I am sent IVR scripts weekly that make me pause.
Luckily, I have the standing in my industry that allows me to be a bit more “collaborative” with clients and make suggestions which would have been unheard of as a new voice talent. (I’m reminded of an audio engineer placing me in front of a mic in my formative years as a voice talent and cautioning me against speaking up with any input to the clients behind the glass unless specifically asked. Copy that.)
When a script is submitted for me to record, and the client stipulates: “Have a look and let me know if anything needs changing..” that’s a gift from heaven. They’re open to changes and they want the script to flow as smoothly as possible – not only to the eye, but to the ear.
Here's some things that the writers of IVR scripts do which unconsciously hobble their IVR and make it awkward and inelegant to use:
You Haven’t Read it Out Loud
The visual word is very different from the auditory word. A script which seems to scan just fine to the eye, might actually be a full-on tongue-twister for the voice talent in the booth. I always encourage people to find a quiet room and read their IVR script out loud. If you find some phrasing awkward; if you encountered a combination of words which just don’t sound right together, even a pro talent won’t be able to make that work. Re-write it until it *sounds* right – not just “reads” right.
You’re Not Thinking Like a Caller
You need to listen to your IVR through the ears of a customer. If your content on your phone system is too lengthy, too much of a challenge to maneuver through, or requires too much energy, this will frustrate callers – and it would frustrate you too. Try to experience your phone system with fresh ears, and decide if you’d still stick around and be a customer if you were encountering that IVR for the first time. It’s also helpful to think about the last time you personally called into a company and encountered “IVR Hell” – what was it that made that feeling of despair come up? Too many choices? Choices which were too similar? You felt like you were being put through an “audition” to get to the “reward” of live service? That’s a hobbled IVR.
You Have Needless Information
I’ve you’ve included information just because it seems to be prevalent in other phone systems, you could be hobbling your IVR by including these things which are meaningless and just taking up space. Phrases like: “please listen to the entire menu before making your selection” or “our menu has recently changed” are things that A: are unimportant to callers and B: are meaningless. Make sure everything in your scripting serves a purpose and is there because it needs to be there, not just because it seems to be the “norm” that you’ve heard in other systems.
You’re Missing Information
It amazes me when companies include details that aren’t really important and miss critical information that could really help their callers. A good example of that would be driving directions, which companies still feel compelled to mention. Driving directions have never been something that a caller could follow real-time, and they are notoriously lengthy and arduous (you need to anticipate every direction a caller might be driving in from and direct accordingly.) Everyone has GPS on their phone and as part of their car’s console and can easily navigate to your facility. That problem was solved long ago. What they *do* need help with is: parking. Where to park, where not to park, how much parking is. Office hours are beneficial to know *if* they can be imparted in an economical, concise way. If there are different hours for each day of the week, make that a separate option for some one to choose if they really need to drill into that. Make sure that you’re including information that will truly benefit the caller and eliminate everything else.
You might be unintentionally hobbling the effectiveness of your IVR by being inefficient in the information you’re imparting, and not really seeing the experience through the eyes (and ears) of your callers. The customer’s impression of your company starts with the phone system – and if your IVR is confusing, hard to use, wastes their time, or burdens them with information they don’t need, your IVR is getting in your way, instead of being the useful tool it can be.