First Contact: The Source of Customer Loyalty
With customers being smarter, more cost conscious, more product knowledgeable and more demanding, improving customer service has become a major focus within many businesses.
In Customer Satisfaction is Worthless; Customer Loyalty is
Priceless, author Jeffrey Gitomer contends the real solution is
shifting the paradigm away from customer service to customer
loyalty.
This may be the first step, but the next step is to shift the
focus away from loyal customers to loyal employees. By
recognizing the significance that the “first contact” a customer
has is with the employees.
The foundation for a loyal relationship begins with the
employee. In retail and many service businesses, employees
experience a short training session usually 16 hours or less.
The time is spent viewing required legal videotapes, completing
paperwork and learning the basic company policies including from
answering the telephone to using the cash register.
Yet, very few businesses actively develop those employees who
have first contact with the customer. This results in employees
who lack the real skills that are needed to develop those
long-term relationships and contributes to the high turnover
rate experienced by many retailers.
Imagine developing employees who can answer the following
questions consistently and then take the appropriate action:
What do my customers really want or need?
How can I meet their needs?
To create such positive self-aware employees begins with
creating good feelings about the individual employees.
Techniques such as creative visualization or positive
affirmations can enhance the employees’ behaviors.
Creative visualization uses the imagination to visualize and
achieve success.
Recent research conducted by the Helsinki School of Business
reveals that only 5% of all communication is received as it was
intended. In simpler terms, five out our every 100 words are
actually received by the customer as the employee intended.
Given the brief dialogue between customers and employees, this
research suggests that the source for many dissatisfied
customers begins with this first contact. How many orientation
sessions actually discuss effective communication skills?
Now imagine developing:
Employees who are proactive in their communications with
customers
Employees who understand the four fundamental principles of
successful interpersonal communication
Employees who go the extra mile for customers
Possibly by shifting paradigms, businesses can begin to
cultivate loyal customers through loyal employees who are
self-aware and actively demonstrating successful attitudes,
skills and knowledge on a daily basis.
Your business begins and may potentially end with that “first
contact.” The question now is “What are you going to ensure that
each first contact turns into a second, a third…?
About the Author
Leanne Hoagland-Smith is President of Advanced Systems, The Process Specialist, located outside of Chicago, IL. She partners with her clients to connect the 3P’s of Passion, Purpose and Performance to affect sustainable change in 4 key areas: financials, leadership, relationships and growth and innovation within a variety of industries ranging from education to manufacturing. Leanne can be reached at 219.759.5601 or leanne@processspecialist.com Copyright © Leanne Hoagland-Smith www.processspecialist.com.

