Does Your IVR Flatter Your Company?
Have you ever had this feeling of disconnect, when – after visiting a website for a company and being truly impressed by their modern approach, their slick graphics, and their forward-thinking strategy to business – you decide to call the company, and encounter a phone system that just doesn’t dovetail with their online image? Their online presence says up-to-date and current, and their opening greeting – voiced by Sue in accounting – sounds sad, tired, unprofessional, and out of step.
Just as the layout, the verbiage, and even the font and color scheme of your website was hotly debated and anguished over, the tone of your telephone system should receive as much attention, and should not be a neglected aspect of your outward-facing image. It’s just presumed that everyone’s preferred mode of interacting with a company is online – and it’s true that we’re comfortably turnkey with looking for a product or solution online.
But what happens when a customer has a legitimate issue, a problem that’s more complex than anything in your FAQ section, or if they’re emotionally escalated and need to talk to a live agent?
Suddenly, that puts your IVR in the spotlight, and makes it less of an anachronism and more as an essential portal for customer contact. Here’s an often-overlooked fact about callers: they need greater specialized care and have more questions than a typical online customer. Your IVR needs to meet those expectations head on, and you need to make sure that your outward-facing phone presence shows your company off to its best advantage.
In short, it should flatter your company.
How do we achieve that?
Make Sure Your IVR Agrees With Your Online Image
It’s actually really simple: if your website projects a fun, informal, casual and relaxed stance, make sure the way your phone prompts are written and delivered by your voice talent agrees with that online image. More of a conservative, formal company/industry? Just make sure your IVR matches that.
What Makes You an Industry Leader? Emphasize That.
Everyone has competition. What do you do that sets you apart? Talk about that in your phone prompts and emphasize the reasons why you’re different, and that the customer is going to encounter a completely unique company.
Not Where You Want to Be (Yet)? Make It So.
I voice for a lot of companies who are small and want to be a player in their industry. They want their company to sound bigger than it actually is, and that’s totally OK. It’s good to visualize where you want to be, and position yourself in your industry. Don’t lie or mislead, but you can create an image – through the sound files on your system – that you’re a more substantial presence than you are, but that you’re also striving to be.
Allison Smith is a professional voice talent who specializes in voicing IVR, call center, and AI prompts. Theivrvoice.com, @voicegal.








