We Got Disconnected…Now What? The Etiquette of Returning Dropped Calls
February 28, 2013One of our most popular posts is the article we wrote on telephone etiquette. In it, I shared a few telephone answering tips to ensure that you’re presenting yourself, and your business, in the most professional manner—at all times.
Good telephone manners go a long way, and one of the things people really struggle with is this scenario:
You’re on a business call and you’re deep into a really great conversation and suddenly you realize you’re talking – but no one is there! In mid-conversation, the call was dropped. Then, here’s the sequence of events that follow:
- You hang up and immediately call the person back.
- Your call gets automatically directed to the person’s voicemail.
- As you’re leaving a message asking for a call back, you hear a beep on your phone – oops, an incoming call.
- You hang up, hoping you can catch the call.
- Too late, the incoming call goes straight to your voicemail. “Hello George, this is Sam, looks like we lost connection. Give me a call back.”
- You dial again–just as Sam has heard your voicemail and is dialing you back.
- And you’re back into George’s voicemail box.
- Now you both hang up and wait for the call.
- At the other end, Sam is also waiting.
Talk about a mess! After a few rounds of this back and forth, the entire conversation has been lost.
Who should call back and who should hold off?
The etiquette for situation where a call is disconnected is simple: Whoever initiated the call is responsible for calling back.
With so many of us using cell phones to communicate in business, remembering this simple tip will save a lot of confusion and wasted time the next time you’re disconnected.
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