As I head into my third decade of voicing IVR, call center, on hold, and AI prompts, I can tell you that I’ve heard (and read) everything. Messages that talk to people sitting on a toilet in Japan? I’ll do it! Autodial warnings for registered sex offenders to check in with their parole officers? I’m on it! There’s very little I haven’t encountered in my career in front of the mic, voicing prompts for giant conglomerates and small basement-based empires alike.
The nature of communications has changed a lot during my work life. Calling a company in previous decades meant a guaranteed encounter with an actual live person as soon as the call was picked up. And what motivated that call in the first place has changed – aside from writing a company a letter and putting it in the mail (the slow solution), calling a company used to be the escalated, fast-track solution.
Now: calling a company is almost a setback. It’s a last resort because you couldn’t handle your request in a self-serve way. Most of us actually dread the prospect of having to carve out the time to actually call a company, explain what you need, and to manage your expectations – because it *will* be a big expenditure of time and energy.
Believe it or not, there is one essential thing that all callers want to hear – their “takeaway” from the call. Something they need to hear.
And that is: “We hear you.”
All their time that they’ve invested in the call, all the energy expended in explaining their issue, and all the frustration that they feel, will all be justified if they only feel heard. If they feel genuine empathy coming from the agent. When they know – at a very base level – that the agent is on their side and will do everything in their power to find a solution.
That’s all they want.
Unfortunately, callers usually encounter the opposite. Indifference, coldness, and a strict following of scripts and procedures are more likely to be the norm that feeling a true connection between caller and agent. Confusing and maze-like IVRs set the caller up for failure, and the lack of commitment on the part of call center agents to set up a truly responsive and transactional experience is not hard to pick up on.
So how do we truly hear the caller?
Tailor Your IVR to Meet Their Needs
Too many options, or options that don’t reflect the top five reasons why anyone would call your company, is a huge fail in the eyes of callers. Make sure that your options accurately reflect choices that will actually *serve* your callers, and set them up for success when they do make it to the live agent.
Call Center Staff Should *Listen*
I’ve ranted written previously about call center agents ditching the script and speaking more naturally to callers. That involves *listening*. Only by truly hearing what your callers have to say can you deliver a responsive solution, tailored to what they’re calling in about, and not a lot of information they don’t need, read verbatim off a cue sheet.
Empathy Serves Many Functions
Callers will remember the company who took them seriously, that didn’t waste their time, and who seemed genuinely interested in their business. The less complicated the transaction, the more likely they are to keep a consistent relationship with the company. Deeper than empathy being a smart business decision, it also creates acceptance and goodwill.