Like a lot of tasks, writing the auto attendant greeting for your company can be seen as a laborious, onerous task. I have many clients who procrastinate, delay, and anguish over their opening greetings – needlessly, may I say.
I think the pressure of not writing something boring – or (on the other extreme of the scale) the fear of writing something too edgy – keeps that task dropping down to the bottom of the pile in priority.
Your prompts don’t need to be anything spectacular -- in fact, less in more – but they *do* need to do five essential things in order to function well, and to make sure that your brand stays consistent across all platforms of corporate expression – even through your auto attendant greeting.
Decide Who You Are
It’s important to have a sense of what kind of “image” your company projects within your industry and commit to keeping that image consistent across all outward-facing platforms, whether it’s your social media image, website, broadcast, YouTube channel, printed material -- *and* your telephone prompts.
Decide Who You’re Selling To
Who’s calling in? What are they most likely calling about? If customers calling in needed to get assistance right away, what would that look like in the structure of your IVR? A company which caters to a highly technical industry audience will have a different approach to their IVR than a company who is outward-facing to the layperson.
How Would *You* Want To Be Welcomed?
We’ve all been on the phone, navigating around auto attendant menus. What do you dislike about that process? Do you hate it when you feel like a rat in a maze? Do you find some of the choices to be repetitive or redundant? Do you hate that powerless feeling of *you* working for the IVR? So will your callers. Decide not to do those things in your system.
Acknowledge That Callers Are Special Kinds of Customers
Callers have already been to your website, and they haven’t found a solution to their problem. They’re probably also miffed/irritated. This is a rare opportunity for a live agent to handle their issue, do some damage control, and to keep a customer. A caller is a *gift*, and you can do personalized mitigation of their problem that a self-serve portal cannot do.
Admit That Self-Serve Can Only Take Customers So Far
Callers do and will solve a lot of their issues on their own without ever interacting with a live agent – but there are some levels of complication that a self-serve IVR can only help with to a certain extent. Make sure the that your IVR prompts *align* the callers to receive *specialized care* from high-level live agent interactions.