Welcome to YLOAN.COM
yloan.com » Gadgets and Gizmos » Interactive Voice Response and You
Gadgets and Gizmos misc Design Bankruptcy Licenses performance choices memorabilia bargain carriage tour medical insurance data

Interactive Voice Response and You

Interactive Voice Response and You

Interactive Voice Response and You

When I need to order a prescription refill I call the pharmacy and give my order. They tell me when it will be ready for pickup and ask me if that time is okay. If I want it before that time I tell them. I do this but I don't talk to a person. I talk to a computer that asks me questions such as: "Will there be anything else?"

This system, known as Interactive Voice Response or IVR has become an everyday occurrence in the telecom world. Think of IVR as a voice computer. Where a computer has a keyboard for entering information, an IVR uses remote touchtone telephones. Where a computer has a screen for showing the results, an IVR uses snippets of recordings of human voice or a synthesized voice (computerized voice). Recordings are used for repetitive messages, "Thanks for calling ABC Company. Push one for our sales department. Push two for our service department." Synthesized voice (also called Text-To-Speech) is used for reading information from files which contain information that can't be put into neat "sound bites," like numbers and dates, e.g. reading my incoming email. Whatever a computer can do, an IVR can too from looking up airline schedules to moving calls around an automatic call distributor (ACD). The only limitation on an IVR is that you can't present as many alternatives on a phone as you can on a screen. The caller's brain simply won't remember more than a few. With IVR, you have to present the menus in smaller, cascading chunks.

The benefits of Interactive Voice Response are obvious. By automating the retrieval and processing of information by phone, you can "give data a voice" and "add intelligence to the phone call." By doing that, you can put information to work. The classic IVR "killer app" takes an existing database (e.g., a magazine's article archives, a freight company's package-tracking system) and makes it available by phone (or other media, such as fax, e-mail, or DSVD Digital Simultaneous Voice and Data). You can automate telephone-based tasks. From "bank by phone" to "find my package" to "sell me an airline ticket," to "validate my new credit card," IVR gives access to and takes in information; performs record-keeping, and makes sales, 24 hours a day supplementing or standing in for human personnel. This results in cost reductions for personnel and allows customers to access information 24 hours a day - 7 days a week.

Businesses are currently using speech-enabled IVRs in the following ways: stock quotes and trading, package training, insurance claims, travel booking, pharmacy prescription refills, restaurant reservation information, banking, directory assistance, social services administration and delivery by government agencies. IVR has become so authentic people don't even realize they are talking to a computer.
Watch Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles And Enter The World Of Machines What is a Hedge Fund I Need 1500 Pounds Today - Make a Wish and Fulfil All Demands Extra Effort and Big Rewards Cheap Mobile Phone Deals - Impressive And Cheap Offers With Exclusive Gadgets Custom Perforated Metal And Cable Railing From Metal Fabrication Industry Foot and Ankle Problems Liquidity And How To Improve The Balance Sheet Slovakia vs Italy: World Cup Odds and Picks: 10:00am EST Organic Matter and Your Lawns Soil Federer And Murray As The Ultimate Challenge Fizzles Out Common Reasons Behind Pc Crash And Their Solution The Martha Stewart Stock Scandal: Misinformation Persists
print
www.yloan.com guest:  register | login | search IP(216.73.217.83) California / Rosemead Processed in 0.024266 second(s), 5 queries , Gzip enabled , discuz 5.5 through PHP 8.3.9 , debug code: 9 , 2918, 60,
Interactive Voice Response and You Rosemead