Author Topic: Things to do when calling to order...  (Read 4617 times)

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stanthedevil

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Things to do when calling to order...
« on: December 16, 2006, 06:03:36 PM »
Inspired by the doctor's office thread (and the looooooooong week I had at work), I thought I'd add this one.

In today's age it is not unusual to conduct transactions over the phone or via the internet.  When making a purchase over the internet, feel free to be as unorganized as you wish as the only person's time your are wasting is your own.  However, when you are calling to order something over the phone, say tickets to an extremely popular musical the day the box office opens, I have a couple of tips for you.

1.  Have your calendar ready.  Ideally you would have picked a date already, but I realize that the advertising was not 100% clear about days and times.  In that case, have a couple of potential days pre-selected so that the sale can move along smoothly.  And with three people at the window and three calls on hold I cannot check each one of thirteen shows to see which one has the best seats.  Also, I do not care about your social calendar.  I want to know what date you can come on, not which day Susie has dance class or which evening your and Mr. Patron play bridge.

2.  If you've never been to our venue, please either look at our seating layout on-line or come in person to purchase your tickets.  As stated above, with so many other people, I cannot explain the seating to you in great detail, especially since it is very confusing to do so verbally to someone who has never visited us before.

3.  Know how many seats you need.  Seriously, it wastes everyone's time when you call up and I ask how many seats you need and you have to run through all of the names of the people who are coming at least twice.  When I ask, "How many seats do you need?"  The answer is, "Four (or two or eighteen)".

4.  Have your credit card ready.  Again, we are extremely busy and it is very rude for you to ask me to wait while you take several minutes to run out to your car and get your credit card.  If I were allowed to hang up on you, I probably would.

5.  For the love of all that is good and holy, please read your credit card in groups of four cardinal numbers. 5424 1212 3434 5656 should not be read "fifty-four, twenty-four" or "five, four, two....four, one, two..."  The number should be read "five, four, two, four...three, four, three, four...etc"

6.  Please don't interrupt my "spiel" to ask a question.  Nine times out of ten I will give you the information that you need.  If you would have waited until I finished my sentence, I would have answered your question.

7.  Please listen to all of the information that I give you.  The information is important and I'm certainly not saying it for my benefit.  (See below)

8.  All sales are final.  I told you that before we completed the order.  Do not call back five minutes later and ask to cancel the sale because you didn't realize the tickets were so expensive.  I told you both the individual price and the total for all of the tickets.  When I once again inform you that all sales are final don't be a brat and declare that you'll just dispute the charges.  Be an adult and take the consequences for your lack of listening skills.  If you had done that and asked nicely, I probably would have just voided the sale without any hassle.  We're all human and I don't mind making exceptions for polite adults.

9.  After you've thrown a temper tantrum the day before, don't call back and try to order the same tickets.  I may have taken 200 orders yesterday, but I remember you.  You are special.  Very, very special.  Yes, we did actually void your sale, so no, the excellent tickets I had available yesterday are no longer available.

10.  Don't yell at me, lie to me, or blame me for your mistakes.  Doing this does not endear you to the staff in the office.  We may not have an actual list, but our memories are long.  The next time you need a favor because you accidently ordered tickets on the wrong night, we really won't be able to help you.

11.  In general be polite and don't waste my time.  We have hundreds of patrons who manage to do this.  They call prepared with a date, number of tickets, and their credit cards.  They don't gripe about the seating availability.  They place their orders and move on with their days.  But it is you, the few who this list is aimed, who make my day very, very long.

Anything else?
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Clara Bow

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Re: Things to do when calling to order...
« Reply #1 on: December 16, 2006, 06:20:44 PM »
And please, for the love of all that is right and holy, do not sing along or talk during the performance, as I may be forced to ruin your whole evening....
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Chocolate Cake

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Re: Things to do when calling to order...
« Reply #2 on: December 16, 2006, 06:23:15 PM »
All I can say is that "Will Call" should not take nearly as long as it does.  So, I am presuming that some of the idiots you run across when selling the tickets over the phone, get to the Will Call desk and try to change arrangements -- either where they are sitting, how many tickets they are buying and not-buying, or something!   So, my suggestion is:

1)  If you have tickets waiting for you at the Will Call office, find out the answers to your questions ahead of time on the venue's website, and have your credit card ready so you can pay and GET OUT OF THE WAY!

