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Added for You - No One Answers The Phone But The Sales Department
Job Interview Tips will move to another house before I’ll report a call to them.Make a good first impressionAppearance is perhaps the most critical element of building a positive first impression. Employers assume that what they see is what they’ll get if they hire your candidate, so make sure that what they see is a consummate professional. Understand that dressing professionally is one of the rules of the business game. Don’t expect to win the game if your break that rule.Pay attention to detailsInterviewers notice the little things. Sloppy manicures, missing buttons, scuffed shoes, stained lapels or snagged stocking are interpreted as signs that the candidate isn’t detail-or 6) If anyone can find a Microsoft number, please let me know. Occasionally, during this exercise, I would finally speak to a real customer service rep. I noticed that they sounded suspiciously alike, which makes me believe all of these companies forward the live calls to one guy who answers for all these companies. I also learned that there is an insurance company in town who, when listening to your recorded customer service options says “to hear the train, press seven” and it plays a train noise. They used to say “to hear the duck, press seven” and a duck quacked, but apparently they got so much traffic, they took it off. Out of respect for them, I am not mentioning their name, but this is true. By the way, try to connect to the sales department for any of these firms and notice how quickly you’ll get through. I am closing with a plea for corporate managers to call yo Finding Legitimate Work From Home Jobs I am writing this column prompted by a recent column in USA Today concerning the difficulty in getting to a live person when experiencing service troubles. The writer gave examples of some national companies that were difficult, if not impossible, to get to if one needed to speak with a live person for help.Is it possible to find legitimate work from home jobs or are they all, to put it simply, scams. Most of us would love the opportunity to earn our incomes from the comfort of our own homes but we are put off because we are afraid of taking the risk of falling for a scam, but believe me when I say there are legitimate work from home jobs out there if you know where to look.Don't be of the mindset that if you have to pay for something it must be a con, this simply isn't true. Even legitimate work from home jobs will have people to pay and costs of their own. A perfect example is paid surveys, it takes the owners of I laughed as I read the article knowing full well that here in the Mid-South, land of hospitality and assistance, this was not the case. I knew that my local providers put emphasis on customer service and support. Ease of solutions was the southern way, I thought. I also knew that, utilizing my own technical wisdom and knowledge, I would never purchase a product or service from a company that made it difficult to speak to someone who would help me. My life was exempt from delays in getting help due to automated attendants and answering devices standing between help and me. Wrong. I made a list of the important products and services that I use every day in work and at home. These include my local telephone service, long distance, wireless provider, PC hardware and software support, Direct TV, cable TV (yep…I’ve got both. I’ll tell you why later), broadband Internet service, banking, and utilities. I then expanded the list to include my doctor, local hospital, hair salon (are there any barbers left?), my attorney, my CPA, and my dentist. I then decided that I would call each of these customer service locations or main numbers and see how long it took to get “real-person” assistance. That was the beginning of a bad day. Calls to each of these companies resulted in the following findings: 1) The only companies with live operators answering the phones were my dentist and attorney, neither of whom I particularly enjoy calling. 2)T wo of these companies never allowed me to even talk to the auto attendant (busy signals). 3) One company, after taking me through the loop of options, gave me the option of talking to a customer service rep. When I opted for that, I began the loop over. 3) I waited THIRTY MINUTES to speak to a live rep with one of these companies. 4) There is no such company as Microsoft. This exercise was a real eye-opener and left me with these conclusions: 1) I will buy a new PC before I call for assistance for hardware. Messrs. Hewlett and Packard have obviously left the building. My PC is groaning and making noises like my uncle in Lexington. I can’t get anyone to talk to and am currently looking for a new PC which comes with a nerd in a box who will set it up for me and transfer all the stuff on this one to the new one. 2) Buy stock now in AT&T. They have a great deal for $4.95 and then a seven cents a minute for long distance. That deal in itself is not so good, but the reason it makes sense as an investor is that once a customer is on it, you can’t get off! I’ve tried for months to call the number on my phone bill to get it changed, but every time I call, I wait about twenty or thirty minutes and figure it’s not worth the $4.95 and hang up (my late Father would spin over if he knew I were so cavalier about the money, but it is ridiculous). 3) My hair salon is covered with mostly female employees, many of whom are doing nothing except looking at themselves often during the day. Why can’t they put a mirror with the main phone and let some of these folks watch themselves and answer calls instead of listening to a recording to set an appointment? 4) My local hospital’s recording told me to call another number if this were an emergency. Thanks. (They also listed their barbershop above their main listed telephone number in the directory…I might try them out). 