Take Your
Customer Service From Drab To Fab
By Eileen
McDargh
It happens all the
time: A full-page ad is placed in a major monthly publication. The
ad touts the service excellence of their product. Catchy phrases.
Great promises. Major dollars are spent to create an implied image
in the mind of the consumer. And it can vanish in a heartbeat if
promises made are not promises kept-if the derived image cancels out
the implied image!
Perhaps this has
been your experience: You have been standing in line at the bank
looking at a sign hanging on the wall that says "Our Customers Are
Our #1 Priority" while the customer in front of you is yelled at by
a teller for not having the proper forms needed for the transaction.
Or perhaps you've had the interaction with a clerk who rolls her
eyes when you ask one too many questions about the product. The
point is: we will all talk about the derived image-not the glossy
ad. Couple this "talk" with chat on the Internet and you've
exponentially reached thousands.
Why should you care
what your customers are saying?
-
It costs 6 to 8 times more to get a new customer
than to keep an old one.
-
There is a 12% higher profit margin with your
existing customers.
-
Companies that keep their existing customers
enjoy a 9% higher growth rate than ones who don't.
-
When each customer leaves they tell at least ten
people they know and with e-mail and Internet they may
potentially tell thousands or millions. Just look at the power
of City Search and Yelp! to make or break a company.
It doesn't take
much to make a negative impression. Here are some of the most
common customer complaints: unprofessional staff; disinterested
staff; bad attitudes matched with a sense of boredom; more
enthusiasm for chatting with co-workers than with the customer and a
lack of an ability to solve problems.
Your employees have
probably had customer service training but perhaps you are still
seeing customers leave. Why is this you ask? It's because leadership
didn't take the time to find out how the customer service "rules"
affect the actual customer. Here are ten tips to take your customer
service from drab to fab:
1. The single most
important thing you can do to increase customer satisfaction is to
treat your employees well. One disgruntled employee can easily
alienate dozens of customers. Find out what is wrong and fix it.
2. Keep employees
in the loop so that they are in the know and feel like valued
insiders. With the power of the Internet your employees can find out
corporate news before you do. Don't let this happen to your company.
Talk to employees often and in-person.
3. Teach employees
to think of themselves as business consultants rather than
employees. Empower them to make customer-pleasing decisions without
having to call a supervisor.
4. Ask employees to
change their viewpoint. Have them look at all customers as
multi-million dollar businesses and treat them accordingly.
5. Embrace new
ideas and reward innovation. Seek and act on advice from your
frontline because most of the time they are the only contact a
customer has with your company.
6. Recognize and
reward each other. Think in 360 directions. A manager needs praise
from a subordinate a much as from her boss. Encourage peer-to-peer
recognition for helping each other resolve customer issues.
7. Constantly seek
innovation. Ask everyone to study the competition and find out what
they do that makes them better. The frontline will see what a
higher-level manager will not.
8. Seek and act on
customer feedback. Don't bother with customer surveys. Assign an
employee or employees to scour the Internet for both positive and
negative conversations about your company.
9. Make your
current customers feel important. Offer them price cuts or coupons,
make every transaction with them pleasant, communicate transparently
and have a live person answer your phones, thanking the customer for
his business.
10. Seek and reward
referrals from current customers. One local chiropractor provides a
free adjustment to any patient who refers someone else. She gets
dozens of referrals every week and her practice thrives even during
economic turmoil.
Don't just pay lip
service to improving customer service. Good customer service is the
linchpin to survival at any time but especially during difficult
times. Start by treating your employees well, keeping them in the
loop, and releasing them to do what it takes to send each customer
away happy.
Read other articles and learn more about
Eileen McDargh.
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