Executive telephone interviews are an effective and efficient way to gather high‑quality client feedback. They are not constrained by the logistics or cost of in‑person interviews, and consistently achieve high response rates while allowing for depth, nuance and personal engagement. This makes them particularly well suited to situations where clients are geographically dispersed.
While some in‑depth and telephone interviews can be free‑flowing and bespoke by design, a more productive approach is to use semi‑structured telephone interviews with a core set of questions agreed in advance. This structure is especially important when insights from multiple interviews are to be aggregated and reported, potentially across several interviewers and interview methods (telephone, web surveys, virtual interviews or in‑person meetings).
By combining quantitative and qualitative techniques within semi‑structured telephone interviews, firms can track changes in client feedback over time and benchmark findings internally and externally. Where a sufficient number of interviews are conducted, findings may also be generalised beyond the immediate interview group. The structure and flexibility of executive telephone interviews often makes them more effective than in‑person interviews, and significantly more insightful than web surveys alone.
The use of technology
Computer Assisted Telephone Interviewing (CATI) is used to guide executive interviewers through the interview process. CATI ensures appropriate questions are asked while still allowing interviewers to probe responses based on context and the stage of the conversation. Used well, CATI is invisible to the respondent. Interviews are voice‑recorded (with consent) and transcribed following completion. This approach supports consistency when interviews are conducted over an extended period or by multiple interviewers, while preserving the natural flow of the conversation.
The rationale for telephone interviews
Executive telephone interviews enable firms to:
- Demonstrate to clients that their views are valued
- Achieve comparable quality to face‑to‑face interviews through probing and follow‑up
- Maintain a more personal approach than web surveys
- Engage clients more easily than virtual interviews
- Reach geographically dispersed clients
- Conduct interviews in multiple languages
- Scale programmes cost‑effectively
- Maintain consistency across interviewers
- Record interviews (with consent) for accuracy and insight
Limitations of telephone interviews
Telephone interviewing does present some constraints:
- Non‑verbal cues and body language cannot be observed
- International mobile calls can increase costs
Other telephone interview styles
By contrast, high‑speed telephone interviews - commonly used in public polling, are designed for speed and volume. Respondents are selected randomly via large databases and contacted using auto‑diallers. These interviews tend to be transactional, tightly scripted and impersonal, with limited opportunity for open discussion.
High‑speed interviews are effective for reaching target volumes quickly, but differ significantly from executive telephone interviews. Executive interviews are pre‑arranged, allowing respondents time to give their full attention. This personal, considered approach enables the collection of high‑quality, actionable insight while clearly signalling to clients that their opinions matter.