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Your Call Is Important to Us. NOT!

Automated answering systems contribute to the public’s impression of government being run by nameless, faceless bureaucrats.

 

My 90-year-old mother still has all her marbles, though sometimes she forgets where she put them.

But a recent go-round with a couple of government agencies and a doctor’s office over a misprint on her Medicare card tested her patience and her sanity.

The main villains were automated answering systems, those unforgiving “Press 1 if you want this, press 2 if you want that” mechanisms that mostly don’t let you talk back. Trying to navigate them can be frustrating for anyone, but it’s especially tough for those with poor vision.   

“I just remember I thought I was going crazy for three days,” said my mom, who otherwise is a huge fan of Medicare. 

When I call an agency or company and the first thing greeting me is a live voice, a feeling of utter gratitude rushes over me.

OK, OK, so I have very low standards for happiness. But the opportunity to explain my request or problem to a real human being is such a relief. So often the automated systems give you a bunch of choices but none of them really fits your needs. I’m told that for many companies and agencies, pressing zero gets you a person. I’ve only found that to be true about half the time.  

According to a 2011 Consumer Reports study on customer service, 71 percent of respondents were extremely irritated when they couldn’t reach a human being during a phone call. The survey said 67 percent claimed they have hung up without getting their business resolved.

One who has resisted turning his agency over to an automated answering system is Alan Jennings, executive director of Community Action Committee of the Lehigh Valley, which helps low-income people with such necessities as shelter, food and fuel assistance.

“I’ve had repeated attempts around me to go to a phone answering system because it’s cheaper and I flatly refused,” Jennings said. “I just don’t think it’s good customer service.

“The people we serve are so beaten down, the least they can get is a real human being that cares about them,” he said. “They live much of their lives going from crisis to crisis and they don’t find a world that’s particularly sensitive, sympathetic or easy to deal with.”

These automated systems are going to be an even bigger issue as baby boomers age. Some might say that boomers will have grown used to the automated answering services over time. But the infirmities of age – hearing loss, reduced vision, fading memory and dexterity – can amplify the frustrations most of us non-senior citizens already feel when confronted with the unbending will of a machine.

In the name of efficiency and cost-cutting, governments have become among the biggest users of automated phone systems. And with all the budget reductions they face, how can the public ask those agencies to hire more real people to be the first voice each caller hears?

Yet live receptionists might well be the best community outreach any government can have. Sometimes a call to PennDOT or a social service agency is the only personal contact a person has with government for months at a time.

If he or she is frustrated by the rigidity of an automated answering service, it’s easier to dismiss government as a bunch of nameless, faceless and mindless bureaucrats.

Bringing back real people to be the kind of “first responders” who put a human face on government would not only be good for the country’s employment picture but could also help change public perceptions about government.

Related Topics: Alan Jennings, Community Action Committee of the Lehigh Valley, Medicare, and automated answering systems

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Mary Ellen Alu

8:37 am on Thursday, September 13, 2012

Amen! BTW, this is another reason why the U.S. Postal system is so cool. EVERY DAY ('cept Sunday), you can have face-to-face human contact with a real government employee! (the mail's a bonus).

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QED

10:35 am on Thursday, September 13, 2012

Margie Peterson is 100% correct. Automated phone systems have there place...giving out the hours, directions or answering straightforward frequently asked questions works well with the systems but the quality of the organization is directly reflected in the ease with which a caller can reach a competent representative.

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Ann Wlazelek

10:35 am on Thursday, September 13, 2012

Whole-heartedly agree, Margie. What was your Mom's problem and how did she eventually resolve it?

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Eric Harding

10:35 am on Thursday, September 13, 2012

"Trying to navigate them can be frustrating for anyone, but it’s especially tough for those with poor vision."

Did you mean hearing? If you did mean vision, then there are phones out there for people with vision problems. We got this great phone for my grandmother that has large buttons with large print on them.

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David Brugger

10:35 am on Thursday, September 13, 2012

Not sure why you limit your concerns to the government. It is much more frustrating to deal with private enterprise which not only uses machines to handle human issues but if you do get a human, it is in a country where one cannot understand the person and the connection is horrendous.

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Mom of DnNnD

10:35 am on Thursday, September 13, 2012

Here's a little trick that I found works most of the time. When it's a voice activated automated line just say "Representative" even if it's not an option. I bypass many systems using this one word.

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Eric Harding

2:03 pm on Thursday, September 13, 2012

Or repeatedly press 0, that works too.

John

10:35 am on Thursday, September 13, 2012

Agreed, I am all for technology, and much of what we want is at our fingertips, however as we have become so expectant of fast solutions, we have to give up some of those niceties, such as human interaction. Unfortunately, some agencies and organizations employ people who answer telephones, but cannot answer basic organizational information (such as directions to their facility of operation). Once I spent 12 minutes with a woman who was so bad I ended up explaining to her how she got to work! Technology is usually good, and human interaction has become so-so.

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Margie Peterson

11:35 am on Thursday, September 13, 2012

Eric, I should have said the automated systems are difficult for people with poor vision or hearing problems. My mom has macular degeneration and her sight has deteriorated so much that even with a phone with the big buttons and large print she sometimes hits the wrong one. And David, you're right that automated systems are used by many in private industry as well. I focused on their use by government agencies because I think agencies fight against a stereotype of being uncaring bureaucrats and automated systems contribute to that image. A faction of the public complains that we need to cut government spending. Well, automated answering systems are an example of what can happen when we do.

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Jessica

5:08 pm on Friday, September 28, 2012

As someone who works in the answering service business, Thank You! We have had people leave us for automated systems, and end up coming back because they missed important calls and because of the customer service!

Truthfully, in an age where everything is digital, people text more than they call each other and you can maintain your relationships without ever having to see someone face to face (with things like facebook), the ability to actually talk to a live person who is there to help you is almost a rare delight. It's also what helps build loyal customers and build your brand.

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