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What
Level Of Telephone Sales And Customer
Service Do You Provide?
By
Virden J. Thornton
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: http://www.TheSellingEdge.com/manual3.htm
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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 Crisp Publications, Inc.
Menlo Park, California. He has also authored
a Self-Directed Learning series of sales,
coaching & team development,
telemarketing, and personal productivity
training guides. To obtain a substantial
discount on two of Virden's new manuals, 101
Sales Myths and
Organizing
For Sales Success, just click on
either of the titles above.
Note:
You
can contact Virden at virden@TheSellingEdge.com.
You can also see an expanded biography
at http://www.TheSellingEdge.com/bio.htm.
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