Tips for Curing Bad Customer Service
Bad customer service is everywhere these days..
Unmanned front desks, surly servers, clueless staff,
employees talking on the phone, and managers who refuse to
acknowledge a customer.
It’s no longer an exception, poor service has become the norm.
In an all-too-typical scene, a customer walks into a retail
store with a question about where to find a product.
The employee, who is busy and doesn’t want to be bothered, gives
the customer a curt answer and continues what she is doing
without even looking the customer in the eye.
The customer persists, so, with obvious annoyance, the employee
begrudgingly turns around and points the customer in the general
direction of the product’s location. Instead of buying the
product, the customer leaves the store, frustrated, vowing to
never return.
Most business owners and employees recognize this as a classic
example of bad customer service. And yet, this scene is repeated
endlessly in modern society. Negativity breeds negativity, and
eventually, nobody is happy.
“Never, never, never ignore a customer,” says Art Waller,
Regional Department Head for Utah State University. Waller
provides tips on how to improve customer relations, a vital
segment of any business.
“It’s important to be accessible,” Waller said. “Everything is
an interruption. A phone rings, someone comes into an office,
that’s an interruption. But if a customer is right there, do
that first. That’s why you’re there.
One of the single most important aspects of a successful
business is good customer service. Waller cited recent findings
in customer service. A typical business only hears from 4
percent of its dissatisfied customers. The other 96 percent
quietly go away. Of this 96 percent, 68 percent never reveal
their dissatisfaction because they perceive an attitude of
indifference in the owner, manager or employee.
Waller said this statistic is particularly dangerous for
businesses because if a dissatisfied customer can’t express
their complaints to a business, they’ll express them through
other outlets such as friends, neighbors and family.
A typical dissatisfied customer will tell eight to ten people
about their problem. One in five will tell 20. “It takes 12
positive service incidents to make up for one negative
incident,” Waller said. “Seven out of ten complaining customers
will do business with you again if you resolve the complaint in
their favor. If you resolve it on the spot, 95 percent will do
business with you again.”
Waller said these statistics speak to the importance of taking
action. Often an employee perceives dissatisfaction in a
customer, but chooses to ignore it and hopes that the problem
will go away. However, if the customer then goes away with the
problem, the customer will likely never return to the business.
This trend is what hurts businesses more than anything.
“We don’t have the ability to keep people that are already happy
with our product,” Waller said. “The average business spends six
times more to attract new customers than it does to keep old
ones. Yet customer loyalty is in most cases worth 10 times the
price of a single purchase.”
The first step is recognizing tendencies toward bad customer
service. But how do businesses improve their overall customer
service? Waller offered some basic tips:
Like what you do
“If you don’t love what you do, get the heck out,” Waller said.
“If you love what you do, it will be evident and people will
know it.” People who have a bad attitude about what they do will
reflect their attitude onto everyone around them, including
customers. Like most everything in life, good customer service
always comes back to attitude.
“If you believe your customers are a pain in the butt, guess
what — you’re right,” he said. “What you say, what you do, and
what you think are the same thing.”
Learn to adjust your perception
Because good customer service depends on a good attitude, a bad
attitude will surely diminish any facade of friendliness. Waller
recommends that employees analyze what is causing their negative
outlook and make a conscious effort to change, rather than cover
it up with a false smile.
“How do you change a belief of certainty?” Waller asked. “You
take out references and change it. Over time, it changes that
belief system.”
Establish Rapport
Customers will do business with people they like. Employees gain
this approval by establishing rapport, or a positive connection,
with a customer. Rapport can be established by simple gestures
such as calling a customer by their name, recognizing mutual
interests, asking questions, and making eye contact. The
customer instantly recognizes the employee as someone who cares
about their well-being, and is more likely to do business with
the company.
“Won’t you spend more money to go to a car dealership where
you’ve been treated well?” Waller asked. “Develop a genuine
interest in and admiration for your customers.” So what happens
when an employee doesn’t establish rapport? The customer
automatically meets that employee with more suspicion, which
leads to distrust, which leads to potential conflict.
Avoid a standoff
Many times businesses find themselves locked in an argument with
a complaining customer that becomes impossible to resolve.
Waller said the way to prevent this is to avoid the argument in
the first place. His advice is to step back, analyze where the
customer is coming from, and form a solution from their
standpoint, not yours.
“I never fought with them,” Waller said. “In fact, I went into a
dance with them. You’ve got to dance with them. You have the
empathize, and get into their world.”
Be reliable, be responsive and be credible
Local cable and utility companies are a prime example businesses
that do not possess these qualities, Waller said. When a
customer calls up in need of service, they give vague ideas of
when they’ll be there (“sometime between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.”),
sometimes don’t show up at all, and are generally indifferent to
customers’ concerns. Because of this behavior, they have lost
nearly all credibility in the public eye.
On the other hand, businesses such as Mercedes-Benz, Ritz
Carlton Hotels, and Disneyland have all gained reputations for
immaculate customer service, where employees are always nearby
to cater to customers’ every need at any time. These businesses
gained this reputation with years of training their employees to
put the customer first.
“The customer’s perception is everything,” Waller said. “People
pay for peace of mind. They want security, integrity, and the
assurance that if there is a problem, it will be promptly
handled.”
All of these tips come down to the platinum rule, or to “treat
people like they want to be treated.” This rule takes the Golden
Rule a step higher, forcing the employee to assess exactly what
the customer wants and act accordingly, not just act as they
would want to act in the same situation.
“You can’t reach everyone the same way,” he said. “You don’t
deal with reality. Nobody does. We deal with our perception of
reality.”
Waller said any attitude in good customer service fits in the
“as if” clause. Always act “as if” you are the only personal
contact that the customer has with the business, and behave “as
if” the entire reputation of the business depends on you.
“The ‘as if’ clause puts you where you need to be,” Waller said.
“The bottom line comes down to relationships and how you treat
others.” .
About the Author
Jill Homer is a freelance writer who is happy to provide articles and ad copy for business and financing specialties. For more information, contact her at jill@biketoshine.com.

