This guide will show you how to change the iPhone voicemail message on iOS 9. Even if you don’t use the iPhone for calls very often this is a great thing to do, since you may end up sending more calls to voicemail.
Before we dive into the troubleshooting steps, make sure that you have Visual Voicemail set up on your iPhone. Open the Phone app on your iPhone and tap Voicemail in the bottom right-hand corner of the screen. If you see “To retrieve a voicemail first set a password and greeting” on the screen as well as a button that says Set Up Now, then Visual Voicemail has not been set up on your iPhone.
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Step 2. Press and hold “1” key on your keypad. You will get a message that you have no voicemail number stored on the card.
Dial 123 or call 1-805-637-7249 and enter your phone number. Then, press 5 to go to the Password Security menu. Finally, press 1 to change your voicemail password. Check out T-Mobile’s voicemail support article to learn more!
Call 800-244-1111, and a representative will verify your identity and reset your PIN for you.
We see small fixes come in targeted updates, but the iOS 9.2 update packs in a lot of new fixes that may solve a problem that annoyed you for the last several months. Here are the new fixes in iOS 9.2.
Website: https://www.att.com/support/smallbusiness/article/smb-wireless/KM1009187/
4. By default, your voicemail will be setup with your carrier's generic greeting.
And then select your language preference. Enter the name and greeting information before you tap on "Set Up Now" option in the middle of the page. Just follow the similar method to change the default voicemail on iPhone for the other carriers.
To check the new voicemail greeting, extension users can dial feature code *2 to enter the voicemail menu, and follow the prompts to check greetings. Change voicemail greetings for a specific extension
source: I want to change my iphone3gs phone greeting,it says press voicemail then greeting but when i hit voicemail there is no "greeting" button,help please?
Thanks for the explanation. It does indeed sound like there’s no convenient solution till your whole system gets revamped. To briefly explain *why* I don’t want your voicemail enabled: I use my USMobile number as a forwarding line for Google Voice. Google Voice’s voicemail is frankly superior to yours so I want to use it exclusively. When your voicemail kicks in it interferes with Google Voice’s operation, causing me frustration and a real mess. I’ll give some thought to whether I want to be bothered with going through a quarterly exercise of calling and re-disabling your voicemail.
Our phone does not leave any type of a prompt on the main screen when there is a new voice mail waiting. Is there some way to turn this feature on?
Did you know that you can turn off Voicemail? Follow this link to find out how to turn off voicemail on iPhone.
To use Visual Voicemail on your iPhone, open Phone>Voicemail and browse the messages. Tap any message to read its transcription and then tap Play to listen to it. To output the audio, tap Speaker , and then tap Call Back if you want to return the call, or Share to share it with others by forwarding it in a text message, email, or saving it to
How To Record A Custom Voicemail Greeting On Android. You can record a custom voicemail greeting right from the Line2 app by tapping on the three dots menu icon (or menu button, depending on your device), then Settings > Call Handling > Greetings: Press Stop once you've finished recording your greeting. Click Preview to listen to the greeting
Along with having my greeting screen frozen I was also not receiving any indication that a call was coming in...no ring, no vibrate, no visual indication on the phone at all. All calls were going directly to voicemail and the greeting was some funky message...maybe it was the default although custom was checkmarked. I also tried resetting, turning off WiFi, checking Do Not Disturb. Dec 3, 2015 6:13 AM Reply Helpful (2) User profile for user: susan from morro bay susan from morro bay Jan 6, 2016 3:57 PM in response to tar722 In response to tar722