then can reveal areas which are awkward to maneuver through – and this is a task that you can enlist other staffers to do on a regular basis as well. If you – and/or your staff – are stumbling in the IVR, or if you come across choices which are redundant or don’t make sense – your customers are hearing it too.
Ask Customers for Feedback
I once voiced call center prompts for a client, and they urged the caller to stick around for a survey after they received service from the live agent. I was thrilled when I read the last question: “Was our phone system easy to use?” What a gem of information to ask for, and to get from the caller. It shows that you care about every aspect of the caller experience, and the wise person will pay attention to any feedback that question elicits.
Keep a Pro Voice in Your Back Pocket
Of *course* I’m going to advocate that you cultivate a good relationship with your go-to voice talent, and make sure that redo’s, revisions, and re-writes are always easy, affordable, and fast to voice and get put up on your system. I have retainer arrangements with a few of my clients, whereby they can draw on their account and make any and all modifications they need (and believe me when I say: I offer faster turnaround than an office staffer who you may have enlisted to voice the initial prompts. They’re too busy doing their actual job to record your last-minute staff meeting message.) When you eliminate that objection in your mind about it being costly, complicated, or complex to render changes to your phone system (it isn’t any of those things…) you are then free to make as many updates to your system as it needs to keep it current, up-to-date, and relevant.