"One Moment Please,
While I Disconnect Your Call"
By Peter DeHaan
The
track record of receptionists successfully transferring calls is not good.
In fact, based on my experience, successful call transfers actually
occur less than half the time. The most common result is being
disconnected.
The
receptionist attempts to transfer your call, but there is no ringing and no
music on hold. As you listen to silence, there is that growing
realization that your call will soon come to a premature end. The
return to dialtone or the automated instruction to "hang up and try
your call again," confirms that you have been summarily
disconnected. Although this could be the result of technical
problem, it is much more likely the consequence of human error.
When a
disconnected caller calls back, how has their mood changed? The
happy caller has likely become irritated, the irritated caller has
become irate, and the irate caller has become abusive. None of
these outcomes are necessary, and the additional stress to agents is
unwarranted.
You
can tip the odds in your favor, by following some common sense, but
often overlooked, steps:
Training: The proper transfer procedure must be covered in
training. Additionally, the trainee should be able to experience
the transfer from three different perspectives: the caller who is
being transferred, the receptionist doing the transfer, and the person
receiving the transfer. All too often, receptionists are deprived of
experiencing the call transfer process from the standpoint of either the
caller or the recipient. But doing so gives them a better understanding
how errors effect others and provides a means for some much needed
empathy.
Practice: To master a skill, it must be practiced until it
becomes rote. Ample practice should occur prior to attempting it
with a real caller. Plus, for receptionists not frequently transferring
calls, ongoing practice is wise.
Consistency: Most telephone systems provide multiple ways to transfer
calls. Pick the most universally applicable method and teach it to
all employees. Get the trainers to concur that this standard method
will be taught and no others. Finally, discourage
receptionists from using
different approaches, seeking shortcuts, or sharing alternative
methods with others.
Methodology: Decide on one philosophy for transferring calls. A
blind transfer is the quickest, but least professional. With
it the receptionist dials the number, connects the caller, and hangs up
before the call is answered. Although common, it is not even close
to a "best-practice." In an announced transfer, the
receptionist dials the number, tells the recipient about the call, connects the
caller, and then hangs up. A confirmed transfer is one step
beyond an announced transfer, in which the receptionist stays connected
long enough to insure that the recipient can address the caller's
needs.
Verification: Transfer lists need to be periodically checked.
Not just read, but actually dialed. Over time, lists become
outdated; frequent verification is on the only sure way to make sure
that receptionists have accurate information. During a slower
time of the day or week is an
ideal time to assign an employee to the task of testing each number on the transfer
list. Less you write this off as too time consuming or not
cost-effective, consider the cost of dealing with an irate or
abusive caller who calls back after being cut off. Even worse, what
if they never call back?
First-Call Resolution: If you pursue first-call resolution, the
need to transfer callers is greatly reduced. Perhaps that is the
best prescription of all.
Read other articles and learn more about
Peter DeHaan.
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