Organize yourself properly, decide
how much money it's going to take for you to feel
comfortably wealthy, and then reach for it with your
own Telephone Answering Service.
Our research has turned up hundreds
of husband and wife entrepreneurs who, beginning with
just a couple of thousand dollars in borrowed funds,
and a lot of ambition, are grossing $50,000 or more
after a couple of years in business.
The exciting part is that the door
is wide open for you to do the same! The demand for
human customer service
and live telephone answering services is good. However, the advent
of the electronic answering devices is beginning
to slow this demand. Still, many people are "turned
off" by the frustration of expecting to talk
with a "live person," and having to listen
to a recording that advises the caller to leave a
message at the sound of the tone.
Exasperation of
this kind can sometimes cost a business person thousands
of dollars in lost profit. Realizing this, today's
successful business person wants the personal touch
of a friendly, professional, "secretary"
answering their phones for them.
The professional answering service
operator can pass along the proper messages to the
different callers, take messages, get clarifications
and even set up meetings with special customers. In
many instances, businessmen come to think of the operators
at their telephone answering service as vital to their
success, and often regard them with special favors
or bonuses when a particularly lucrative deal is closed
because of courteous and efficient service by the
people at the answering service.
To get started properly, you'll need
an initial investment of about $10,000 for equipment
and facilities, plus working capital. In the beginning,
with a 2 person operation, you can have your operator
selling by phone while you make in-person sales calls.
You might also want to add a couple of "hungry"
commission sales people to help line up a good list
of accounts as fast as possible. These efforts will
take planning and coordination because you don't want
two different sales people calling on the same prospect.
You can begin operating out of a spare
bedroom or your garage - you'll need a leased switchboard
from the telephone company - with plans to move your
operation into more formal quarters at a later date.
However, it's quite expensive and time consuming to
have a switchboard moved once it's been installed.
Our suggestion would be to locate a "beginning"
small office, and plan on being there at least 5 years
from the start.
Many operations begin in a small 200
to 300 square foot economy office location, and as
their growth warrants, open a second location with
space for eventual expansion to include 3 or more
switchboards. Our research has found that you'll need
an average of 85 regular customers per switchboard
in order to realize a minimum profit after expenses.
Just about anyone with a business card
will be a good prospect for your services. People
working out of their homes are very good prospects,
especially those holding down regular jobs while moonlighting
with a part-time businesses of their own. Every salesman
is a prospect, people who work on a 24 hour "on-call"
basis, repair service business owners such as plumbers,
electricians, locksmiths and auto mechanics. There
are other kinds of services that will be interested
too, such as ambulance companies, towing services,
volunteer fire departments, survey organizations,
and customer complaint departments of virtually every
business in your area. By all means, don't for get
the doctors, dentists and other professionals.
A lot of beginners start by providing
service only for theses intermittent users. These
people "put out the word" that if they can
be reached at their regular number after 4 or 5 rings,
the caller should dial the number of their answering
service. The answering service, which in this case
is just a housewife answering her home phone, takes
the caller's message and either relays it to the customer
or holds it until he checks in with her. Very simple,
very easy and very profitable.
Usually after such a "shoestring"
operation has 15 or 20 such customers, it's necessary
to install a phone with multiple incoming lines. The
cost and questions of the phone company can be allayed
by purchasing your own telephone and explaining that
you have several teenagers in the family. However,
once you have 35 to 50 customers, it's time to expand
into a commercial operation complete with switch board
and hired operators.
The average rates to charge for your
service should be about $40 per month for a specified
number of calls - usually 70 to 75 - with a surcharge
of 25 cents for each call beyond that number. Other
calls such as "wake-up calls" and reminder
calls for appointments, are usually billed on a "per
call" basis at about 35 cents per call.
Most telephone answering services provide
a variety of other services to keep their operators
busy during the times when there are no incoming calls.
These services range from typing, envelope addressing,
computer input services, envelope stuffing, subscription
soliciting and order fulfillment for mail order operators
to reviewing books for publishing agents.
In recent years some have even included
a private post office, mail-drop and mail forwarding
services. The important thing
is to keep your phone agents busy doing some kind of
work that makes money for you. When you decide to
lease an office and get going, complete with switchboard
- it's important that you try to get as close to the
telephone company's switching or exchange station
as possible. This is due to the mileage charges it
will cost you for land lines.
Also remember that each exchange station
handles prefixes limited to customers
within a certain radius of that station. What all
of this means that if most of the business in your
area have a 234 and 345 prefix, you'll want to locate
your answering services offices as close to the station
serving theses prefixes as possible. Basic installation
and set-up of one switchboard will cost close to $4,000.
