17 Jan
Written by lifehacker
When getting things done involves making phone calls, you want to spend the least amount of time and money on the horn as possible-and several tricks and services can help you do just that. With the right tones, keypresses, phone numbers, and know-how, you can skip through or cut off long-winded automated voice systems and humans, access web services by voice, and smartly screen incoming calls. Check out our pick of the 10 best telephony techniques for getting more done in less time over the phone.
Instead of calling regular 411 to get information (and an extra charge on your phone bill), Google by voice by calling 1-800-GOOG-411 to get a street address or phone number. Some Lifehacker readers say GOOG 411 works better than others; if you haven’t tried it, here’s a YouTube clip (courtesy of Google) on how to give it a try.
Interrupt a long phone call or meeting (or date!) with two interesting services: SorryGottaGo.com (original post) offers a myriad of sounds you can play while you’re trapped on an endless phonecall that give you the perfect excuse to hang up. (Like, someone’s at the door, or you’re out of change to feed the naggy public phone.) Along the same lines, schedule an interrupting call with the Popularity Dialer (original post) an incoming calling service that can make you seem “in demand.” (Do we actually recommend these two services? Maybe not, but it’s nice to know they’re out there when you’re desperate.)
When you owe your buddy 12 bucks on the dinner bill and you’re out of cash, call 1-800-4PAYPAL (1-800-472-9725) to send him the money on the spot. (Your phone must be activated on your PayPal account for this to work). Here’s more on how to send and receive money via phone with PayPal.
“Do everything you’d ever want from the phone” service Jott supercharges your ability to leave yourself a reminder voicemail. Jott will transcribe your voicemail to self and email it to you, as well as post to your blog, add events to your Google Calendar, and more. See Kevin’s full rundown on how to get things done over the phone with Jott.
If your cell phone supports per-caller ringtones, reader Jim suggests selectively silencing the low-priority incoming calls with a dead air ringtone. Here’s how to make a ringtone from any MP3 on your mobile.
Sick of missing calls to the office while you’re home or vice versa? Set up a free GrandCentral number that can ring all your phones at once from one number, or selective phones based on the caller-like your cell phone, office phone, and home phone. GrandCentral’s got scads of neat customized phone features; see Adam’s tour of how to consolidate your phones with GrandCentral.
Long voicemail greetings are tedious to sit through, but on many services, specific keypresses can skip you right to the beep. Hit 7 or # to bypass that long greeting, and save time and money on your cell phone bill.
Dying to know what song that is playing on the car radio? Call 866-411-SONG and hold your phone up to the speakers. Just 15 seconds (and a small fee), and 411 SONG will send you a text message with the song name and artist. (This only works on cell phones with SMS capabilities.)
When that Interactive Voice Response (IVR) system’s making you navigate an endless menu of options, put your potty mouth to good use. Some IVR’s are programmed to listen for naughty words and speed you along to human help when they hear them. Adam gave this trick a try and dropping the F bomb did indeed zap him right through to a human. We suggest using this trick when you’re not within earshot of your co-workers.
If you’ve got automated phone marketers or political campaigns or debt collectors ringing your phone at all hours, trick the system into thinking your phone’s dead. Add the U.S. Special Information Tone signal for “vacant circuit” to the beginning of your voicemail greeting to automatically unsubscribe your phone number from bot call lists.
How do you save time and money getting things done on the phone? Let us know in the comments.
3 Responses
Cellular Phones » Top 10 Telephone Tricks
January 17th, 2008 at 11:03 am
1[...] unknown wrote an interesting post today onHere’s a quick excerpt [...]
connie
January 17th, 2008 at 12:09 pm
2These are cool. Thanks.
Ted
July 16th, 2008 at 11:50 pm
3Great tips. You can report and/or lookup calls you receive from telemarketers, etc. at sites like http://www.everycall.us or http://www.800notes.com.
Great blog by the way, I’m enjoying your posts via RSS thanks!
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