For years I have wrestled with the definition of customer service and
I know that every business owner or corporate manager must face this
dilemma daily. We establish a directive as to how to talk to the customer,
how to direct the customer, how to answer the phones, clean the office
and even how our invoices must appear. In the context of it all we attempt
to pass on the same virtues to the employees we hire. Manuals are created,
signs are posted and meetings are held.. Wouldn’t you expect it! But
we don’t. Having worked in various industries from manufacturing to
service, from technology to publishing, it’s all the same. Customer
service is a buzz word that like so many others has lost its significance.
Let’s break it down.
Customer Service = How people are treated as buyers or potential buyers.
This statement says that customer service is
neither good nor bad ...it just exists. The question in most firms is
to define customer service as an experience between a business and its
customers. A long time ago I realized that when educating a child, it
is not the intent of the actual message that will determine positive
results, but the perception of the message. For example you tell a child
that they do not sing well, the child hears, “I cannot sing,” and gives
up the possibility of singing as a life long love. So…
Customer Service = The customer’s impression (before or) after an encounter.
Focus groups always try to get feedback on
this particular point all the time. But then why do we see and expect
poor customer service. Just the other Friday we brought our vehicle
in to be serviced and had to juggle a family with one car: you know,
the meetings, schools, drop-offs and pickups- not fun. We have had trouble
with a vibration since we leased the car and had scheduled an appointment
weeks in advance. (for the 3rd time). At 5 pm, we swung by the facility
to get the vehicle. I entered the repair docks of one of the larger
auto dealers in the area and for 3 minutes three employees did not pick
up their head from their terminals to even say to me, “One moment, I
will be right with you,” or that they had to finish these last few papers
before 5…anything!! Our car had not been touched all day. Is this customer
service? The major auto companies work around the clock to come up with
methods to keep customers happy and 3 service “managers” could not pick
up their heads to help a customer and to date we have leased $350,000
worth of cars. What made this one so poorly run? Did they not understand
the basics? The customer’s impression is what drives business. Let’s
state the seemingly obvious.
Good Customer Service = Lasting relationships Average Customer Service
= Steady relationships that could be lost
Poor Customer Service = Lost business
Any business must focus on creating positive impressions of the encounter
and post-encounter activities to keep repeat business and earn new business
through referrals.
Here are a few tips.
Create
systems to define customer service. Do not create customer service rules!
They don’t work. Most posted rules could only be followed by the holiest
of people. Create systems that make customer service less of a reaction
but an action that is defined by circumstance. Customers are happy when
they get what they expect, (and they are won over when they get even
more than what they expect.) When you enter a McDonald’s, you expect
the same results every time. If it’s within tolerance of expectations,
that’s great! Whether that happens or not is up to the management from
corporate down or up…depending on your corporate culture.
Evaluate
what level of customer service is truly to be expected. Do not believe
that everyone knows what’s expected.
Managers
who expect their employees to be at the height of their companies’ standard
charts must give employees empowerment to create the time and space
to do things right. They must also be aware that they will be let down.
We are all human and each day is different. Don’t you love the manager
who barks all day, is late on proposals, and is the cause of many of
the customers’ post impressions, but who is angered by how others treat
the customers (as if the managers are excused from such actions.)
Create
a feedback loop … too many customers are lost just due to an impression
that their business is not important. It’s not always the mistake that
loses a customer. Mistakes are opportunities to create loyal customers.
A simple card that says thank you for your business goes a long way.
Sales automation tools are now adding features to automatically send
letters and a thank you. Self-addressed cards or an internet site with
a quick feedback mechanism will, in addition, help to gauge the satisfaction
created by the experience.
The
difference between a good company and a poorly run company is not always
shown when things run smoothly; the difference is in how they handle
situations when there is a mistake. You won’t get it perfect every time,
but you have control over the company’s reaction to a customer when
things go awry. Be honest and fair, and when in doubt, “the customer
is always right.”
Customer
service must also be viewed as company etiquette. If employees are not
treated well, it’s going to be tough for them to treat others properly.
No I am not trying to change the world …just pointing out that the little
things internally really do count.
Qualify
your hires. Put a potential employee in a situation that would purposefully
allow them to expose their situational handbag. Treat potential hires
to lunch. You’d be surprised how many will be eliminated from your list
of potential employees based on their disgusting treatment of waiters.
It’s easier to start with a well-mannered person who is cordial than
to try to teach a person who lacks respect for people.
Lastly,
look for the good. On a recent trip to participate in a meeting with
President Jimmy Carter, I arrived at one of the Courtyard Marriott Hotels
in the Atlanta area late in the afternoon, asking if there was any way
my suit could be pressed by 6:30 AM. Three people started to make phone
calls to cleaners and in the end one person personally drove the suit
across town and returned it to me later that night. It was done! That’s
a WOW! Not only did I send a letter to management but thanked the staff
multiple times prior to leaving.
Customer service is not difficult if you know
what it is. The rock quarry and the trucking company will have different
operations than the health spa and the catalog company, but in the end,
meeting and surpassing expectations will only come from people who have
created environments to do so. Create systems that generate guaranteed
predictable results.
_______________________________________
David & Lorrie Goldsmith are founders of the Syracuse based
MetaMatrix Consulting Group Inc. Their firm specializes in consulting
and speaking services. They can be reached at 315-476-0510 888-777-8857
or emailed at dgoldsmith@davidgoldsmith.com

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