Meet Your Caller’s Expectations
As you design your company’s IVR, ask yourself some soul-searching questions:
Is it unreasonable for a caller to be taken seriously? Is it out of the realm of “normal” for callers to have a full and satisfying resolution to their issue they’re calling about? And are callers being too demanding by expecting to come away from the transaction feeling better about the company than when they called in?
The fact is: most IVRs feature options which will categorize callers into separate streams of service (presumably to be handled by an expert in that area), and they improve the bottom line for the company by not having a live person triaging each call that comes in.
The caller experience is not even on the radar of most IVR strategists.
And yet: the addressing of caller’s emotions and expectations is the “gushy” stuff that we need to pay more attention to. It’s taking all that brand perception that you’ve created with your outward-facing image and putting it into practice. If you don’t closely assure that the customer experience is a positive one – and that the caller’s expectations are met – you’re un-doing all the image and brand perception work you’ve done to get the customer to this point.
So what do your caller’s expect?
Reward.
They’ve sacrificed time to call in and they’ve carved out room in their schedule to endure long hold times, a sometimes aggravating IVR/repeating on hold sequence, and a feeling that everyone else is getting service but them. When they do get through to a live agent, they need a sense of reward and compensation for their time that they’ve even up, even if that’s a simple acknowledgement from the live agent that the hold time was hold and that they appreciate them hanging in there.
An Ear.
Callers need to know that the live agent truly comprehends their issue (and is not just reading from a script which says: “I understand that must be very frustrating.”) They want to be heard, and they don’t want to explain their issue multiple times.
An Opportunity to Come Back.
If the caller comes away from the interaction feeling as though there’s no earthly reason for them to remain a customer – they won’t. The minute a caller senses that they are just being accommodated and assuaged, and not truly cultivated as a regular and recurring customer, they lose the sense of value and loyalty – and will somewhere else next time. They have no reason to come back – so they won’t.
Some caller’s expectations are unreasonable and are founded in entitlement and the goal the milk the company out of resources for fun and profit. For most other callers, they are calling in because their issue is real, legitimate, and want to experience being made whole again and have the opportunity to think back on the interaction – and the company – favorably.








