Showing posts with label voicemail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label voicemail. Show all posts

Customers Getting A Raw Deal from Call Centres



Technology marches on, however it is making it difficult to actually talk to someone if you need to contact a major company. Any standard call to a complaints or service centre instantly routes you through a voicemail led menu system that offers wave upon wave of choices which you have to sit through, knowing full well you need to hold to the bitter end until it actually puts you through to someone who can actually understand your particular issue.


Voicemail may be a great time saver for companies, but it doesn't really do a great deal for customer service when you spend ten minutes hopping from option to option, only to have to hang up and do it all again because you took the wrong path down their menu tree. Once I had to deal with a company that handled every call via voicemail: you called, left a message and a call back number and then camped next to the phone for the next few hours like some desperate lonely person waiting for a date to ring them.


Phone support should be efficient and above all, honest. I don't appreciate the little dance that's often scripted into the operator's call sheet asking about my health or what the weather is like in my number-identified area. I'm not going to marvel at the call centre banalities, I'm going to be more impressed if I get the problem sorted or connected quickly to someone who can deal with it effectively, it occurs to me that a lot of customers would be more polite off the bat if they realised this would be the norm.


It seems like that many companies use their phone service to create a barrier between their staff and their customers, instead of using the second-best method of directly communicating with them. Maybe it's a side-effect of the savings in time and efficiency that automated services bring, anything that is convenient and cheap is seen as good for the company. What a customer really appreciates however, is a bit of personal care and attention. This simply doesn't come across any more in the factory conveyer-belt style call handling these days.




Voip Calls - The Way Forward?



A great way to save yourself some money if you are prone to making a lot of calls is a Voip system. Standing for Voice Over Internet Protocol, this lets you use a broadband connection and some software on your PC to send and receive voice calls over the internet. You can either use a microphone headset plugged into your PC, or more commonly, a proper phone handset that plugs into your computer and broadband socket.


The benefits of a Voip set-up are mainly the cost implications; Voip rates are extremely cheap and very competitive compared to pricing plans from landline phone companies, and the installation of a home Voip system is extremely simple and doesn't require a great deal of technical experience. A great deal of businesses are switching to Voip networks to save on their running costs, but home owners are now waking up to the fact these are easy and cheap to install in a domestic setting too.


Most Voip plans will include software called a softphone. This allows you to make calls directly from your PC provided you have some sort of speaker and microphone input. This means that wherever you can take your PC, laptop or netbook, your phone system can go with you, withoutr haviong to carry around a dedicated phone handset. Many softphone set ups are designed to mimic an actual phone on your desktop, so are extremely easy to use.


Another plus you will enjoy with a Voip package is a whole host of extra features that are included as standard. Most of these would only be available through additional cost options with a landline phone company. Given the way the computer handles the call message information, it's far simpler to present and track this information for the user. This means that you can have voicemail, as it records onto the storage space of your PC, as well as other really useful extras such as Caller ID and emergency dial options that locate your Voip phone to the operator. More advanced features are usually available on higher rates plans or business contracts.