Houses (8 days ago) In today's Agent Insights - Shannon Milligan, a Real Estate Agent at RVA Home Team in Virginia (and 2nd time guest blogger), provides some real estate marketing tips of having a voicemail that sells you and your business.. Here's Shannon: As Realtors - we all know that our chances of converting a lead into a client are much higher when we respond quickly to an inquiry.
To set up your voicemail, press *98, *68, or #55 (varies by location) from your home phone or call the retrieval number you received with your welcome letter. Voice prompts will guide you through the rest of the steps.
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The standard default house phone voicemail or answering machine sound effectFree Download: https://uptona.com/wW2GLPQ6Subscribe for more Sounds!http://bit.ly
Your voicemail message should ideally answer all of the following requirements: Brief -- nothing bores callers as much (or makes them hang up as often) as long voicemail messages; Informative -- if it's your professional voicemail, say your name, business, and if necessary, department. Let your callers know when to expect a return call
Remember to watch out for ambient noise on your end of the call as well. Train signals, traffic, or even outside conversations can be very distracting to your callers and project an unprofessional image. Don’t forget the beep. Every millisecond – yes, millisecond – between the end of your greeting and the beep is time callers could potentially drop the call. That’s why the anticipated beep should sound the moment your greeting is finished. Leaving lengthy, silent gaps may cause your customers to wonder if they’ve been disconnected. Don’t give them the opportunity to hang up waiting to hear that affirmative tone. Check and then recheck your greeting. After you complete your outgoing voicemail message, play it back to verify you’ve said everything you intended to say. Then take it a step further and dial in to experience the greeting for yourself, and be mindful to contemplate the greeting from the customer’s perspective.
8. Howdy, you’ve reached [your name], [your job title] at [your company]. I’m sorry for lacking your name, but within the event you allow a message that entails your title and receive in contact with data, I’ll receive in contact as rapidly as I will.
1. General Voicemail Greetings 1. Hello, you’ve reached [your name]. I’m currently unavailable, but leave your name and number and I’ll return your call as soon as I can.
Please leave your full name, contact details and reason for calling and I will call you back as soon as I’m back. Thanks for calling!”
When I was in my 20s, I had an answering machine with a 30 second outgoing message tape. I thought it would be fun to come up with all sorts of cute or funny messages for my friends to hear just before the beep. It got pretty elaborate sometimes, with celebrity impersonations and movie spoofs and other things. I didn't usually get many important phone calls anyway, so I didn't see any harm in being funny for the few people who did call.
I have a confession to make: I haven’t recorded a new voicemail greeting since 2014. In the past four years, I (hopefully) have become more articulate, poised, and self-assured. But hear my voicemail recording, and you’d think I was still new to the work world, a little unsure of myself — and probably not an authority. Obviously I need toupdate it. And if you haven’t changed your voicemail greeting in over a year, you’re likely in the same boat. After all, a professional voicemail recording boosts your credibility, makes you seem more competent, and encourages whoever’s listening to it to continue the relationship. A relatively unprofessional one — like mine, for instance — does the opposite: It encourages prospects, recruiters, and potential connections to run in the other direction. With that in mind, I’ve written 18 unique voicemail greetings for every situation. Pick your favorite, practice a few times, then record your new voicemail.
In this way, voicemail becomes an important part of the grouping process. It can help organize incoming messages by the priority you set as a system administrator.
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5. Any specialties you have. Do you sell a lot of commercial properties? Maybe you match clients with the vacation home of their dreams? Use your voicemail to showcase a specialty and market yourself.
Enter your New Voicemail PIN within the requirements. 4
7. Explain when you expect to return calls. This is crucial. Instead of telling clients that you'll return their call when you have time, tell them when you return calls.
To do this, you can simply say, “I look forward to speaking with you and resolving any issues or concerns you might have as quickly as possible.” This implies you’re going to read your messages, you’re going to respond to those messages, and you’re going to resolve any issue, regardless of how big or small, the customer has. Acting as a mentor by making yourself more accessible is a great way to improve the overall customer experience. Having your business voicemail greetings reflect this is a great way to show customers where your priorities lie even if you’re unable to get to the phone right now.
5. "Hello, [Person's name] is chasing new adventures and is no longer with [Company name]. Please forward all future requests to [New or interim person's name] at [phone number]. Thank you!"