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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: Beyond Company Policy
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 department...Continue
Exceptional Customer Service Starts With Your Executive Team
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
Internal Customer Service – The Key To Productivity & Growth
Customer service is the foundation on which businesses are created. Unless you understand your customers and treat them with respect, you will go out of business. That is a well-known fact....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
Top 10 questions about customer service and business
Question 1: Is it true that the client is always right?
Answer: Yes. The customer is always right. The customer's
perception is reality.
Question 2: If the client is always right, does it mean the
service provider is always wrong, even if they...Continue
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Is Bad Customer Service Killing Your Business?
It's time to beat the old bad customer service drum again. I
know, I'm sick of beating the drum, too, but as long as bad
customer service runs rampant through so many businesses I feel
it is my entrepreneurial duty to bring it to your attention. So
grab a pew and prepare to listen to the sermon I've preached
before: bad customer service is the bane of business. If the
Almighty smote down every business that dispenses bad customer
service, the world would be a much friendlier, albeit much
sparser place. Consider a world without malls and fast food
joints... would it really be so bad?
What puzzles me most is if bad customer service is such a death
knell for business, why do so many businesses allow it to go on?
Don't they read my column, for Pete's sake? I think the problem
is that most bad customer service is doled out (or at least
condoned) by business owners and managers who have ceased caring
what their customers think. When you stop caring what your
customers think it's time to close the doors. Go find a day job.
You'll make someone a wonderfully disgruntled employee.
My latest parable of lousy customer service was actually
experienced by my better half while attempting to buy my
daughter a pair of basketball shoes. I won't mention the name of
the sporting goods chain store in which the bad customer service
took place, but I will tell you that its name is similar to the
sound a frog with hiccups might make.
As my wife waited for someone to assit, the four or five
teenagers who had been charged with manning the store stood in a
clump at the cash register giggling and flirting with one
another as if they were at the prom instead of at work.
When my wife pointed out this fact, one of the employees, a
cheeky lass of 16 or so, put her hands on her hips and said,
"How rude!" The males in the group didn't react at all. They
were too busy arguing over who could take a break so they could
chase other cheeky lasses about the mall.
Needless to say my lovely bride, who has the ability to instill
fear into the hearts of even the most worthless employees, left
the gaggle of giggling teen idiots standing with their mouths
open in disbelief. How dare a customer tell them to do that with
a pair of basketball shoes?
As much as I bemoan bad customer service I celebrate good
customer service. It should be applauded and the purveyor of
said good customer service should be rewarded for actually
delivering satisfaction to the customer, above and beyond the
call of duty.
So let me tell you the story of my new hero, Ken. I won't tell
you the name of the store in which Ken works, but let's just say
they started out selling radios in a shack somewhere long, long
ago.
I first met Ken when I went into the store to buy a mixing board
for my business that records audio products for the Web. In a
nutshell, you plug microphones into the mixing board then
connect it to the computer and you can record audio directly to
digital format. Totally beside the point of this article, but I
didn't want you thinking that I was purchasing non-manly cooking
utensils.
When I got the mixer installed it didn't work. So I boxed it up
and headed back to the store to return it. When I told Ken my
problem he didn't just grunt and give me my money back as so
many bad customer service reps would do. Instead he asked, "Do
you mind if I try it?"
"Knock yourself out," was my reply, confident that if I couldn't
get it to work, neither could Ken. Ken took the mixer out of the
box and went about hooking it up to one of the computers on
display. He started pulling power cords and cables off the
display racks and ripping them open and plugging them in. He
tore open a new microphone and an adapter and kept going until
he had the mixer hooked up and working. Yes, I said working. It
turns out the mixer was fine. I just had the wrong power adapter.
Ken could have just given me my money back and been done with
me. Instead he spent 15 minutes and opened a number of other
packages that I was under no obligation to buy just to help me
get the thing working.
I was so impressed that I not only kept the mixing board, I also
bought another $50 worth of products. And the next time I need
anything electronic guess where I will buy it? Even if it costs
twice as much, I'll buy it from Ken.
Now here's the moral of the story: if you are a business owner
who has a gaggle of teenagers in charge of customer service at
your store you would be better off replacing them with wild
monkeys.
At least monkeys can be trained.
About the author:
Tim Knox. Entrepreneur, Author, Speaker. Tim Knox is a
nationally-known small business expert who writes and speaks
frequently on the topic. For more information or to contact Tim
please visit one of his sites below.
http://www.dropshipwholesale.net http://www.smallbusinessqa.com
http://www.timknox.com
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