Hi, my first time on this site, so hopefully this reply makes it to the list. I've looked through all the messages here, and there are some excellent comments and suggestions. I'd just like to go back to Tracey's initial question:
(It seems tome though that we play this message a little too often and the onlypurpose it serves is to irritate the customer and to remind them of just how long we have kept them waiting. Is there an industry standard that suggests how frequently these messages should be played? Does anyone have any comments or suggestions regarding the customers perception of service following changes to the frequency of this kind of message? ), which in itself has not really been answered.
Tracey, a few questions:
1. How often do you replay the message?
2. Do you have one initial message, followed by a 'comfort' message, or do you only use one message repeatedly?
3. What is your average Time to Answer?
4. What is your average Time to Abandon?
I've called numbers in the past where the message comes back in almost as soon as it had finished playing the first time, in other words, the programmer had not left a large enough gap from the end of the message to the start of the next one. Guaranteed to raise the blood pressure. Conversely, I've heard others where the gap is so long, the caller's phone bill is through the roof before they even hear the message. We usually have the initial message at about 20 seconds, with comfort messages at about 25 seconds.
But a point to stress, you should not be relying on these messages as a replacement for having enough agents. This is where the timing measurements come in. If you have an average Time to Answer approaching 30 seconds or more (note I say average, there will be peaks and troughs), then you are stretching your resources, and callers will be unhappy. If your average Time to Abandon is spookily about the same time as one of your announcements is kicking in, then you can assume the callers have got fed up hearing it.
Obviously it's very difficult to give full advice without knowing the overall setup of your operation. For example the technology you are using may not have all the latest features, etc. But if you'd like to compare notes, by all means drop me an e-mail to pete_handley@uk.ibm.com.
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