New Business Phone System Makes the Difference
My small business was growing in almost every way imaginable.
Every way except the bottom line, that is. My company primarily
does business over the phone, with over ninety percent of our
sales coming across our telephone lines. When our call volume
started to increase late last year, I hired several new
employees to man our existing phone system. We updated our
computer software, desktops and server to make order processing
substantially smoother. We redesigned our website for easy
navigation and ordering for internet customers. We even
integrated our shipping department to handle an increase in
orders. The phones were ringing off the hook several times
throughout the day as our business increased, and we started to
see a slight shift in the right direction for our profits.
Still, I wondered if we were losing calls because of a lack of
response time.
Our phone system simply routed incoming calls to any available
phone. If no one was available, the customer would hear the
phone ring until someone eventually picked up or until they got
tired of waiting. I decided to have a trunk study performed,
which is a method of finding out how many calls we were losing
for not having enough lines. Sure enough, we were missing out on
several hundred calls per day. During the busy times, people
were calling and hanging up after being made to wait. There was
no telling if they ever decided to call back. With office space
already maximized to the point that I couldn't hire additional
employees for lack of a place to put them, I decided to update
our phone system. We had several new lines installed and would
now have the capability to route incoming calls that were not
picked up within three rings to go to an automated message
telling the customer to please hold for the next available
representative. This helped quite a bit as now our busiest hours
seemed to stretch out even longer. We then added desk phones
with LCD displays so that our representatives could field up to
five calls each. This meant that four less customers per desk
would receive the same request to hold, but from a human being.
What was formerly a two hour stretch of nonstop business in the
morning and afternoon turned into an all day affair. We then
customized our message to inform customers that received the
automated message of when the best times to call were, so that
they would have the option of calling back at a less busy time.
After all this, my business increased tenfold. All I can say is
that if you do business over the phone and have times where your
lines are ringing nonstop, you need to have a good business
phone system in place or you might be losing money.