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The Power of
Voicemail
By Peter DeHaan
October 2005
When first introduced in the early 1980s, voicemail systems were
seen as a threat to live agent services by some, a technological curiosity to
others, and a vital automation tool to still others.
At the time, few call centers embraced the nascent technology.
Fast-forward a couple of decades into a new century and we see that
voicemail's utility and ubiquitousness have changed dramatically.
Today's call centers rely heavily on voicemail systems for a
variety of tasks and functions. On a
most basic level, voicemail can be used to aid intra-company communications.
Another common use is facilitating contact between clients and their
customer service representatives. However
the biggest area of application, and the most wide-ranging, is the myriad of
ways in which voicemail systems are used to serve callers.
This can take the form of supplementing live agents by doing routine and
repetitive tasks, enhancing agent effectiveness and productivity, providing
automated services, or as a technological tool to aid agents in serving callers.
A
case in point is Ambs, MI that uses a Startel Voice
Processor in their call centers. "Our
clients have enjoyed the Voice Processor since 1999," stated Aaron Boatin,
Vice President. "What they and our
new clients are very excited about are the unified messaging services we are
able to offer. Our one number
follow-me service, audio conferencing-on-demand, and faxmail to email gives us a
powerful suite of service offerings that we tailor fit on a client by client
basis."
With
the features and power of today's voicemail systems, they can also serve as an
automatic dispatch mechanism that can respond immediately, thereby removing
bottlenecks that can result from agent initiated tasks.
"Call center clients today are more used to instant messaging and email
so they expect that every action should be immediate," stated Jim Becker,
Marketing Manager for Amtelco. "That requires automating as much as
possible to eliminate operator time spent reading through instructions and to
eliminate potential operator error. Flexible dispatch methods are required
when it seems like every day a new device is introduced. Clients expect
their call center to be able to send messages to their new devices. These
devices include pagers, cellular phones with Web and email support, PCs with Web
and email, and PDAs."
Nicholas
Naimo, Telescan's Director of Business Relations/Operations summed it up
succinctly by stating, "Voicemail is an essential communications tool."
While there are many voicemail system providers,
for an updated list of key vendors who specialize in voicemail technology systems for today's teleservice
agencies and outsource call centers see
Voice Mail and Voice Processing
System Providers.
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