The present invention relates to telecommunications systems and methods and, more particularly, to a method for offering, selling, and configuring new services by phone.
Some of the most significant expenses in providing telecommunications services involve getting a potential customer to the point where the customer is receiving and paying for the services. There are four major components to sign-up expenses, (1) making the customer aware of the service, (2) committing the customer to a purchase, (3) setting up the service, and (4) billing for the service. Methods for these sign-up steps include advertising (direct mail, TV, newspaper, web sites), telemarketing, and email, each representing significant costs. What is needed is an inexpensive method of selling and configuring new services.
In accordance with one aspect of the invention, the aforementioned problem has been solved and a technological advance achieved by using an automated sales agent to sell and configure services for customers. The invention works by “up-selling” (offering an existing customer additional services at an additional cost) new features to customers who are already using one or more services. The agent makes a potential customer aware of a new service by playing an announcement, inviting the customer to accept or reject the offer, and then, if the customer accepts, configuring the customer's service and adding a corresponding charge to the customer's bill.
In the following description, numerous details are set forth to provide an understanding of the present invention. However, it is to be understood by those skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these details and that numerous variations or modifications from the described embodiments may be possible.
Either before, during, or after the execution of Service A, an announcement is played to the customer in block 120 to advise him/her of a new service, Service B. The customer is then invited to accept the new service or reject the new service in block 130. In block 140, a determination is made as to whether the customer's response corresponds to “accept” or “reject (equivalently, “yes” or “no,” respectively). In one embodiment of the invention, the yes/no determination is made by the agent recognizing a voice response (e.g. saying “yes” or “no”). Alternatively, the agent may accept a touch-tone response (pressing “1” for “yes” or “2” for “no”). Alternatively, the agent may accept either voice or touch-tone. The customer is advantageously prompted in block 130 to provide the form (voice or touch-tone) of the response that the agent will accept. If a touch-tone (also called DTMF) response is expected, a touch-tone detector is used to determine the customer response. If a spoken response such as the words “yes,” “no,” “accept,” or “reject” is expected, an automatic speech recognizer is used to determine the customer response. If the customer rejects the new service, Service A continues in block 180.
If the customer accepts the service, then the system optionally prompts for additional information, if necessary, in block 150. Additional information may include a second confirmation to insure that the customer wants to Service B and did not respond by mistake. Additional information may also be a credit card number for billing, an email address (for, say, a service that sends voice mail to a subscriber's email account), or personal information to verify the customer's identity. In block 160, the agent configures Service B for the customer. For example, if Service B is voicemail, the agent may set up a voicemail box, ask the customer to enter a password, and configure the network so that unanswered calls will be directed to voicemail. For certain complex services or where human action is required, the customer may be transferred to a CSR (customer service representative) as an alternative to automatic configuration in block 160. If it is not practical to configure the service (for example, if a manual step is involved, essential systems are unavailable, or if authorization is required) in real-time, the service is scheduled in block 160 to be configured at a later time.
In block 170, charges for Service B are added to the customer's bill or are scheduled to be added to the bill. The service offer in blocks 120 and 130 may include an incentive such as a time-restricted free trial or a discount during an introductory time period, in which case a data record is created that will cause the correct charges to be added to the bill at the appropriate times.
Once the up-sell process is complete, Service A resumes, if appropriate, in block 180. Alternatively, the customer may begin using Service B or an introduction to Service B immediately.
In one embodiment, Service A is broadcast voicemail, where the new service is announced in a voicemail message sent to a block of customers. In alternative embodiments, Service A may be any telephone service. In the example of broadcast voicemail, the voicemail message advertises Service B and prompts the customer to accept or reject the service. In one embodiment of the invention, the customer is required to accept or reject Service B before the customer is able to continue to use Service A. In another embodiment, the customer may continue to use the Service A, including listening to other voicemail messages, but cannot delete the broadcast voicemail containing an advertisement for Service B until the customer has accepted or rejected Service B.
One illustrative prompt (or, in the case of broadcast voicemail, an illustrative voice message) is as follows:
“Hello, <subscriber name>. I've gone back to school and learned a new trick! I can now give you a wake up call in the morning and then read your calendar to you. I can remind you of appointments or any bills that may be due and then offer to reschedule your meetings or pay your bills—all by voice command. Would you like to try the additional service free of charge for 30-days? Just say “yes” and the feature will be automatically added to your account and the billing program will be notified to charge an extra $1.95 each month unless you cancel within 30-days via the web.”
For purposes of the current invention, a service, as referenced in the text description of the current invention and as Service A and Service B in
For illustrative purposes, decision block 140 is shown as a binary response by the customer; however, for some services and in response to certain customer responses, it may be necessary to expand the accept/reject portion of the up-sell method to include providing additional information, treating error conditions, and responding to complex (more than simple yes/no) customer input. One example of a more sophisticated version of decision block 140 is shown in
The flowchart in
If the customer agrees to learn more (the “yes” path from decision block 220), additional information is provided in block 230 (block 230 is optional and is only necessary if the customer needs more information). The customer is invited to accept or reject the offer in block 240 and a determination of the customer's response is made in decision block 250. If the customer accepts (using a yes/no accept/reject determination as described above), control transfers to block 150 in
The specific sequence of prompts and responses in
It is to be understood that this application discloses a system and method using telephone prompts to sell new services to customers using existing services. While the invention is particularly illustrated and described with reference to example embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form, details, and applications may be made therein. For example, prompts and other information may be provided via recorded announcements or via text-to-speech synthesis. Other responses may be elicited from a prospective customer other than “yes” or “no.” For example, the agent may offer several services and invite the prospective customer to accept a service or to learn more by saying the name of the service. In one alternative embodiment, the customer's response is sufficient to offer and bill for service. In an alternative embodiment, the customer is connected to a CSR for verification. In another alternative embodiment, a recording is kept of the customer response to confirm that the customer did authorize the new service and associated charges.