Three Things That Happen on a Telephony Install
It happens frequently.
A company is sold a fantastic telephony solution – one which promises to accommodate the specific communications needs for their company. The purchase was a great decision – probably upgrading them from an old legacy system and quite possibly saving their company money.
Even the sales transaction with the technology rep was a positive one, leading to a feeling that on-going support and service will not be an issue.
The install goes smoothly, and when everything’s booted up, the IT rep might say: “Great! Now all you need is an opening greeting on your system, and after-hours message, and likely, a phone tree with employees and extensions. The instructions are right here – super easy to follow….” – presuming that the customer is going to take on that job themselves.
They might. Or they might make *you* -- the resale agent/installer – find an empty boardroom and make you voice a “rough” opening greeting (“just until we find a good solution!”) Possibly, they might find an office admin or assistant and make them perform on the spot recording the message. If neither of those two solutions were available, many a CEO has had to just sit and scribble out a script and voice it themselves.
What’s wrong with these options?
- Resale Agent/Installer: I have many telephone resellers in my network. They’re usually pretty happy to know me, as they *hate* having to voice a message on their customer’s system that’s “temporary” (and that’s in quotations, as twenty years later, many of these “stopgap” messages are still playing.) While the agent who sold you the system identifies the need for custom prompts, they may not have a professional solution available and might just offer to voice it themselves, rather than stick you, the customer, with the task. Needless to say: this installer – as expert as they are at their job – are no more adept at voicing professional prompts as they would be in baking cupcakes unless they had the experience and training (and inclination) to do so.
- Office Admin: The temptation to have the company receptionist/admin do the telephone messages seems to be intuitive – they answer the phones, and they oversee the back-end office functions. I’d like you to think about how many times you’ve called a company and encountered a message with a tired, frazzled voice reading in a deadpan, expressionless voice? I’ve encountered many. And it’s a result of someone saying: “Janine, before you leave on Friday, I need you to record the after-hours message mentioning labor day. Can you do that?” Sure she can. Should she? Does she want to? And does she have the energy to do it well?
- The Client: Should your customer be the one to voice his or her own prompts? Should that fall in their purview? That’s akin to selling someone a pair of pants and forcing them to sit and hem them. And using the same logic as to why the Office Admin is underqualified to voice the greetings, so is the client/purchaser/CTO of the company. They’re busy doing their job.
The obvious solution is for all resellers/installers/CX experts to have a voiceover professional available to voice their customer’s systems; offering fast turnaround and responsiveness to make changes to their customer’s systems in a timely manner. If employees leave the company, change extensions, or transfer to different departments, that information on the IVR needs to be current and up to date. Having a telephone voice on call is an extremely valuable service to offer your customers – and one that’s often overlooked.