5) I have cable TV as a result of not being able to get local channels when I first got Direct TV. I never want to call Direct TV again and will move to another house before I’ll report a call to them. 6) If anyone can find a Microsoft number, please let me know. Occasionally, during this exercise, I would finally speak to a real customer service rep. I noticed that they sounded suspiciously alike, which makes me believe all of these companies forward the live calls to one guy who answers for all these companies. I also learned that there is an insurance company in town who, when listening to your recorded customer service options says “to hear the train, press seven” and it plays a train noise. They used to say “to hear the duck, press seven” and a duck quacked, but apparently they got so much traffic, they took it off. Out of respect for them, I am not mentioning their name, but this is true. By the way, try to connect to the sales department for any of these firms and notice how quickly you’ll get through. I am closing with a plea for corporate managers to call yo Create Yellow Page Ads that Hypnotize Customers Into Giving You What Ever You Want that I use every day in work and at home. These include my local telephone service, long distance, wireless provider, PC hardware and software support, Direct TV, cable TV (yep…I’ve got both. I’ll tell you why later), broadband Internet service, banking, and utilities. I then expanded the list to include my doctor, local hospital, hair salon (are there any barbers left?), my attorney, my CPA, and my dentist.Exactly how do you create an advertisement that stops a potential customer right in their tracks? One that gets them locked in a hypnotic trance from the moment they lay eyes on your ad until they grab the phone and feverishly dial in your number?Would you like a specific answer? I'll lay out the exact process for you right here on this page.OK, ...Lets suppose for a minute that you are a behind the steering wheel of your car driving toward your home right now. Its been a very long day at work and you have had one or two (or three) of your normal challenges with the people who can make your day a hassle.< I then decided that I would call each of these customer service locations or main numbers and see how long it took to get “real-person” assistance. That was the beginning of a bad day. Calls to each of these companies resulted in the following findings: 1) The only companies with live operators answering the phones were my dentist and attorney, neither of whom I particularly enjoy calling. 2)T wo of these companies never allowed me to even talk to the auto attendant (busy signals). 3) One company, after taking me through the loop of options, gave me the option of talking to a customer service rep. When I opted for that, I began the loop over. 3) I waited THIRTY MINUTES to speak to a live rep with one of these companies. 4) There is no such company as Microsoft. This exercise was a real eye-opener and left me with these conclusions: 1) I will buy a new PC before I call for assistance for hardware. Messrs. Hewlett and Packard have obviously left the building. My PC is groaning and making noises like my uncle in Lexington. I can’t get anyone to talk to and am currently looking for a new PC which comes with a nerd in a box who will set it up for me and transfer all the stuff on this one to the new one. 2) Buy stock now in AT&T. They have a great deal for $4.95 and then a seven cents a minute for long distance. That deal in itself is not so good, but the reason it makes sense as an investor is that once a customer is on it, you can’t get off! I’ve tried for months to call the number on my phone bill to get it changed, but every time I call, I wait about twenty or thirty minutes and figure it’s not worth the $4.95 and hang up (my late Father would spin over if he knew I were so cavalier about the money, but it is ridiculous). 3) My hair salon is covered with mostly female employees, many of whom are doing nothing except looking at themselves often during the day. Why can’t they put a mirror with the main phone and let some of these folks watch themselves and answer calls instead of listening to a recording to set an appointment? 4) My local hospital’s recording told me to call another number if this were an emergency. Thanks. (They also listed their barbershop above their main listed telephone number in the directory…I might try them out). 5) I have cable TV as a result of not being able to get local channels when I first got Direct TV. I never want to call Direct TV again and will move to another house before I’ll report a call to them. 6) If anyone can find a Microsoft number, please let me know. Occasionally, during this exercise, I would finally speak to a real customer service rep. I noticed that they sounded suspiciously alike, which makes me believe all of these companies forward the live calls to one guy who answers for all these companies. I also learned that there is an insurance company in town who, when listening to your recorded customer service options says “to hear the train, press seven” and it plays a train noise. They used to say “to hear the duck, press seven” and a duck quacked, but apparently they got so much traffic, they took it off. Out of respect for them, I am not mentioning their name, but this is true. By the way, try to connect to the sales department for any of these firms and notice how quickly you’ll get through. I am closing with a plea for corporate managers to call yo Fired? The Interview Solution h the loop of options, gave me the option of talking to a customerSo you were fired? Now what? How will you explain it when you interview?There are many questions that plague job seekers. “What salary are you looking for?” is a big one. “Why should we hire you?” is another. And “Why did you leave your last job?” can leave you spluttering if you were fired and don’t know how to answer. And most people don’t! After they’ve stumbled through a few answers—trying in vain to phrase it in an acceptable way—and are not invited back for a second interview, their fears are confirmed. No one will hire them because they’ve been fired.Except that’s not what’s really happening. The p service rep. When I opted for that, I began the loop over. 3) I waited THIRTY MINUTES to speak to a live rep with one of these companies. 4) There is no such company as Microsoft. This exercise was a real eye-opener and left me with these conclusions: 1) I will buy a new PC before I call for assistance for hardware. Messrs. Hewlett and Packard have obviously left the building. My PC is groaning and making noises like my uncle in Lexington. I can’t get anyone to talk to and am currently looking for a new PC which comes with a nerd in a box who will set it up for me and transfer all the stuff on this one to the new one. 2) Buy stock now in AT&T. They have a great deal for $4.95 and then a seven cents a minute for long distance. That deal in itself is not so good, but the reason it makes sense as an investor is that once a customer is on it, you can’t get off! I’ve tried for months to call the number on my phone bill to get it changed, but every time I call, I wait about twenty or thirty minutes and figure it’s not worth the $4.95 and hang up (my late Father would spin over if he knew I were so cavalier about the money, but it is ridiculous). 