Your department may have a specific manner of answering office phones. If so, please follow their guidelines. If, however, no office-specific way is presented, adopt the following methods for effective and efficient service.
- All incoming calls should be answered with "Vanderbilt Central Library, how may I help you?"
- All incoming calls should be answered:
- promptly
- personally, when possible (use voice mail only when necessary)
- professionally
- courteously
- If a visitor is talking with you in person and the telephone rings, excuse yourself to the visitor and answer the telephone. Ask the caller to wait a moment or offer to return the call.
- If a visitor approaches while you are on the telephone, excuse yourself briefly from the caller and acknowledge the visitor. Ask if the visitor can wait a moment while you finish the call.
Make an effort to give each caller your full attention.
- If the individual whom the caller requests is busy, offer to take a message or connect the caller to the individual's voice mail.
"Mr. Smith is away from his office. Would you like me to connect you to his voice mail?"
- Tranferring calls should be done only when necessary and in a positive, efficient manner.
- Listen carefully and attempt to fully understand the caller's needs.
- Complete the transfer quickly and correctly. Always give the caller the direct number.
To transfer a call, follow these procedures:
- Let the caller know you are transferring the call. Always give the caller the direct number.
- Give the caller the department name and extension that s/he is being transferred to, in case the call is disconnected.
- Announce the caller to the person to whom you are transferring the call and provide any information the caller has given.
"I will need to transfer you to the Admissions Office. The number is 555-5555 and they should be able to assist you."
- Note: All staff phone numbers are posted online on the library staff directory: https://www.library.vanderbilt.edu/staff/
- Taking telephone messages is a skill that saves time and is beneficial to both caller and recipient. If you need to take a message for someone, get as much information as possible. Include:
- Date/time of call
- Full name of the person calling
- Phone number
- Nature of the call
- Your name at the bottom of the message
While most callers will opt for voice mail over a written message, if you do need to take a message, take enough information to make the return call productive. If the individual the caller is trying to reach is out of the office for a length of time, let the caller know their message will not receive an immediate response.
When taking a message, avoid saying, "I'll have John call you back when he returns." A more appropriate response is, "I'll make sure John gets your message as soon as he returns."