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3 Keys to Building a Winning Customer Service Strategy
How will you meet and exceed your customer's expectations and keep them coming back and spending throughout 2003?
January is a time for resolutions to be made. It is also a month when resolutions are broken. Did you make a resolution to eat better,...Continue
Bad Customer Service Is Not So Funny: Five Secrets To Giving Outstanding Customer Service
The following story tells how a customer experience went from funny to sad in less than 24 hours, and five secrets to creating an outstanding customer experience. Recently, Joy and I were invited to go to a local comedy club. It was one of those clubs where...Continue
Customer Service is Now Customer Care
As I waited for an answer to my VCR inquiry from a stereo company, the recording stated a “customer care” representative would be available shortly. At that moment, I realized it’s finally catching on everywhere. With aging baby boomers, world events and...Continue
Customer Service - The Infection of Mediocrity
In recent months, I've had the worst experiences with my phone
company, the post office, my bank, fast food drive through
services, the grocery store, department stores and local gas
stations.
I expect to receive what I pay for. I expect that what I...Continue
Foolproof Customer Service Strategies (that only a fool would try!)
Ever notice how customer service varies from store to store? You walk into some stores, and before you can say "Buzz off!" a salesperson asks "May I help you?"
"No thanks."
"May I help you?" asks another.
"No thanks."
"May I help you?" asks a...Continue
Hiring Customer Service Representatives That Are A Perfect Fit
Have you ever phoned a customer service department only to receive an attitude rather than help? Not a pleasant experience! It is quite obvious that the person on the other end of the phone is not pleased with...Continue
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What the Taco Bell Manager Taught Me About Customer Retention
I didn't plan to get a marketing lesson. I really just wanted a steak chalupa! But as I went through the Taco Bell ordering line, my day took an interesting twist.
I've always been one to give compliments when they were due. So, after receiving repeatedly good service at this location, I decided I'd sing the staff's praises. I asked to see the manager. Fred came over and offered to help me.
I told him how pleased I was with the service, and that - from my experience - not all Taco Bell's were created equal. (I had gotten some pretty rotten service at other restaurants.) Fred just smiled and said, "Well, I'm not only the manager, but I own all the Taco Bell's in the city. I bet I can tell you which stores left you unhappy."
I was surprised. I named one location that I'd visited recently and Fred interrupted with, "The manager is not personable and doesn't treat the employees well. I've been trying to find a replacement but have had no luck so far."
I named another store to which Fred replied, "That area is full of rich kids who are undependable and don't have any work ethic."
For each location I named, Fred began to tell me how good (or not so good) the employees were. Never once did he say, "They can't make a taco to save their lives!" In fact, there was no mention of the food at all. He didn't say, "They pre-make their burritos and let them sit" or "I've told them a hundred times they need to put more cheese on that." It all revolved around people.
Next Fred made his point. "Ma'am, it all lies with the employees. The food is the same all over, but some stores - even in great locations - have lousy sales because the people don't treat my customers well."
Fred is right on the money. Your products and services may be the main reason a customer comes to you (I wanted a chalupa). However, if they get unsatisfactory service, they won't stay long at all. (I won't visit a few Taco Bell locations in my city even though the food is all the same.) There is simply too much competition out there for a customer to tolerate impatience, rudeness or unprofessional behavior.
Consider the fact that your customers pay your salary. They have the money you are seeking to earn. They also have a choice - whether to stay with you or move to your competition who offers the same, or a similar, product as your business.
Wise business people keep their customers in mind at every turn. Making people feel welcome and appreciated is a sure fire way to increase customer retention. In fact, in the results of the 1996 White House Office of Consumer Affairs Survey, a lack of attention and caring was the #1 reason people stated for leaving a company.
Do your people matter? Absolutely! In fact, you and your employees are the reason you have customers. You and your employees are the reason your customers come back. It all boils down to people.
Keep that fact in mind throughout all your marketing, sales and support efforts and you'll see dramatic improvements in your repeat sales - and ultimately your profits!
About the Author
Diane C. Hughes * ProBizTips.com
FREE Report: Amazingly Simple (Yet Super Powerful) Ways To Skyrocket Your Sales And Build Your Business Into A Tower of Profits! ==>> http://madmarketer.com/diane
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