“Sorry, “I’m not available at present … Please leave a message.”
So you leave a voicemail message.
You hope your contact will get your message and call you back, but mostly you sink into the bottomless pit of voicemail hell to be tortured by the digital demons therein.
There are no perfect ways to guarantee a response. But here’s three strategies to get your phone calls returned more often.
Most voicemails start and end exactly the same way.
“Hi, this is Frank Smith from ABC company … Give me a call when you can.”
This type of message is likely to get relegated to your contact’s “B” priority list (or be deleted). And when did you last work on your "B" priority list?
It’s better to tell the person what you want right at the beginning of the call. Do you want a document, a phone call, an email, a piece of information?
Whatever you want, ask for it first and ask for it fast.
"Hi Ted, this is Mary from XYZ. I’m calling to get your go-ahead for the project we discussed yesterday ….“
Make sure your voicemail is no longer than 30 seconds. Any longer and they’ll likely hang up on you.
Many people procrastinate. They’ll call you back, but only when they have the time.
Here are two strategies that prompt them to call sooner.
This does not mean threatening your contact. Consequences are the natural and understandable outcomes of an action or inaction.
You are telling the person that if he or she does not call back to you this or that will happen. Factual and without emotion. Here are some approaches:
Now let’s put these three steps together in a few examples:
"Helen, this is Tracy from OPQ. I need confirmation of the bank transfer by end of business today or we cannot ship. Please give me a call back by 4:00pm to ensure shipment. Thanks."
"Hi Joe, I need the final drawings we discussed by noon tomorrow in my email or I won’t be able to meet the delivery date of next Friday. Please give me a 30 second call when you have sent them to confirm. This is Roger from EFG Drafting. Thanks."
"Barry, this is George from Advance. I only need 3 minutes to get from you the details I need to give you the proposal you requested. If we connect by noon today, you'll have my proposal before you pack up to go home. Thanks.”
People will more likely return your phone calls if you (1) lead with exactly what you want, (2) set a time frame for them to call back, and (3) outline the consequences (in a factual non-threatening way) if they don’t call by then.