Knowledge (XXG)

Operator messaging

Source đź“ť

74:
are encouraged to share with the caller such as business summary, website information, personal schedule, and other informational details. An alpha-dispatch service operator usually has no knowledge of the subscriber, except for their first and last name or company name, and serves only as a messaging bridge between the caller and the subscriber with the caller dictating what the operator should type as a message to the subscriber. Because of this difference, minimal training and supervising is required of the call center employees and therefore operator messaging service is much less expensive than full-service answering services. The low cost makes operator messaging an affordable alternative to voicemail.
39:“message center.” A message center or “message desk” was a centralized, manual answering service inside a company staffed by a few people, usually women, answering everyone's phones. Extensions that were busy or rang “no answer” would forward to the message center onto a device called a “call director”. The call director had a button for each extension in the company which would flash when that person's extension forwarded to the message center. A little label next to the button told the operator whose extension it was. 92:
technologies of voice messaging and text messaging as an alternative to voicemail service by using call forwarding features to redirect callers of your cell phone automatically to the operator messaging service after three or four unanswered rings. Operator messaging service providers remain profitable because the average call length is under 30 seconds and employees are often paid less than full-service answering service employees due to the limited training required.
47:
or a numerically coded special message, such as room numbers to report to, etc. However, alphanumeric pagers could only receive text messages when the message sender had installed software on their PC to dial into the publicly accessible modems operated by the paging service provider to then transmit their message over-the-air through the network of radio towers.
83:
in the same way as to pager service providers. Operators still follow the same answering procedures and have no idea if the subscriber is receiving the text message on a cell phone or a pager. The operator still serves as a "relay" or "bridge" for the caller to dictate their message to the operator messaging subscriber's device.
73:
Alpha-dispatch was never designed to replace a full-service answering service. Although both services will answer calls in a customer's name and advise the caller that the customer is unavailable, a full-service answering service will usually have additional information about the customer that they
82:
As the use of alphanumeric pagers declined in the mid-1990s and cell phone text messaging availability and reliability increased ever since, these well-established alpha-dispatch call centers adjusted their technology to allow live operators' messages to be transmitted to cellular service providers
46:
service providers created a subscription service offered in a variety of plans and options to meet the needs of a subscriber and the type of device used. In general, all pagers are given unique telephone numbers so that callers could dial in and send a numeric message, such as their callback number
38:
In the 1970s and early 1980s, the cost of making a phone call decreased and more business communication was done by phone. As corporations grew and labor rates increased, the ratio of secretaries to employees decreased. The initial solution to the phone communication problem for businesses was the
91:
Although e-mail capabilities have been extended to alphanumeric pagers and cellular text messaging, the operator messaging services are used by individuals who are not located near a computer or where sending a text message may be dangerous or impractical. Live operator messaging marries the
55:
Alpha Dispatch service is best described as enhanced numeric paging. It is a service that consists of live operators who answer incoming calls and input the callers' messages on a computer, then transmit the message using the
60:
to the paging provider's radio towers. Alphanumeric pagers receive the messages in the form of words and numbers. Messages are sequentially numbered and archived for later reference if required to be re-sent.
30:, applying to an answering service call center who focuses on one specific scripting style that has grown out of the alphanumeric pager history. 57: 210: 65:
was one of the larger paging providers who offered this service add-on to their alphanumeric pager customers.
241: 231: 246: 167: 131: 159: 151: 111: 132:"E Mergency C Alls N Ot R Equiring an U Rgent a Mbulance R Esponse : E Xpert C Onsensus" 143: 236: 214: 27: 196: 184: 23: 225: 171: 101: 147: 155: 163: 207: 42:
As wireless communication technologies increased in the late 1980s, the
62: 106: 43: 187:. medicalansweringservice.net; cited 27 May 2014 87:Rise of Operator Messaging in the 21st Century 8: 78:Operator Messaging Extends to Text Messaging 69:Difference between full Answering Service 122: 51:Message Center becomes Alpha-dispatch 7: 14: 58:Telocator Alphanumeric Protocol 130:Woollard, Malcolm (Jan 2003). 1: 263: 213:November 21, 2008, at the 136:Prehospital Emergency Care 148:10.1080/10903120390936626 197:Call Center IVR example 22:is the term, similar to 16:Messaging answer service 20:Operator Messaging 112:Answering service 254: 217: 205: 199: 194: 188: 182: 176: 175: 127: 262: 261: 257: 256: 255: 253: 252: 251: 222: 221: 220: 215:Wayback Machine 206: 202: 195: 191: 183: 179: 129: 128: 124: 120: 98: 89: 80: 71: 53: 36: 28:Voice Messaging 17: 12: 11: 5: 260: 258: 250: 249: 244: 239: 234: 224: 223: 219: 218: 200: 189: 185:Unsecured Text 177: 142:(3): 384–391. 121: 119: 116: 115: 114: 109: 104: 97: 94: 88: 85: 79: 76: 70: 67: 52: 49: 35: 32: 24:Text Messaging 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 259: 248: 245: 243: 240: 238: 235: 233: 230: 229: 227: 216: 212: 209: 204: 201: 198: 193: 190: 186: 181: 178: 173: 169: 165: 161: 157: 153: 149: 145: 141: 137: 133: 126: 123: 117: 113: 110: 108: 105: 103: 100: 99: 95: 93: 86: 84: 77: 75: 68: 66: 64: 59: 50: 48: 45: 40: 34:Early history 33: 31: 29: 25: 21: 242:Radio paging 203: 192: 180: 139: 135: 125: 90: 81: 72: 54: 41: 37: 19: 18: 232:Online chat 102:Call center 226:Categories 118:References 247:Telephony 156:1090-3127 211:Archived 172:37556818 164:12879391 96:See also 63:PageNet 237:Pagers 170:  162:  154:  168:S2CID 107:Pager 44:Pager 208:IDSC 160:PMID 152:ISSN 26:and 144:doi 228:: 166:. 158:. 150:. 138:. 134:. 174:. 146:: 140:7

Index

Text Messaging
Voice Messaging
Pager
Telocator Alphanumeric Protocol
PageNet
Call center
Pager
Answering service
"E Mergency C Alls N Ot R Equiring an U Rgent a Mbulance R Esponse : E Xpert C Onsensus"
doi
10.1080/10903120390936626
ISSN
1090-3127
PMID
12879391
S2CID
37556818
Unsecured Text
Call Center IVR example
IDSC
Archived
Wayback Machine
Categories
Online chat
Pagers
Radio paging
Telephony

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