The
Politics of Calling
By Peter DeHaan
With the fall elections in the United States now in our
rear-view mirror, we can now take a calmer look at
what happened. In the days preceding the election, more than one
person shared with me their eagerness for the voting to come to a
conclusion. Quite succinctly, their common refrain was, "I'm sick of all
political commercials -- and especially the phone calls."
Here are some of my observations:
-
Unlike in the past, I did not receive one live call. Not even a "don't
forget to vote" reminder.
-
The number of
recorded messages I received this year, far outpaced the total
number of automated and live calls during past campaigns.
-
My mother, part
of the senior citizen demographic, received about three times
the number of automated political calls that I received.
-
People do not
understand why they receive these calls when they are on the “Do
Not Call” (DNC) list -- and they are angry about it. (Our
self-serving elected officials conveniently exempted themselves
from the DNC legislation.)
-
My wife's
common response is to lay the receiver down (or put the call on
hold) and walk away. It's her small way of retaliation.
-
I never
listened to more than a few seconds of a single robo call I
received.
Therefore, our politicians calls should consider:
-
Just because
something is legal, doesn't make it right. Check numbers
against the DNC list when making political calls. Those who
signed up did so for a reason. Calling them will only make them
mad, cause them to assume you or your client are breaking the
law, or both.
-
Don't overcall
people. Even if you have them donations to call the same number
multiple times, don't do it -- especially not on the same day!
-
Don't mislead
people and do provide responsible discloser. Email messages
must contain legitimate subject lines; print and broadcast ads
must state who paid for the ad; and mailed messages have their
own content requirements. Apply these reasonable and accepted
practices to recorded messages -- people have grown to expect
this from other channels, provide it on calls as well.
Given the
electorate's outcry over robo calls,
specifically, and political calling, in general, we can expect the
practice will come under greater
scrutiny.
To address this,
our elected officials will adopt a more regulatory attitude
towards telemarketing and robo calling, even though they, in part,
contributed to the problem, causing some of the exact voter angst they are
seeking to appease.
Read other articles and learn more about
Peter DeHaan.
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