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Customers Don’t Pay For Average #3
This is the final in a series of three issues of Perpetual Insight
dedicated to the series; Customers Don’t Pay For Average. In the June
and July editions, we introduced the first nine elements required for
you and your company to provide a differentiated service experience:
- Customers don’t pay for average.
- Think like a customer rather than an employee.
- You must address your internal service effort before your external service effort will deliver results.
- Exceed what the customer thinks they are going to receive.
- Seek a strategic service outcome.
- Your agenda and the customer’s agenda should match.
- Make fewer service statements.
- Moving beyond what to why.
- Positive service messaging - This month’s edition of Perpetual
Insight continues to take an intense look at the final six steps of the
fifteen, associated with providing a proactive rather than reactive
customer service experience. Providing exceptional service is not about
a fad or a trend that is connected with the difficulties of the
economy. It is about truly desiring to set a standard that is reserved
for the truly committed. The good news is that the standard is
available to any individual or company that sets their direction and
actions toward the effort consistently. Get ready to explore how you
can apply each of these principles consistently and live out the
actions that create a memorable service experience for your customers!
- Under promise and over deliver – You arrive at a restaurant only to
find out that there is a waiting list. When you ask how long of a wait,
the host or hostess tell you it will be about 20 minutes and they hand
you a pager. Somewhat skeptical, you take the pager and proceed to
wait. Time passes and 30 minutes later, you still haven’t been seated.
How does this leave you feeling? If you’re like most people, you are a
bit impatient, angry and upset. It was only ten minutes longer than
expected you think to yourself as you try to gain perspective on the
service level provided. It is a classic case of over promise and under
deliver. As a result of this one situation, it is likely that your
perspective on your meal and the server’s tip will both share a
decreasing perspective. When it comes to service, there are three
choices to choose from. You can over promise and under deliver. This
certainly isn’t your best option. You can over promise and over
deliver. This is the ideal scenario and it is reserved for those few
select companies who have made customer service the driving force of
their company. Finally, you can under promise and over deliver and this
is where a majority of people and companies have the opportunity to
delight and excite their customer by exceeding their expectations.
While it’s the best option, it’s also important to remember that in
addition to over delivering, you must create an experience that excites
the customer and causes them to want to do business with you or refer
you to others. Providing service that under promises and over delivers
is one of the best ways possible of insuring repeat business at higher
margins with the right kind of customer.
- Customize the experience by listening. – Customers just want
someone to listen and they want someone to listen well. They want their
voice to be heard and know that someone actually understood their
situation because listening took place. As a customer, there is nothing
more frustrating than trying to communicate with someone whose primary
objective is to hear themselves talk and justify why they can’t service
you as a customer. Listening gives you the ability to customize the
service experience by targeting your actions and responses specifically
to the concerns or needs expressed by the customer.
- Hire people who reflect the values and beliefs of customer service.
- Let’s face it; some people were just not meant to have customer
service and their name connected in the same breath. Despite this fact,
many companies continue to view customer service as an area that
anybody can work in regardless of their skills or temperament. How can
this be? Customer service is the area of your company that is built on
first and last impressions. This is the area where you need the very
best people, with the very best attitudes. It is a place where
enthusiasm makes a difference and the values and beliefs of your team
should match the requirement to serve the customer. Hire the best and
forget the rest if you want a superior service effort consistently.
- Leadership sets the tone. - Find a company where leaders personally
practice exceeding the service expectations of their customers and you
will see what it means to truly embody the essence of service. Their
continuous example shows everyone in the company how they are expected
to internalize the service effort consistently. Their example is
visible through their willingness to actively participate and be
involved in the actions of service. No matter how big or how small,
leaders who set the service tone choose to pitch in regularly and
remain connected to their customer.
- Rely on common sense – Most customer service policies and
procedures are written to discourage rather than encourage the
effective delivery of customer service. They are written to limit the
decisions that any one person can make or the extent to which any one
person can take action. They are written in response to an abuse on the
part of an individual or to proactively prevent abuse. In many cases,
they should be called customer disservice policies. Here’s a prevailing
thought to consider when determining what your policies and procedures
on customer service should be. Use common sense and do the right thing.
If everyone is trained with this expectation in mind and they
understand how to apply it in the course of their day, they are
equipped to exceed the expectations of the customer. After all, how can
you go wrong when you use common sense and do the right thing on behalf
of your customer?
- Remember, the customer puts food on your table and pays for your
housing. This is really what it comes down to when talking about
service. Absent the customer, there’s no job, no food and no housing.
The customer doesn’t need us, we need them. Acknowledging the fact that
the customer has more choices today than ever before, they deserve to
be treated with the utmost dignity and respect. They are entitled to
our full attention and our full commitment to insure that the
experience that they receive exceeds their expectation. It never pays
to take the customer for granted. When we do, is when they exercise
their choice to do business elsewhere.
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