| November 7th, 2008 by Christopher Musico |
Companies face a difficult challenge with a tight economy and increasing customer expectations. How can they get their message out to constituents without spending more money on live agents, direct mailings, and face-to-face interactions? Unfortunately, the answer for many comes in the form of myriad automated calls pushed out to individuals at all hours of the day, with no sense of intimacy or personalization.
I can personally attest to the fact that whenever I pick up my phone and there’s a slight hesitation, or silent pause on the other end of the line, I wish RoboCop was there to deliver justice to these robocalls, a sexy term for unsolicited automated interactions.
This couldn’t have been personified more in this past presidential election. (You voted, right?) Robocalls from political candidates throughout the country flooded phone lines, leaving many people annoyed and second-guessing picking up the phone. It was so bad that the Boston Globe even reported on an anti-robocall site President-elect Barack Obama had set up so the populace could sound off.
While many of these calls can just waste time, there are some essential calls — from a healthcare provider, collections agency, or financial institution — that may have some very important information that you may ignore based on prior experience. To try and counteract this, Seattle-based on-demand communication provider Varolii Corporation dished seven ways for people to tell the difference between robocalls and legitimate automated information. According to the company, an automated call with vital information will always be:
- relationship-based, meaning the caller will immediately recognize the caller as someone they do business with already;
- courteous, the calling organization will identify itself immediately, using a natural sounding voice in a conversational tone;
- personalized, the message asks for the recipient by name (which is pronounced correctly);
- relevant, the information is specific and applicable only to the individual receiving the call;
- valuable, the reason for the call is essential, like a fraud alert, flight delay, or prescription pick-up reminder;
- private, the recipient is asked to authenticate herself before receiving confidential information; and
- interactive, there is an opportunity to have a conversation by answering questions and confirming selections, such as confirming a credit card purchase.
According to Steve Zirkel, vice president and general manager of business continuity at Varolii, the first tip, relationship-based, is the macro factor for most everything else listed. “We’re trying to be the highest value for the dollar spent,” he says. “So if we did telemarketing work it would be really hard for us to distinguish that high-dollar return for the dollar spent with us because there’s no relationship we’re leveraging communication on.”
Many clients understand that forging a relationship is important, especially in automated notifications, but Zirkel goes on to explain that many do not understand privacy and interactive. Speaking more specifically about the latter, he says people do not truly know what interactive means in this particular field.
“It’s not about asking a question and getting an answer,” he stresses. “Interactive is where the client and consumer get all the value. A lot of people use this service as just a cheap talking letter, and that’s absolutely the wrong thing to do with this service.” The fear is — while maybe not as extreme as RoboCop coming to the rescue — people just won’t buy in. “No one will want to sign up for the service if that’s all it’s going to be,” he concludes.


