Have you ever had the feeling that your calls are being labeled as spam and there’s nothing you can do about it?
The fact is, spam labels are often applied as a trailing indicator. If you're only looking at spam labels to gauge your call reputation, you're missing some of the early indicators for poor reception of your calls. But the good news is that if you’re using the analytics console in Hiya Connect, you can identify and make changes to your calls before they get labeled as spam by the carrier.
Whether you’re calling customers or prospects, your call recipients all have a phone carrier and that carrier is likely to use a third-party analytics service (such as Hiya) that provides data the carrier uses to determine if a call is spam. For example, Hiya analyzes millions of calls every day looking for patterns that indicate a call may be spam. That information is provided to Hiya’s carrier partners who make the final determination to label it as “spam,” “spam likely,” “fraud likely,” or any other label the carrier uses.
Customers using Hiya Connect have access to a robust analytics console that gives them insight into how call recipients are reacting to calls. Below are data points in the analytics console that indicate your calls could soon attract a spam label.
As seen in the analytics console of Hiya Connect (“Reputation” tab), a high number of blocked calls and spam reports from call recipients on Aug. 5, resulted in increased calls labeled as spam by the carrier on Aug. 6.
The “Call feedback” tab in the analytics console of Hiya Connect.
Related blog post: Beyond answer rates: call duration
The “Call traffic” tab in the analytics console of Hiya Connect.
Related blog post: Beyond answer rates: call duration
There’s a wealth of information in the analytics console in Hiya Connect, information that can help you make changes to your calls before they receive a spam label by the carrier.
For example, if you look at your data and see a spike in spam reports or blocked calls, that’s an indicator that a spam label by the carrier may soon follow. To see what the problem may be, read through the call feedback to discover why users are reporting the calls. It could be something simple. Maybe users are saying that the caller phoned too late at night, so you need to adjust the time frame for your calls. Or, maybe several users report that when they picked up the phone no one was there. In that case you may want to adjust your dialer so there is a shorter delay.
The analytics console can also zero in on specific phone numbers. In some smaller calling operations, each agent might be assigned an outbound calling number. It could be that just one or two agents are generating high volumes of spam reports and blocked calls. If so, read the call feedback to see why customers are dissatisfied.
For additional insight on why calls are reported as spam and what you can do to turn that around, download our eBook below.
10 Tips to Improve Your Reputation and Get Your Business Calls Answered