Smallpotatoes
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2002
- Messages
- 14,975
Last Wednesday, about five minutes before I was supposed to send my pages to the paginators (We don't do Quark ourselves, a long, sad story), I received a phone call, which, it turned out, was transferred to me from a news editor who apparently didn't know I was on deadline.
The caller was slurring his words and I couldn't understand what he was saying. In fact, I could only make out one word.
I could tell that whatever the caller needed to talk to me about was going to take some time, some time that I didn't have. As politely as possible, I told him I was on deadline, I could not discuss whatever it was he wanted to discuss at the moment and asked him to call back in an hour when I had time to talk. After several moments of dead air, I hung up.
I usually answer the phone when I'm at my desk rather than letting it go to voicemail because without caller ID, I don't know who it is. If it's a co-worker who needs something, it's best that I answer and if it's a reader who has a quick question that can be answered quickly (giving out an e-mail address or letting them know the deadline to send youth copy, for example), I don't see what the big deal is to answer the question so I have no problem helping them in such a situation.
If it's obvious that the call is going to take a while (such as a complaint call), I try to get the caller to call back at some other time and they usually don't (in this case, the guy didn't).
One co-worker who heard me said I was rude. I suppose he felt that I should have stayed on the phone and tried to help the guy and if it meant blowing deadline, so be it. Or perhaps I should never answer the phone when I'm on deadline.
What would you have done?
The caller was slurring his words and I couldn't understand what he was saying. In fact, I could only make out one word.
I could tell that whatever the caller needed to talk to me about was going to take some time, some time that I didn't have. As politely as possible, I told him I was on deadline, I could not discuss whatever it was he wanted to discuss at the moment and asked him to call back in an hour when I had time to talk. After several moments of dead air, I hung up.
I usually answer the phone when I'm at my desk rather than letting it go to voicemail because without caller ID, I don't know who it is. If it's a co-worker who needs something, it's best that I answer and if it's a reader who has a quick question that can be answered quickly (giving out an e-mail address or letting them know the deadline to send youth copy, for example), I don't see what the big deal is to answer the question so I have no problem helping them in such a situation.
If it's obvious that the call is going to take a while (such as a complaint call), I try to get the caller to call back at some other time and they usually don't (in this case, the guy didn't).
One co-worker who heard me said I was rude. I suppose he felt that I should have stayed on the phone and tried to help the guy and if it meant blowing deadline, so be it. Or perhaps I should never answer the phone when I'm on deadline.
What would you have done?