Wednesday, June 03, 2009

It's elementary, my dear Mason

Zack, one of our new customers, called me today. He has a single find-me voice mailbox and wanted to ensure that he was sounding as professional as he could with his system. In looking at his program, I noticed that his callers would ring directly through to his cell phone and only when his cell phone went unanswered or was busy would they then be given the company name and greeting.

Zack expressed the desire to have his company announced and his callers notified that their call was being transferred to the next available representative. I added the functionality to play a greeting before executing the find-me routine and on a no answer play a second greeting. To complete the professional sound, I recorded the greetings for him. Once the greetings were in place, I notified Zack that everything was up and running according to his request.

I received a call again from Zack after he had listened to the greetings, and it was exactly what he was looking for. However, he wanted to add just one more thing; music on hold. I sent him the different selections of music that we offer and instructed him to let me know which he preferred and I would upload it into his program. Again, Zack called and we discussed his options. After opting for the piano-guitar selection, he expressed his heartfelt thanks for my time and service stating I deserved a “gold star just like in elementary school”.

In elementary we’re taught the basics, the building blocks, for the rest of our school career. They become the foundation on which our entire learning is based. They are the relationship between the abcs and research papers, numbers and algebraic equations, questions and the scientific theory. Zack also reminded me that they also are the relationship between gold stars and satisfied customers.

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