2)  Also, not everyone in your party has to wait in the Will Call line.  Send one representative (the person under whose credit card the tickets were reserved) to get the tickets and stay off to the side out of the way.




FoxPaws

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Re: Things to do when calling to order...
« Reply #3 on: December 17, 2006, 01:04:09 AM »
Re: Will Call

Either print out or write down the confirmation number and name you're leaving the tickets under. You bought these things six weeks ago, it's easy to forget this stuff. Extra doubly important if someone besides yourself is picking them up. And if you aren't the person who ordered them and have to call to find out what name they're under, kindly step out of line to do so.
I am so a lady. And if you say I'm not, I'll slug you. - Cindy Brady

IndianInlaw

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Re: Things to do when calling to order...
« Reply #4 on: December 17, 2006, 09:03:24 AM »
Don't ask us to mail tickets for tonight's performance.

(yes, people have requested this)

(many people)

Suze

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Re: Things to do when calling to order...
« Reply #5 on: December 17, 2006, 09:48:30 AM »
I've got a good one for you all --- My girlfriend works for a company that  makes custom envelopes and checks.  A few years ago when UPS (or was it Federal Express) was on strike they had a customer INSIST that they next day air their order to them.

The kicker to this is that the airport and the customer WERE IN THE SAME CITY!!

I just have visions of the old comadies of going in one side of a car and out the other......

She said it took an hour and 3 supervisors to try to convince him that it would be faster if he came up and got it himself (50 mile drive one way) There were a lot of their costomers doing just that if they were in a hour or two drive to the plant.

No they still had to next day air the thing,(at a massive shipping charge) I can imanage the fun they had at the airport. (lets see put this on a plane and take it right off?)

Some people are just not to be believed!!!

Suze
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FoxPaws

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Re: Things to do when calling to order...
« Reply #6 on: December 17, 2006, 12:56:25 PM »
I've got news for you. I work for one of the aforementioned shipping companies and you would be amazed at how many people pay beacoup bucks to "ship" something across town. In our particular company, every package is routed through a single central sorting facility even if the sender and addressee are only blocks apart. The package just gets a round trip plane ride before being delivered. (I believe most package handling companies work the same way.)

I can understand large corporations doing this, as the volume pricing they get probably makes this cheaper than using a local courier service, but it always blew my mind when people did it for individual packages.

Oh, and for the record: No, we cannot back date the paperwork so it looks like you sent it yesterday. :P
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Lunadiana75

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Re: Things to do when calling to order...
« Reply #7 on: December 18, 2006, 10:04:30 AM »
Don't ask us to mail tickets for tonight's performance.

(yes, people have requested this)

(many people)

Oh my, that one made me laugh out loud.  I guess people have forgotten that snail mail IS NOT email, it is not immediate!
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behindbj

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Re: Things to do when calling to order...
« Reply #8 on: December 18, 2006, 10:52:03 AM »
I try to be the most pleasant, non-time-wasting customer there ever was when ordering by phone - because whatever problem I may have generally was not caused by the person on the other end of the phone.  If it was, there are other ways of dealing with it other than to be a rude maniac.

I get a kick out of people who complain that there is a separate line, inside the theater (once we've entered with our tickets) for season ticket holders to handle business for future shows (or other concerns for that night's performance. 

No, we were not let in without a ticket.

And, yes - I am special as I have decided that I would like to put my entertainment money into this series of shows.  Just like you may have priority access to the golf course or whatever else you're on the "special" list for outside of the theater.

And, no - the show is not just like the movie - any movie or any show.  And please stop discussing it during the show.  It tells me just how little you go to shows and how you don't know how to behave.  That, and the flip-flops and torn t-shirt you're wearing.  I don't mean to sound like a snob (as I am not), but there are rules for various things and venues.

