5
Best Customer Service Ideas
Customer
Service Practices
Do you remember
when businesses used to gain separation from their competition by
proudly announcing, “it is the service after the sale that
counts”? Somewhere along the way, pride in offering great
service got buried in an avalanche of price cutting and profit taking.
But in the new economy of the 21st Century, customer service is
back and booming. There days, the market is full of great products
and low prices. How are you going to build market share? By giving
outstanding customer service, that’s how. Our exceptional
Customer
Service Training classes will equip you to marry great service
with great products to keep you running ahead of the competition
for years to come.
Customer Service Ideas:
Don't do business without them.
You know the
stories: There's the legendary tale of a Nordstrom clerk who refunded
the price of a customer's tires, even though Nordstrom doesn't sell
tires. And who could forget the one about a Midwest Express employee
who lent his own suit to a passenger whose luggage had been lost?
Reserved for
world-class companies, these stories tell of the loyalty-boosting
customer service most entrepreneurs would kill for. The problem?
Most entrepreneurs don't have the foggiest idea how to provide this
kind of service. In the words of Jay Goltz, 42, founder and president
of Artists Frame Service in Chicago, and author of The Street Smart
Entrepreneur (Addicus Books), "You read books, go to seminars,
hear speakers talk about great customer service, but it doesn't
always work."
There are, however,
a few things that almost always work. Consider the following five
ideas the equivalent of "Once upon a time...," the beginning
of your own tales of legendary customer service.
1. Hire The
Right People.
"Find and
retain quality people," advises Ron Zemke, founder of Performance
Research Associates, a Minneapolis service-quality consulting firm,
and co-author of Delivering Knock Your Socks Off Service (Amacom
Books). "You can't create world-class customer care if you
hire run-of-the-mill employees."
Customer service
employees who excel have the right personality for the job, according
to Peter Baron, 38, founder and principal of Socket Public Relations
in Tucker, Georgia. "The people we hire [are] high-achievers
who take charge," he says. According to Baron, this type of
person is best suited to doing whatever it takes to make customers
happy.
Ask the right
questions when interviewing candidates, advises Goltz. Artist Frame
Service's interviewing protocol probes deeply into prospective customer
service employees' past job experiences. "I ask them to tell
me about how they handled their worst customer service experience,"
Goltz says. "You can catch a [candidate's] attitude that way."
In today's tight
labor market, it can be tough to find the right people. Zemke suggests
asking your best customer service employees to identify other people
like themselves. "If you have good workers," he says,
"use them to recruit [others]."
2. Make Service
A Core Value.
Even the most
eager-to-please employee must know what's expected in a variety
of customer service-related situations. But that's not easy. For
instance, how could Midwest Express train its reps to lend their
clothes to stranded passengers? It couldn't, says Leonard Berry,
a Texas A&M University marketing professor who cited the Midwest
Express story in his book Discovering The Soul of Service (Free
Press).
"There's
no way to write a policy manual that instructs employees on what
to do in every conceivable situation," argues Berry. "But
by building the ethic of excellent service into the [organization's]
core values, even without the rulebook, your employees will know
what to do."
Making service
a core value keeps it fresh in everyone's mind, says Berry. The
process of embedding customer service as a core value starts at
the top, he emphasizes. "The best way to perpetuate a concern
for excellence is to have excellence at the highest levels of management,"
says Berry.
Just as you
can't tell people what to do in every situation, you can't tell
them exactly what great service is either, Berry says. Instead of
detailing your values, inspire people by example. Tell them stories
about your company's great service--appeal to their hearts as well
as their minds.
3. Empower Front-Line
Employees.
Fear may be
the biggest factor blocking great service. By providing extra-special
service, employees may fear overstepping their bounds. To counter
this fear, entrepreneurs must empower employees to do what's necessary
to achieve their customer service vision.
At Socket Public
Relations, Baron's employees are empowered to stop billing clients
who are dissatisfied with a press release or other job. "It
definitely sends a message," he says. "It gives each employee
the knowledge and discretion to make sure the actual time they deliver
is high quality. If they're engaged in an activity they don't think
is valuable to the client, they decide whether to charge or not."
Giving employees
the discretion to provide free service isn't always the best form
of customer service empowerment, however. At Sonic Innovations,
a Salt Lake City hearing-aid manufacturer, company president Andy
Raguskus, 53, empowers customer service employees to make a whole
range of decisions in an effort to make customers happy.
"They're
free to offer refunds, swap one product for another, send out free
batteries or provide free consulting services," says Raguskus.
