Voice Mail Etiquette


I am a busy executive of a multi-billion dollar company. As such I am
incredibly busy and must choose where focus my energy and efforts with great
care. Thus, I am always looking for those things that steal time.

One of those time stealers is the phone. In fact, next to meetings and
email, it is probably the worst time stealer of all. Phone tag is a
complete waste of time, and I generally simply refuse to play the game at
all.

Voice mails, like email messages, can be major time wasters. I know you've
gotten at least once voice mail in your life that goes on and on, with the
callers phone number mumbled at the end. You just wasted five or ten
minutes!

So what I do is simple. Unless the voice mail message is from my boss or
someone very important (like my wife), I will ignore it unless it follows
most of the voice mail etiquette rules listed below.

Tell me who you are - I hate playing the guessing game. If you leave a
message without leaving your name (first and last is best), then I'm not
going to spend a lot of time trying to figure out who you are.

Leave contact information - Look, I'm pretty good at what I do but I don't
have every phone number in the world memorized. In fact, believe it or not,
I may not have your phone number even listed in my address book. Even if I
do, you've given me another reason not to call you back - you've annoyed me
by forcing me to have to search around for your number. This wastes time,
and unless your call is important to me you are probably not going to get a
return call.

Be polite - Believe me, my day is hard enough without listening to a hostile
voice message. You want to make I don't call you back (unless you are the
boss or the boss's boss), then leave a very emotional message. You'd be
amazed at how quickly I'll delete those that are hostile or somehow
upsetting.

Tell me what you want - I'm highly unlikely to call you back if you call out
of the blue and leave a voicemail like "this is Joe, call me". Unless I
already know what you want (or suddenly develop telepathy) I am not going to
return your call.

Be brief - Don't leave a fifteen minute message. I can guarantee you that
unless you are my wife or a rich uncle leaving me a million dollars I will
have erased it long before. If you've got something long winded to say then
presumably you've done business with me before, so send me an email instead.

Give me the information in order - Tell me who you are first, then, if
necessary, what company you work with. Now tell me your phone number, then
tell me what you want. That's the best way to get me to return your call.

Tell me the phone number slowly - The best thing to do with a phone number
is say it slowly. A second between each digit is best. This gives me time to
write down the number. Also, don't mumble your phone number. Speak it
clearly and precisely. It's also a good idea to repeat at the end of the
message just to make sure I've got it.

Generally, as I said at the beginning of this article, I will not even
attempt to return phone calls unless they follow these rules. And believe
me, it does not take long to "train" regular callers - they want me to call
them back.

Follow these suggestions and you will get a prompt call back with the
answers or service that you need. This saves everyone time, which improves
our productivity.

About the Author

Richard Lowe Jr. is the webmaster of Internet Tips And Secrets
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