I went to a tractor pull (just to use an example of something the opposite of going to the theater - I guess...) and asked the person with whom I was going if I needed to know anything special.  I did.  And I went with the flow - and had a ball.

behindbj

ginlyn32

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Re: Things to do when calling to order...
« Reply #9 on: December 18, 2006, 12:30:41 PM »
.
« Last Edit: October 16, 2011, 08:21:56 PM by ginlyn32 »
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Telmereth

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Re: Things to do when calling to order...
« Reply #10 on: December 18, 2006, 03:31:55 PM »
I hear you! I used to work in a busy restaurant as a waitress and it always seemed to me that was walking past the phone when it rang.
Here are a few more for the list:
1. Please ascertain the date on which you want to visit us, and the number in your party BEFORE you phone the restaurant. I have absolutely no idea what day Cousin Helen said she would be free or if your Great Aunt Muriel will be able to attend!
2. Please speak clearly! I am answering a phone close to a lot of noisy diners and I can't really make a reservation for Mr *mumblemumble* now can I?!
3. Please don't question my competence! No I am not making it up when I tell you that there is no room for your party! I am not discriminating against you because of your name or address or the sound of your voice, but if you keep yelling at me like that, I might just decide to!

Argh....

IndianInlaw

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Re: Things to do when calling to order...
« Reply #11 on: December 18, 2006, 11:53:47 PM »
Lunadiana, this was in 1980, before email was even invented!

Slartibartfast

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Re: Things to do when calling to order...
« Reply #12 on: December 19, 2006, 02:21:49 PM »
I have a couple of tips for you.

1.  Have your calendar ready.  Ideally you would have picked a date already, but I realize that the advertising was not 100% clear about days and times.  In that case, have a couple of potential days pre-selected so that the sale can move along smoothly.  And with three people at the window and three calls on hold I cannot check each one of thirteen shows to see which one has the best seats . . .

2.  If you've never been to our venue, please either look at our seating layout on-line or come in person to purchase your tickets.  As stated above, with so many other people, I cannot explain the seating to you in great detail, especially since it is very confusing to do so verbally to someone who has never visited us before.

...

5.  For the love of all that is good and holy, please read your credit card in groups of four cardinal numbers. 5424 1212 3434 5656 should not be read "fifty-four, twenty-four" or "five, four, two....four, one, two..."  The number should be read "five, four, two, four...three, four, three, four...etc"

6.  Please don't interrupt my "spiel" to ask a question.  Nine times out of ten I will give you the information that you need.  If you would have waited until I finished my sentence, I would have answered your question.

I agree with the others, but I wouldn't demand these particular ones from customers, especially new or infrequent patrons.  I patronize your theater (or somewhere like it) because I CAN talk to a person, not a machine, and I can ask things like "if I went Thursday instead of Friday, could I get seats in the center section?" or give vague requests like "Could you put me somewhere my five-year-old would be able to see?"  If your venue has these things available online, I will do the research myself - but if you don't, I expect part of my higher-than-a-movie-priced ticket to go toward a few extra seconds of help over the phone.

I know how it can get when you have a "spiel" and you aren't even thinking about the individual words anymore - but if I'm calling to ask you whether I can reserve seats so Aunt June can pay for them tomorrow, I don't want "Allsalesarefinalyouwillnotreceiveacreditonyourcardifyoucancelwithin48hoursoftheshowWillCallticketswillbeatthecounter" - I want an answer that pertains to my specific question.  Yes, you may feel your 2-minute recitation answered my question - but I want to know that you put some thought into it, and *you* - the one who works in the business and actually knows the regulations - interpreted the answer-buried-in-the-monologue the same way I did.

The credit card thing is something I do - I never read my credit card aloud in groups of four if I can help it.  Unfortunately, not everyone out there is trustworthy, and I don't want to make it any easier for someone to memorize the number (or write it down) at the same time they type it.  Reading it one digit at a time at a steady pace makes it hard to memorize, but easy to type.

heathert

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Re: Things to do when calling to order...
« Reply #13 on: December 19, 2006, 07:52:57 PM »
Speaking as a person who work in customer service for an insurance company, there are things we have to tell people for legal reasons, so it does help if they listen first and if they didn't understand it, ask the question after we finish, rather than interrupt us.  Otherwise, we may have to answer that part of the question and then start all over to make sure you understood what we were saying, which seems to waste time for both of us, you know?

Heather