Generally a metro population of 35,000
people will support a telephone answering service
hoping for $50,000 per year; 75,OOO to 80,000 people
will be needed for $100,000, and 150,000 people for
$200,000 per year or more. For more help and further
information, it would be wise to contact the Associated
Telephone Answering Exchange, Inc. This organization,
the industry's watchdog group, can update you on current
practices and trends.
Meanwhile in setting up your own facilities,
keep your cost in line with a realistic view of your
first year's anticipated income. It shouldn't be too
difficult to find low-cost rental space in an older
building not far from the telephone company's exchange
building - the telephone company is usually just as
reluctant to pay high rent as you are. Locating in
an older, less than "beautiful" building
should not detract from your business because few
of your customers will ever actually see your offices.
Most will sign up for your services either through
your in-person sales calls on them, or your telephone
soliciting efforts, and send their payment in by mail.
You'll need 125 square feet of space
for each switchboard you plan to eventually install.
Also plan for a small reception area which can also
double as a rest area for your operators and general
office area for bookkeeping, billing and other administrative
functions. Be sure there are convenient rest room
facilities as well.
Before installation of your first switchboard,
the phone company will require an inspection of your
office, mainly to determine if the floor is strong
enough to support the weight of the switchboard. Save
yourself a lot of frustration by explaining this to
the real estate agents or building managers before
they start showing you what's available. The best
thing is to ask for certified copies of the original
building blueprints or previous inspection reports,
and have these in hand when you contact the phone
company.
Once you are ready to go, consider
the attitudes and feelings of the people who will
be working long hours on the switchboards for you
- invest in some cheery paint for the walls, non-glare
lighting, carpeting for the floors and a few wall
prints, pictures or other decorations. Look around
for good used office furniture and buy or lease only
what is absolutely essential. A pocket calculator
and a used manual typewriter will work fine until
you get the business running on a dependably profitable
basis.
When you order your first switchboard,
listen to the telephone company's instructions, read
the operating manual and attend their training sessions.
The more you know about the equipment, the easier
it's going to be to operate it, and the more you'll
under stand your profit potentials.
The traditional telephone company switchboard
is known as the model 557 or TAS-100. This board handles
100 incoming secretarial lines and 15 office trunk
lines. With this board, you have the capabilities
of receiving incoming calls and making out going calls
at the same time. You also have a business answering
line which can be used as your number for customers
wanting to use your number as their business number
and/or for special events such as a special number
of survey replies or telephone orders such as advertised
on television for one-time-only sales promotions.
Even though you have the capabilities
of 100 incoming lines, you shouldn't activate more
than 5 or 10 more than your actual customer list,
it's then a simple matter for the phone company to
activate or "tie-in" according to your needs.
Your rental/lease payments to the phone company for
equipment includes all maintenance, so when ever you
have a problem or something isn't working properly
to suit your needs, call and ask the phone company
to send a repairman.
Some of the extras you can get with
your board includes a "secrecy switch."
This feature prevents an operator from listening in
if a customer has already picked up his phone after
the operator has answered. The customer could then
request the operator to hang up and conduct whatever
conversation he wants with the caller.
Another feature is the "position-splitting"
key. This involves plugging in a second head set and
simply turning the key to enable two operators to
work the same board during an especially busy period.
When your customers want to call to check with you
for any messages, you can have them call their own
number if they are calling from a different number,
or pre-designated trunk line. Most answering service
owners experiment both ways until they decide upon
the system that works best for them. Which ever method
is finally chosen should be decided upon with the
efficiency of the operators in mind.
In addition to your switchboard, you
should install a time clock and message racks. These
are ideally located above or on top of your switchboard.
The operator then takes the call, jots down the message,
punches the time clock and then quickly slips it into
the customer+s message box. When the customer calls
in for his messages, the operator retrieves the messages
from his message box, reads them to him, again punches
the time clock with each message slip, and drops them
into a "dead message" box.
You should keep these message slips
for totaling at billing time, so it's a good idea
to have each operator file them in your customer folders
as they finish their shift on the board. Retention
of these message slips for at least 30 days is not
required, but it is a good policy to practice. You
may find a customer will want to check a message received
or double-check his billing against your records.
Basically, your message rack can be
either pigeon-hole compartments in a wooden box designed
and built to fit your space, or lazy-Susan clips similar
to what any restaurants use for fast food orders.
At any rate, you shouldn't have any problems in finding
what you need on the open market.
It isn't necessary that you have specially
designed or printed message slips, but you should
have a plentiful supply available and within easy
access to your operators. Simple 4x5 inch pads should
be all you'll need, and if you'll check with your
local quick print shops, you'll find most of them
willing to make up a thousand or so pads of 50-100
pages each, from scrap paper, for almost next to nothing.
