Business Voicemail Greetings: Scripts and Best Practices That Actually Work
Your voicemail greeting is often the first voice a customer hears from your business. A poor greeting — too long, too generic, or filled with outdated information — creates an immediate negative impression. A great greeting reassures callers, sets expectations, and increases the probability they leave a message rather than hanging up and calling a competitor.
The Elements of an Effective Business Voicemail Greeting
A great business voicemail greeting is brief (under 20 seconds), identifies the business or individual clearly, acknowledges the caller’s time, sets a realistic callback expectation, and provides an alternative contact option when possible. Greetings that are too long (over 30 seconds) see significantly higher hang-up rates before the beep — callers simply give up and do not leave a message.
Standard Business Voicemail Greeting Script
A simple and effective script: “You’ve reached [Business Name]. We’re unable to take your call right now, but your call is important to us. Please leave your name, number, and a brief message, and we’ll return your call within [timeframe]. Thank you for calling [Business Name].” Keep the timeframe realistic — if you actually return calls within four hours, say four hours. If it is one business day, say one business day. Overpromising and underdelivering damages trust.
After-Hours Voicemail Greeting Script
After-hours greetings should acknowledge that you are closed and set expectations for next-day response: “Thank you for calling [Business Name]. Our office is currently closed. Our hours are [days and hours]. Please leave your name, number, and a brief message, and a team member will return your call on the next business day. For urgent matters, please [alternative contact option]. Thank you for your patience.”
Individual Employee Voicemail Scripts
Individual extensions benefit from personal greetings: “Hi, you’ve reached [Name] at [Business Name]. I’m either on another call or away from my desk. Please leave a message and I’ll get back to you shortly. You can also reach me by text at this number or email me at [email].” Providing an alternative contact option — especially email or text — dramatically increases the rate at which callers leave useful contact information.
Common Business Voicemail Mistakes to Avoid
The most damaging mistakes include greetings with outdated information (wrong hours, wrong staff names, references to promotions that have ended), greetings recorded in noisy environments with background noise or echo, greetings that do not ask for a callback number (many callers forget to leave their number if not prompted), greetings longer than 25 seconds, and not updating greetings during holidays or unusual closures.
Voicemail-to-Email: The Better Alternative
Modern VoIP systems like Vivant’s offer voicemail-to-email transcription — voicemails are automatically transcribed and sent to your email inbox, so you can read messages at a glance without dialing in to a voicemail box. This dramatically increases message response rates and ensures no voicemail is overlooked during a busy day.