The Green Sheet Online Edition

April 4, 2016 • 16:04:02

Brush up your phone manners

Whether you're responding to a phone call from one of your merchant customers, cold calling or following up after an in-person presentation, it's essential to conduct yourself as a professional. Yet it's easy to inadvertently overlook some essentials of doing business by phone.

In Good Selling!SM: The Basics, Paul H. Green said that courtesy pays and simple actions can ingratiate you to a prospect or screener. Certain things such as snacking while on the phone should be no-brainers, but other actions can be just as irksome to folks on the other end of the line.

Here are four recommendations Green made:

  1. Do business from your home only if no noise from family or roommates will interrupt you. This could be a spouse entering your office to talk about family matters, or it could be children playing or dogs barking nearby, for example.
  2. When in the middle of a phone conversation, do not accept incoming calls. This is especially important if you are the person who placed the call, but it is common courtesy to finish one conversation before jumping into another.
  3. Let someone know if you're in transit and conversing via a mobile phone. Transmission quality for cell phones has improved dramatically over the years, but calls still experience static or become dropped due to lack of carrier coverage or other issues. A person informed of the situation will be less likely to become irritated by it.
  4. Avoid putting callers on speakerphone, but when you must, let them know you are doing so, and why. Sometimes the speaker function diminishes a call's quality. It can also make people feel put on the spot and feel less important than whatever you are doing that prohibits you from holding your phone to your ear.

Also, use good diction. If you slur your words or tend to speak quickly, consider working with a speech therapist so you can articulate clearly.

Tips from a coach

Barbara Pachter, a career coach, offers additional tips for proper phone-related behavior in her book The Essentials of Business Etiquette. Some of these follow:

If you're succeeding in the competitive payments arena, your phone manners are likely already good. Just brush up your weak spots to enhance your results.End of Story

Whether you want to upgrade your POS offerings, find a payment gateway partner, bone up on fintech regs or PCI requirements, find an upcoming trade show, read about faster payments, or discover the latest innovations in merchant acquiring, The Green Sheet is the resource for you. Since 1983, we've helped empower and connect payments professionals, starting with the merchant level salespeople who bring tailored payment acceptance and digital commerce tools, along with a host of other business services to merchants across the globe. The Green Sheet Inc. is also a proud affiliate of Bankcard Life, a premier community that provides industry-leading training and resources for payment professionals.

Notice to readers: These are archived articles. Contact information, links and other details may be out of date. We regret any inconvenience.

skyscraper ad