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10 Customer Service Quality Statements to Measure up Against
Customer service is a fundamental quality that every business must have. The higher the standard, the higher the return on the investments you make. But just how do you measure your performance, in an easy-to-use way? It's really quite simple... It might...Continue
Awesome Customer Service Requires a Three Pronged Attack
The perception in the marketplace, according to research, is that customer service is declining. Whether consumer expectations have increased or services have declined over the last few years is debatable. The fact is, perception is truth, in the consumers’...Continue
Retail Customer Service: Tips For Improving Your Level Of Service
Today I witnessed a customer service miracle in action. I took my son to our local fast food restaurant, so he could have some lunch and play in the indoor playground. While I was waiting for our food to be ready, a woman approached the counter with a...Continue
Thinking of Using a Coach? Watch Out!
More and more professionals and managers are hiring success coaches to help them move ahead more quickly. This can be either a great idea - or a very bad one. There are now many 'posers' out there who are happy to take your money and then leave you high and...Continue
Training Your Customer Service Organization
According to a new survey carried out by Alliance & where ID_NUM=9270; Leicester, one in five small business owners view tax as their greatest concern. The Chancellor has announced in his last budget that companies with profits below 10,000 will not...Continue
Why hasn't customer service improved despite the profusion of databases and technology?
Let's not get confused here.
Databases and technology are tools that we can use in our
businesses. There has been a lot of emphasis on Customer
Relationship Management recently which is very much about using
this technology. But what has this got to...Continue
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Customer Service Warning--What to Watch for That Indicate We Have a Customer Service Problem
Do you frequently hear that customers are unhappy about
something, and sometimes they are downright frustrated.
Yet, what you hear from your employees is, "Stupid customers!
They just don't understand how to use the product"?
As the owner, or manager, what has been your response? Has it
been to back up your employees, or do you go find out what the
customer is really saying?
WARNING: you've been given an indicator of what is going on in
the organization. The customers aren't getting what they thought
they paid for, and the employees are actually blocking access to
what the customer wants.
Let's look at it from the customer's view: You've just bought a
new XYZ that is critical to your business operation. You get it
back to the office, and can't make it work as advertised. You
call customer support, with hope that it is just something that
can be quickly fixed. After waiting on the phone for 30-40
minutes you finally get a live person who immediately says, "Oh
sure. Everyone makes that mistake. All you have to do is
......[stand on your left foot while pushing the button with the
right index finger]. No problem. Thanks for calling...click."
You didn't even have the chance to tell him that you aren't one
of those everyday customers. You are actually quite
knowledgeable and already tried that, but it didn't work. So,
since he didn't listen, you've got to make that call again.
Another 30-40 minutes waiting and finally get someone else whose
immediate response is....[exactly the same as the last time] but
you are trying to get him to listen before he cuts you off list
the last one. You finally get him to stop and listen, but his
response is, "You're using it wrong. It wasn't meant to do that,
at least that way. When you are using it THAT way you have to
stand on the right foot while pushing the button with the left
index finger. Geeeeee!!! .....click."
And after you try it on the left foot it starts working. In the
meantime you and your business were off line for how long at how
much cost?
What did it cost you to buy that product that was supposed to
save you money?
And chances are that there will be another 20-30 calls for other
issues. In the meantime it's costing you tons of time and money
while you are trying to fix THEIR product, and, in some cases,
because your business is dependent upon having the product
working, the entire business is down.
So, what's the answer to this?
Although many customer service reps, managers, and business
owners think this is a technical problem that can be fixed by
fixing the technical issue, please listen carefully IT IS NOT.
It is a management problem. It is up to management to fix the
fact that the person directly in contact with the customer is
more concerned in proving that the product really does work and
the customer is too stupid to know it instead of helping the
customer get what he really wants. The employees must be
informed, maybe trained, to understand their real job is to help
the customer and that requires listening to him thoroughly.
Otherwise they are probably answering the WRONG question.
Sometimes there really is a good technical reason to stand on
the left foot instead of the right when pushing the button. And
if a customer doesn't know how or when to do that, isn't the
problem with the instructions, not the customer.
Keep good records on what customers are calling about. Even if
an employee has what he thinks is a justifiable answer, if that
question just keeps coming up over and over it is time to find
out what the real base cause is.
I also believe that most customer service people actually are
trying to do a good job for their boss, but they don't
understand what the goals of their job really are. So they are
doing a good job delivering the wrong service. Most feel that
their job is to protect the boss, the company, and maybe their
own job, from that "stupid customer." That makes it a losing
situation for the customer.
If they change their perspective to, "My job is to help the
customer get what he wants. I'm the expert on company policy,
the technical issues, and I'll use those tools to help the
customer get what he really wants, which usually is a product
that works."
I was traveling to the Middle East last year and saw a perfect
example of how the perception of an employee might affect his
customers. When arriving at the counter where they check
passports there were two people that were there to facilitate
faster movement through the different lines.
One considered themselves as someone to help the people get what
they wanted. They walked up to the arriving passengers, asking
them if they were citizens or not and guiding citizens quickly
to the right line. If they were not citizens, then they asked if
they had each of the several papers filled out, checked those
papers and then suggested that they correct line XYZ before
getting up to the counter that they were now being pointed
toward.
The other considered himself a policeman. He was preventing
people from getting in line, preventing them from getting in the
wrong lines, and sending them over to a work table to fill out
the papers themselves. When they came back the "policeman" would
check the papers again and send them back to do them over. No
offer to help other than to say, this isn't filled out right, do
it again.
The difference between these people: mainly in their vision of
their job, what they perceive as their job. They both have the
same job description, making sure that the agent at the counter
doesn't have to deal with improperly filled out forms and to
make the lines move through faster.
However, one sees his job as catching mistakes and taking them
out of line. That might actually make things easier on the guy
checking papers at the counter, but certainly not on the
customer, the guy trying to get in to the country. The other
sees his job as helping the customer get through this tough
process and guiding him to get the answers on the paper, and
into the right line.
So, ultimately how can this be used in your company? Make sure
that the employees in direct contact with a customer have a
vision of their job that is clearly defined as: Your job, if you
decide to take it, is to make sure that customer gets what he
wants. You are the expert in company policy, and possibly even
technical issues of the product so use those tools to
facilitate, smooth out, getting the customer what he wants.
Many times the responsibility of the employee is not to find a
technical reason (standing on the left foot while.....). The
employees should be trained to think beyond the fact that some
technical aspect of a product is or is not broken. He should be
asking the customer why he is struggling, it could be in the
instructions, it could be customers are buying it to do
something that it wasn't intended to do (marketing, advertising,
are saying the wrong thing, or not saying it clearly enough).
Frequently the employees need to be trained to think out of the
box, and help the customer in ways that are not quite as
obvious. The employees can better help a customer if they have
the skills to probe find what is the real cause that is well
beyond a technical "it's broken" response from a customer.
About the author:
Alan Boyer, CEO of The Leader's Perspective, LLC is considered
one of the world's leading breakthrough specialists.
With over 35 years of business experience, he has catapulted
businesses lightyears ahead in weeks. Some double, some jump 10
times.
He helps companies worldwide reach further than they EVER
thought possible....FASTER
http://www.leaders-perspective.com
mailto:AlanBoyer@leaders-perspective.com
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