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You are here: Career Services > For Students > Job search > Telephone use > Making calls: reasons, etiquette and effectiveness
 
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Making calls: reasons, etiquette and effectiveness
 
Reasons
Your job search will involve telephone calls for various purposes, as precursors and follow-ups to written (including e-mail) correspondence. Purposes may include:
Confirming names, spelling, title, address and other information for prospective contacts prior to writing a letter.
Following-up a letter to arrange a visit, ask for further information, explore future employment possibilities, follow-ups to interviews, etc.
And, if you're lucky, employers will call you. See receiving calls from employers.
  You may be interviewed, or at least screened for interviews, through telephone calls. See telephone interviews.
   
Etiquette
Be courteous to everyone with whom you speak. Never treat support personnel in a disrespectful manner; the person you are trying to impress will hear about it, and no one wants to hire people who behave rudely to anyone.
Identify yourself, stating your first and last name clearly. Be clear about the purpose of your call. Make reference to any previous contact, conversation, meeting, etc., to remind the person why you are calling. Don't assume the person remembers you right away. Even if he or she does remember you, a brief reintroduction of yourself is a business and social courtesy.
Ask if this is a convenient time to talk. If you want to talk to someone at length — e.g. to conduct an informational interview, etc. — you should ask to schedule a mutually convenient time for a phone appointment. Then you make the call at the agreed-upon time and stay within the limits of the time set.
When leaving messages, SLOW DOWN when you state your phone number. DON'T make your listener have to replay the message three times in order to write down your number; very annoying; and s/he may give up and therefore not return your call.
   
Effectiveness
In asking for information, wherever possible, use open ended questions rather than questions which are likely to be answered with "yes" or "no." For example, instead of, "Will you have any openings in June?" say, "I’m interested in learning about your hiring plans for management trainees this summer." Your goal in asking open-ended questions is to start a conversation in which you gain information which will help in your job search.
But don't ask questions that you could easily find answered on the employer's web site. You'll risk looking lazy (or that you don't know how to use Internet resources).
Your voice: Remember that tone of voice carries a lot of weight in a telephone conversation.
You don't have facial expressions, body language, and other non-verbal elements coming through in a phone conversation. However, silly as it may seem, smiling while you speak on the phone can make you sound more pleasant.
Ask friends (who will tell you the truth) how you sound on the phone. They know you, but an employer doesn't. Do you sound cordial or aloof, articulate or fumbling, interested or gloomy?
Practice how you speak on the phone.
Seek advising through Career Services if you want coaching or assistance or have questions on this topic.
   
Also see:
  When employers don't return your calls
  Receiving calls from employers
  Telephone interviews
  Cell phone use in your job search
           
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