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predictive dialers and crm software
computer telephony software predictive dialer

Voice Broadcasting
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predictive dialers and crm software
computer telephony software predictive dialer

Automated Phone Survey Software
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Digital Phone Systems
Collection Predictive Dialer
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predictive dialers and crm software
Information

Customer Survey
IVR Phone Surveys
Touchphone Surveys
Phone Survey Software
Customer Surveys
IVR Call
Clinical IVR
Employee Opinion Survey
Automatic Surveys
Salary Survey
Customer Satisfaction Survey
Customer Service Surveys Opinion Survey
Automated IVR Survey
Political Survey
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Consumer Survey
Automatic Survey
Survey Dialers
Phone Surveying
Automatic IVR Surveys
IVR Survey Software
Survey Autodialer
Market Research Survey

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phone survey and customer surveys
ivr survey software solution

Automated Customer Surveys

Technology from Database Systems Corp. lets you develop IVR survey applications using our interactive voice response IVR solutions. Surveys can be initiated by outbound phone calls or can be a response to callers. Using our PACER and WIZARD phone systems with the Smart Message Dialer and survey software, we can call your survey prospects and play a highly focused and custom greeting. We then can give your survey audience the option to take your survey or even talk with a representative, leave a voice message, hear additional information, or simply decline to participate in the survey. The survey can accept touchphone response or can record each question response for later analysis. To view more information regarding our automated phone applications, please visit our Automatic Phone Survey solution web page.

The following is an article relating to automated survey techniques and products and services in our business.

Evaluating Customer Comments


The Business Research Lab

Many customer satisfaction surveys give customers the opportunity to provide comments. Evaluating each comment as it is returned will be helpful in understanding the needs of individual customers. However, you'll gain even more information if you review the comments in batches and attempt to uncover patterns in the responses through "coding" them..

This doesn't have to be rocket science. If you are dealing with a relatively small number of comments (less than two hundred or so), all that is necessary is to read through the comments once or twice and write down "categories" into which most of the comments would fit. Typical categories would include items such as speed, accuracy, courtesy, pricing, product, product availability, business hours, business location, etc. You should create one list for positive comments and a second list for negative ones, including the same categories in each. After you have developed the categories, you would review the comments again, this time recording a "tick mark" in the appropriate category for each comment. People often comment about more than one thing, so it is a good practice to break each comment into parts and enter a tick mark for each portion of a comment. So, if a comment says something like "It took too long for my food to be served and the waiter was very rude," you would code it in both the speed and courtesy categories of your negative comments list.

Once you have completed "coding" the comments, you can look for patterns. You would commonly see many of the same things identified as issues in the quantitative portion of the survey report (if you have a quantitative section). Often, the comments will provide you with more specific information about how to fix problems identified in the quantitative portion of a survey. However, it is not uncommon to uncover completely new issues by coding and reviewing comments. If this occurs, consideration should be given to modifying future questionnaires to specifically ask about such issues.

If you see a lot of references to particular employees, you should consider including employee names in both the positive and the negative comment coding sheets. You could then put a tick mark in the appropriate column for each positive or negative mention of an employee. If you do this, be sure to also place a tick mark in the appropriate "issues" category as well.

If you have many comments to code, it is helpful to use a data base program or a spreadsheet. Rows should represent each respondent and columns can represent categories. This approach also makes it easy to calculate what percentage of respondents mentioned items in a particular category.