I recently had a discussion on LinkedIn with a prospective client, who I was trying to persuade to look into my company to provide IVR prompts for his phone system.
He explained that – lost as to where to find a voice talent after the purchase of his phone system – his marketing department just called a local top 40 radio station, and asked if any of their DJ’s were open to doing outside work. This seemed like a logical work-around – DJ’s work with their voice every day. He sent me a sample of his female DJ voicing their opening greeting, which instantly made the IVR sound like a slick, over-sold top 40 list of top-ranking songs for the week. I’m not going to be precious about my skillset as a IVR voice talent, but It’s a very different discipline to voice phone prompts which are clear, basic, and easy to follow, without a lot of “flourish”; as well as being easy to concatenate with other. (On the converse of the coin, I also might not be a fantastic DJ).
Another option that many companies explore when searching for a voice talent are the discount jobber sites; sometimes you can get lucky and find a quality talent with pro gear who can do a great job voicing your telephone platform. That’s a rarity; most talent on the discounts sites – willing to work for radically reduced rates – are not the most experienced nor are they necessarily adept at the specific skillset required to offer clean, consistent, professional-sounding prompts; not just in the initial session but going forward. People who are well established and experienced aren’t waiting around for a job that will pay them $15 when they can be making exponentially more.
Perhaps the most-utilized method of getting telephone prompts recorded is enlisting someone in the office – usually the office admin – to voice the prompts. This may seem like a common-sense workaround – especially if you enlist the help of a receptionist with a well-modulated speaking voice. The problems become several-fold: updates and changes will be needed for your phone system. The admin is busy doing her actual job and likely won’t be available when Mike at extension 204 leaves the company and we need to reassign his local to Sandra – making your phone tree out of date and running the risk of customers being without the continuity of the agent they’re used to interacting with. The admin/staffer is also going to be voicing it directly over a handset, and not doing digital files, which are clean, balanced, and professional-sounding. Also – and again: risking sounding precious over what we voice talents do – the office admin is not a professional voice, knowing the proper inflection, knowing the speed at which IVR prompts need to be spoken, and there’s no “magic” of a pro talent understanding the brand and proper inflection.
In much the same way that you might be nervous if -- instead of hiring a professional web designer – the CEO wants his nephew to build the company’s website, procuring “alternative” talent for your phone system should also give you pause, and make you wonder if something as important as the impression the IVR gives to customers should be done on the cheap.
Allison Smith is a professional IVR/AI/TTS voice talent, heard on platforms globally. theivrvoice.com, @voicegal