Another essential to plan on - buy in wholesale lots
and keep handy for your operators - is pens. It may
be exasperating until the business is on a sound profitability
basis, but in a busy month, one operator can easily
go through 100 or more pens. Don't fight the how's
and why's, just charge it up as a business expense
and order more pens.
You'll need some form of maintaining
basic customer information such as address, name and
number to contact during an emergency and any special
answering instructions. For this, simply go with 3x5
or 4x5 index cards and place them in each customer's
message slot for easy operator reference. Many services
have these cards laminated in plastic to prevent them
from getting dirty or deteriorating with constant
use.
Efficiency is the name of the road
leading to profits in any small business, so when
you begin with one switchboard, make sure you have
that position-splitting key, and that you balance
the board - half of them on one side and half on the
other side. This will enable you to put two operators
on that one board in times of emergency. Your customer
lines must be distributed according to usage across
the board for maximum efficiency of your operation.
Each time a customer "signs"
for your service, you should have him sign a simple
contract that specifies the name and address of the
firm to be billed for the service, and the typed name
as well as the signature of the person authorizing
the service. There should also be space on this contract
for alternate phone numbers, names and addresses as
well as phone numbers of persons to contact in case
of an emergency, and any special answering instructions
the client may want you to use. Don't forget to include
a clause requiring a 30-day notification of cancellation
by either party to the contract. It's also a good
idea to state that a full month's payment must be
made for any partial month's usage, in order to
cover any disconnect charges. You'll probably want
to stipulate that the last month's base charges are
to be paid at the time of service approval, in order
to enhance your working capital situation.
Check with the phone company - find
out if they or you are to bill the customer for hook-up
charges, and the line into your switchboard. By all
means get everything written out and fully explained
in the contract. You will be money ahead by paying
a good contract attorney to put all that you want
into a legal contract that not only protects you,
but also is binding upon your customers.
One other item of paperwork you should
have is a good
business insurance policy including an Errors &
Omissions Insurance Policy. This protects you and your
phone agents against any liability
from mistakes or missed messages - very good to have,
and available at very low cost through the Associated
Telephone Answering Exchange by special arrangement
with Lloyd's of London. Your other insurance needs
are those basic to any business. Always shop around
for the best rates.
In the beginning, you and your spouse
or partner can operate a telephone answering service.
However, we strongly suggest that you add to your
operator staff just as quickly as you customer list
warrants. The longer you try to operate with just
two
people, the longer it's, going to take you to achieve
real profitability.
Remember you want a 24x7 full service
operation. This will require at least three full-time
operators for your board, plus at least one relief
operator - and don't forget about commission sales
people.
Ideally, you should try to hire people
with telephone switchboard experience, but in order
to get these people, you may have to offer short-shifts,
moonlighting jobs to regular telephone company operators.
It will take some time to train inexperienced people,
so bear this in mind when you begin looking for people
to hire. It's always a good policy to hire your new,
inexperienced people for the evening shift. Break
them in by having them "sit in" with an
experienced operator during the day-time hours, and
have someone close at hand during their first week
on the evening shift before turning them loose to
handle the board by themselves.
The most important qualifications to
look for in an operator are voice and attitude. The
voice must be pleasant and sound alert, interested
and ready to help the caller. Warn your operators
never to allow their "personal feelings"
to show through when they are answering the phone.
They represent your business and your customers. As
such, they must project a professional manner at all
times.
Teach your telephone agents to answer the
phones with a "happy smile" in their voices.
Train them to take their time with the callers, and
get the message right by reading the message back
to the caller, and also be sure they ask the caller
for the correct spelling of his or her name. Unless
specifically instructed otherwise by a customer, insist
that your operators never allow an incoming call to
ring more than twice before answering it. Hardly any
thing frustrates anyone calling a business number
more than a telephone that seemingly rings forever
before someone answers it.
You can start your inexperienced people
at $10/hr, and your experienced operators at $13/hr.
Try to explain to them that the success of your business
depends on them, and as your business prospers, so
will their monetary rewards . Get them involved and
interested in helping you succeed.
It's going to take aggressive selling
on your part to reach success with a venture of this
kind. You must spend at least 50% of your time making
sales calls - if you can't or don't wish to do any
personal selling, then you will have to hire at least
two full time sales people to take your place. In
addition to your own sales efforts or people who fill
your shoes in this area, you should hire at least
one other full time salesperson. You should plan to
have someone making telephone solicitations for at
least 3 hours out of each working day.
Selling your service - building an
ever larger customer list - is the name of the game
for real success. You've got the start-up information,
and from here on, the rest depends on your own marketing.