3) My hair salon is covered with mostly female employees, many of whom are doing nothing except looking at themselves often during the day. Why can’t they put a mirror with the main phone and let some of these folks watch themselves and answer calls instead of listening to a recording to set an appointment? 4) My local hospital’s recording told me to call another number if this were an emergency. Thanks. (They also listed their barbershop above their main listed telephone number in the directory…I might try them out). 5) I have cable TV as a result of not being able to get local channels when I first got Direct TV. I never want to call Direct TV again and will move to another house before I’ll report a call to them. 6) If anyone can find a Microsoft number, please let me know. Occasionally, during this exercise, I would finally speak to a real customer service rep. I noticed that they sounded suspiciously alike, which makes me believe all of these companies forward the live calls to one guy who answers for all these companies. I also learned that there is an insurance company in town who, when listening to your recorded customer service options says “to hear the train, press seven” and it plays a train noise. They used to say “to hear the duck, press seven” and a duck quacked, but apparently they got so much traffic, they took it off. Out of respect for them, I am not mentioning their name, but this is true. By the way, try to connect to the sales department for any of these firms and notice how quickly you’ll get through. I am closing with a plea for corporate managers to call yo 7 Top Questions Job Candidates Should Ask ! I’ve tried for months to call the number on my phone bill to get it changed, but every time I call, I wait about twenty or thirty minutes and figure it’s not worth the $4.95 and hang up (my late Father would spin over if he knew I were so cavalier about the money, but it is ridiculous).Preparing for job interviews, candidates try to collect information to formulate their best answers to questions that are most likely going to be asked. Despite this extensive preparation, the actual interview could turn to be boring. Worse still, you could begin to sense the interview’s failure. Unless you do something to turn the situation around, it is going to be a battle lost. So what better way to save the interview than by asking a few pertinent questions? (Hint: you should be doing this anyway!)Top 7 Questions You Should Ask An InterviewerThe questions you ask should not just be for the sake of as 3) My hair salon is covered with mostly female employees, many of whom are doing nothing except looking at themselves often during the day. Why can’t they put a mirror with the main phone and let some of these folks watch themselves and answer calls instead of listening to a recording to set an appointment? 4) My local hospital’s recording told me to call another number if this were an emergency. Thanks. (They also listed their barbershop above their main listed telephone number in the directory…I might try them out). 5) I have cable TV as a result of not being able to get local channels when I first got Direct TV. I never want to call Direct TV again and will move to another house before I’ll report a call to them. 6) If anyone can find a Microsoft number, please let me know. Occasionally, during this exercise, I would finally speak to a real customer service rep. I noticed that they sounded suspiciously alike, which makes me believe all of these companies forward the live calls to one guy who answers for all these companies. I also learned that there is an insurance company in town who, when listening to your recorded customer service options says “to hear the train, press seven” and it plays a train noise. They used to say “to hear the duck, press seven” and a duck quacked, but apparently they got so much traffic, they took it off. Out of respect for them, I am not mentioning their name, but this is true. By the way, try to connect to the sales department for any of these firms and notice how quickly you’ll get through. I am closing with a plea for corporate managers to call yo 10 Tips to Use Giveaways Effectively will move to another house before I’ll report a call to them.Walk around any trade or consumer show and you will be able to collect a bag full of advertising specialties, or giveaway items all designed to promote. But look a little more closely. How many really do an effective job? How clearly do they get a message across? Is the message sufficiently visible? Is the giveaway useful or unique enough that you would want to keep and use it? All these questions, and more, need to be considered before jumping into the giveaway game.Everyone enjoys receiving a gift, even if it is "just a little something." Gift giving creates a favorable impression. It can build goodwill, be an 6) If anyone can find a Microsoft number, please let me know. Occasionally, during this exercise, I would finally speak to a real customer service rep. I noticed that they sounded suspiciously alike, which makes me believe all of these companies forward the live calls to one guy who answers for all these companies. I also learned that there is an insurance company in town who, when listening to your recorded customer service options says “to hear the train, press seven” and it plays a train noise. They used to say “to hear the duck, press seven” and a duck quacked, but apparently they got so much traffic, they took it off. Out of respect for them, I am not mentioning their name, but this is true. By the way, try to connect to the sales department for any of these firms and notice how quickly you’ll get through. I am closing with a plea for corporate managers to call your own customer service departments and listen to what your customers are hearing. For most of you, this will take some time…be patient.
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