"They have a wide range of latitude." He stresses, however,
that this type of empowerment only works if customer service reps
aren't reprimanded for making bad decisions. That means backing
them up if they give away something they shouldn't have in an effort
to please a customer. "If employees make a decision I wouldn't
have made, I won't burn them for it," explains Raguskus. "Nine
times out of 10, our reps make fabulous choices."
4. Solicit And
Use Feedback.
Before you know
how much power to give employees, you have to know what's important
to customers. For instance, Sonic Innovations has two types of customers:
users, often elderly and hearing impaired, and professional audiologists,
who dispense its products. While a user may require an explanation
of the difference between analog and digital hearing aids, an audiologist
may have technical questions about programming. Knowing what's important
to each type of customer is essential.
How do you find
out what customers want? Listen and take notes, says Fred Wiersema,
co-author of The Discipline of Market Leaders (Perseus Books) and
editor of Customer Service (HarperBusiness). "The one thing
that can make up for all deficiencies is being in touch with your
customers," he says. That means using a variety of approaches
to encourage customers' letters, calls and other feedback.
Use computer
systems to record as much of this information as possible. Customers
of Lenel Systems International, a security management systems firm
in Pittsford, New York, are asked to provide an identification number
when they call. Service reps then enter the number into computers
to retrieve customer files, including all past problems reported
regarding Lenel's software and hardware.
"[Our customer
service database] has a tremendous amount of information,"
says Rudy Prokupets, the company's executive vice president of research
and development, and chief technology officer. Lenel also uses its
Web site to gather service data. Customers who access the site are
prompted to enter a unique password, identifying themselves and
funneling comments or complaints into their file. "We have
a feedback area on the site," adds Prokupets. "And we
make sure we respond to it."
Don't restrict
yourself to computerized solutions, however. Wiersema recommends
that entrepreneurs regularly call a few randomly selected customers
and simply ask about the company's service. "Make sure you
get directly in touch with the customer," advises Wiersema.
Prokupets agrees
about the value of direct experience. "We like to send service
people into the field to see real installations," he says.
"Once they come back, they're changed people."
5. Pick The
Right Customers.
Nothing will
work if you're trying to serve the wrong customers. "Small
businesses don't do a very good job of segmenting," says Zemke.
"If you've been serving everybody and not thinking about who
your core customers are, you're going to be in trouble when business
changes."
Some customers
are too demanding, reducing your ability to serve those who are
more easily satisfied. Others are too small to make serving them
worthwhile. To differentiate, says Zemke, "Define your core
customer, the one you would live or die for. Figure out who's going
to be the customer you'll go to the mat for, with all kinds of value-added
services."
You can use
data-based tools, such as projected lifetime revenues, to identify
the best clients. Or, says Zemke, you can simply listen to your
gut instincts. "Ask yourself, who would you go out in the middle
of the night to make a delivery for?" he suggests. Then try
to figure out what traits make those accounts so valuable to you,
and match new prospects to the profile. Otherwise, warns Zemke,
"You can spend an awful lot of time romancing marginal customers."
Baron says Socket
uses two traits to decide whether customers can be successfully
served. First, customers must have products or services that are
likely to be successful. "If we feel their expectations are
out of line with what they have to offer, we decide then and there
it's not a good fit," he says.
Equally important,
Socket clients must be people who are easy to work with. "If
we have a customer who's hard on our employees, we walk," Baron
says. "We put our people first."
By Mark Henricks

Customer Service Practices - Customer Service is
Back and Booming
Customer
Service Training Quote
"Spend
a lot of time talking to customers face to face.
You'd be amazed how many companies don't listen to their customers."
Ross Perot
Suggested
Reading:
Best
Practices in Customer Service
by Ron Zemke, John A. Woods
Breakthrough
Customer Service : Best Practices of Leaders in Customer Support
by Stanley A. Brown
Customer
Service Best Practices
by Ron Zemke
Best
Practices in E-Service: Building Powerful Customer Loyalty (Report)
by Best Practices
The
Big Book of Customer Service Training Games
by Peggy Carlaw, Vasudha K. Deming
Best
practices in customer care for financial services (AIIM international
white paper)
by Irene Macauley
Library
customer service training manual
by Pat Wagner
Great
Customer Service on the Telephone (Worksmart Series)
by Kristin Anderson
Branded
Customer Service : The New Competitive Edge
by Janelle Barlow, Paul Stewart
Exceptional
Customer Service: Going Beyond Your Good Service to Exceed the Customer's
Expectation
by Lisa Ford
Secret
Service: Hidden Systems That Deliver Unforgettable Customer Service
by John R. DiJulius III
Customer
Service for Dummies
by Karen Leland
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