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What Level Of Telephone Sales And Customer Service Do You Provide?
By Virden Thornton
07/23/2005
Using the telephone as an
effective sales and customer service tool begins before you ever pick
up the receiver to answer the telephone or make an appointment or
sales call. When you reach for a ringing telephone, you need to put a
smile on our faces and then greet people with the same enthusiasm
you’d show them in-person.
People can
hear a smile, can’t they? You also need to have music in your voices
and an attitude that conveys to a caller that he or she is your top
priority. The impression you create on the telephone can help you
stand out from other organization If you don't stand out, you lose
your competitive edge.
Practice these telephone-answering
techniques that can help you stand apart from others:
1. Say,” Good morning or good
afternoon." (Use these words to trigger a smile)
2. Sincerely thank the prospect,
customer or client for calling.
3. Identify your institution, company
or firm.
4. Identify yourself. (This is Jon
Jeffers)
5. Ask, “May I help you?” or “How may
I direct your call?”
6. Listen carefully to the caller’s
request without interrupting.
How you answer your telephone,
creates either a negative or positive impression in the mind of a
caller. What you do and say after the first impression is important
also. For example, if callers must be placed on hold, give them a
choice. Say: “I need to leave the line for a few minutes to check that
information, would you like to hold or may I take your number and call
you back?”
Callers, who are put on hold, should
be checked with every 20 to 30 seconds. High quality service means you
never keep people in the dark wondering whether or not they have been
forgotten in a Musak limbo. If callers are your most important
priority, you must always treat them as such. In our workshops we use
an exercise to illustrate how callers feel about being put on hold. In
the exercise we ask participants to close their eyes and raise their
hands at the end of two minutes. Workshop participant’s hands usually
go up at about 27 seconds and most of their hands are raised before a
minute and a half has passed. Two minutes on hold is the same as five
minutes in the mind of a caller.
When a call must be transferred, make
certain to identify the person and the extension that you are
transferring to. Say: “Tim Connor is at extension 543. I will transfer
you and stay on the line until he answers.” When the employee answers,
introduce the caller and his need “Tim, I have Mrs. Inez Stewart on
the line. She would like to discuss….”
Ending your call properly is
important, too. Always thank the caller or in some way affirm the
caller’s value to you and your organization. Say: “I’m glad I could
help you, Mr. Johnson"; or “Call again anytime, Mr. Johnson”; or “It’s
always good to talk with you, Mr. Jones.” Then let the caller hang up
first. To obtain a comprehensive manual on using the telephone
effectively check out TeleSales & TeleService at:
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Copyright 2003-2005
The $elling
Edge®, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
VIRDEN THORNTON is the founder and
President of The $elling Edge®, Inc. a firm specializing in sales,
customer relations, and management training and development. Clients
have included Sears Optical, Eastman Kodak, IBM, Deloitte & Touché,
Bank One, Jefferson Pilot, and Wal-Mart to name a few. Virden is the
author of Prospecting: The Key To Sales Success and the best selling
Building & Closing the Sale, Fifty-Minute series books and Close That
Sale, a video/audio tape series published by the Thompson Learning,
Crisp Learning division. He has also authored a Self-Directed Learning
series of sales, coaching & team development, telemarketing, and
personal productivity training guides.
Virden teaches for the Center For
Professional Development, Texas Tech University at Lubbock, Texas and
in the School Of Entrepreneurship, J. Willard And Alice S. Marriott
School Of Management at Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah. You can
contact Virden at:
Virden@TheSellingEdge.com. or learn more about him at:
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