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A Guide For Customer Service Training Tools
Let's face it, good customer service can make or break a company. Even if the product is top-notch, if the sales representatives don't have great customer service skills, it doesn't matter. Customer service should be a number one priority to any...Continue

Customer Service: A Matter of Common Sense
There's more to customer service dealing with order fulfillment, returns, complaints and questions. Good customer service is based on respect and concern --- qualities that can't be spelled out in a company policy. Consider: The managers of two...Continue

Customer Service - A Sweet Essence
Due to unusually heavy call volume, our customer service agents are busy helping other customers. Your wait time is approximately 15 minutes. Please continue to hold...Please continue to hold...Please continue to hold... First let us specifically...Continue

Customer Service in Your Home Based Business - It Can Make or Break You
Have you ever been shopping and the salesperson ignored you? How did it make you feel to receive such poor customer service? Most people would say that they would never return to the store. Poor customer service can cost you more than clients, but it can cost...Continue

Customer Service Is Still The Key To SUCCESS!
Pick any industry. Who is at the top? How did they get there? I can guarantee the answer to that question is two words: "customer service." Sure, cost is important, variety is important, all those things are important. But when you're new to a business, good...Continue

The Physics Of Customer Service
That probably sounds a little too technical doesn't it? Does it even make sense? How can physics relate to customer service? It's very, very simple. Every single customer service action can and will lead to a customer reaction. Whenever you deal...Continue

 

4 Customer Service Mistakes Companies Should Avoid Making


1) Being placed on hold endlessly. Don't you just love it when you call a company and they place you on hold, leaving you to listen to their latest on-hold, recorded sales pitch, over and over again. Would you think it normal business practice for a retail store clerk to ask you to "wait a minute" while they disappeared into the back of the store for ten, fifteen, thirty minutes or longer? People do things over the phone that they would never do in person. It's bad business either way to leave a customer hanging without at least coming back to let the customer know how much longer they'll be holding.

2) Getting rude with a customer. As the saying goes, even if the customer's wrong, the customer's always right. There's never any reason to get rude with a customer. If a customer gets rude with you, let them blow off steam and remember that their behavior is not an attack directed against you personally. Always keep in mind that as long as you remain calm and in control, you can address the reason behind the customer's anger.

3) Ignoring a problem. Ignoring a customer's problem won't make it go away. The same can be said of fixes that work for the company but not for the customer. Some customers have problems with a service or product that don't fit comfortably into any category. Those are the problems that need special attention, not standard responses. Too many companies ignore this and try to use the "one size fits all" method of complaint resolution. Companies have to realize that their policy must fit the customer's needs, not the other way around.

4) Making the customer jump through hoops for a refund or exchange. I recently had to return a product to a national bookstore chain. Before the clerk refunded me, she asked me for all sorts of personal information. I refused to give this information. I explained that I hadn't given this information out when I made the original purchase, and didn't see the purpose in giving it out to get my money refunded. After 15 minutes and a visit from the store manager, they finally relented and gave me my refund. The time spent waiting in line, plus the time spent to get my refund, added up to 20 minutes. This company wasted 20 minutes of a customer's time, all in the effort to get information. If you have to disregard your customer's time in order to gather a marketing profile, you're defeating your long-term marketing goal, which is to retain a satisfied customer base that makes repeat purchases.

Russ Mate is President of MateMedia, Inc.


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