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    Home Pet Euthanasia of Southern California
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  • Preparing
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    Preparing for your pet’s euthanasia
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  • Home
    Welcome
    Home Pet Euthanasia of Southern California
    • Welcome
    • Why at home?
    • What do I do next?
    • Overview
    • Blog
    • Navigating our Website
    • Our locations
    Forslund (36)Annie cropped horizontal
  • About us
    About us
    Home Pet Euthanasia of Southern California
    • What makes us different
    • What we do
    • Meet the team
    • Photo Gallery
    Forslund (33)Family, cropped
  • Services
    Our Services
    End of Life Care
    • Pet Euthanasia
    • Pet Hospice
    • Quality of Life Assessments
    • Aftercare (Body Care)
    • Education for the Pet Parent
    • For the Veterinarian
    Fletcher23 hug

    See all Services

  • Preparing
    Preparing
    Preparing for your pet’s euthanasia
    • Choosing the right euthanasia service
    • Is it Time?
      • Quality of Life
      • Understanding Pet Pain
      • Natural Death
      • Pet Hospice
    • Preparing for the event
    • Forms
    • Videos and podcasts
    • Should other pets be present
    • Should Children be present
    • Fee Schedule
    • FAQs
    • Why at home?
    hand and paw
  • Is it Time?
    Is it Time?
    Assessing Quality of Life and Pet Pain
    • Quality of Life
    • Understanding Pet Pain
    • Home Tests
    • Am I “Playing God”?
    • Natural Death
    • Pet Hospice
    megamenu-testimonials
  • Testimonials
    Testimonials
    Memorializing your pet
    • Memorials
    • Poems
    • Video testimonials
    • What people are saying on YELP
    Video shot #15 Jolie
  • Fees
  • Contact

How to handle Web Reaches

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  2. Admin
  3. Staff Training
  4. CCS and Scheduler Mini-Hat
  5. How to handle Web Reaches

How to handle web reaches

 

WEBFORM emails subject line is ALWAYS:  “Your message to Home Pet Euthanasia”.  These are sent directly from OUR WEBSITE to us.  This is the email we get when prospects land on our website and fill out a contact form on our website.  

They are what you use to reply to the client or when we need to forward the email to another staff and we keep those webforms on record in a client folder on our computers.

If you push “reply” to a “Your message to Home Pet Euthanasia”, it will reply directly to the client’s email and you will have the communication trail underneath, meaning that when the client receives your email, he will see what message he wrote to you originally and above this your reply and when the client replies to your reply, you will see the whole trail of messages starting from the original webform that the client submitted, your reply to the client and his reply to you.  This is very important, especially since there are several of us replying to clients and the person receiving the client’s reply is not necessarily the same phone person who answered the webform originally and it is important for the person new to the email trail to be able to track and see what was originally asked and what replies have gone back and forth.  

Once you are done replying to the webform email, (and after you do any hat pass needed on the communication), you then file this webform (“Your message to Home Pet Euthanasia” email in a folder where they can all be in the same place for future reference. 

They NEVER go in the trash (unless they are spam).  You should never mark a webform as “spam” even if it actually is spam otherwise, all webforms will end up going in the spam folder.

There is another email type you will get:  chat tickets.

These are sent to us when the person attempts a chat and fails because nobody was logged in to chat with the person.  Ideally, this should happen very little and someone should always be logged in during their shift so that you can chat with clients reaching out.  However, if someone is not there to chat, we will receive a chat “ticket”.
This comes from ANOTHER company (not the website).  This company is called Live Chat.  They are linked to our website and allows us to use the chat feature.

The email subject title will look like this: "Ticket #MA3ZF: Dog Cremation” (or whatever subject line the client put on the form).  You cannot hit reply to this email to reach the client.  If you email a client in response to this “ticket” you will have to write a new email to the client.  Please copy and paste the original message that the client sent you in the chat ticket at the bottom of the email so that everyone can see the exchange of communications that took place and the client’s original communication.

Once you have replied to the client, these “tickets” need to be filed in a folder (in the same folder where you file the “Webforms”).  So that we can refer to them if we have any question regarding what the client asked for originally.  They also never go in the trash.

Again, these emails whether “Your Message to Home Pet Euthanasia”, “Webform Submission:  Hospice Care History Form” or “Ticket” NEVER GO IN THE TRASH and you should never mark them as spam.  

Please check the spam folder daily on each one of your shifts to make sure that no Webform has landed in the spam folder.  If you see a Webform in the spam folder, there is a specific procedure to follow to ensure that our web reaches are not wasted and do not routinely land in the spam folder.  The procedure on how to handle those is entitled “How to unspam emails”.  Please follow this procedure exactly.  

My pet is suffering, what do I do?

CCS and Scheduler Mini-Hat

  • Client Care Specialist (CCS) JOB DESCRIPTION for HPESC
  • Sales and Salesmanship
  • Handling Prospect Calls
  • Prospect Call form
  • Enlightenment patter for Client Care Specialists
  • How to handle Web Reaches
  • Giving Quotes
  • Fee Schedule
  • Fee Schedule table
  • Private Cremations Packages
  • Scheduling Guidelines
  • Appointment time v/s client time constraints
  • Finalizing the Appointment
  • Procedure for creating a new appointment for same pet, same client
  • Procedure for notifying doctors of appointments
  • Cancellation fees and cancellation handling
  • The cremation process

Related Subjects

  • Client Care Specialist (CCS) JOB DESCRIPTION for HPESC
  • Sales and Salesmanship
  • Handling Prospect Calls
  • Prospect Call form
  • Enlightenment patter for Client Care Specialists
  • How to handle Web Reaches
  • Giving Quotes
  • Fee Schedule
  • Fee Schedule table
  • Private Cremations Packages
  • Scheduling Guidelines
  • Appointment time v/s client time constraints
  • Finalizing the Appointment
  • Procedure for creating a new appointment for same pet, same client
  • Procedure for notifying doctors of appointments
  • Cancellation fees and cancellation handling
  • The cremation process

Who we are

Home Pet Euthanasia of Southern California

Our caring and compassion is what sets us apart.  As you will see in our bios, each one of us has a different story on how we ended up “in this business”.  It is more than a business for each of us.  Myself, my husband Todd, our manager, Tracy, our doctors, Dr. Julie, Dr. Lily, Dr. Daniel, our client care specialists Cris, Lauren, Mary and Marc, our admin in charge Raylaina, our Aftercare in charge Danielle, our webmaster Jeff…  we each have our own story and we invite you to get to know us better by clicking here.

Let Us Help You

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We are here to help you in this difficult time. Let us help you.

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Home Pet Euthanasia of Southern California
407 West Imperial hwy Suite H #252
Brea, CA 92821
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657-221-7500

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