How to Enhance Customer Service
The way in which we care for customers is expanding fast. Welcome to the exciting world of social media..
800 words on how to enhance customer service – are you kidding?
Volumes of books have been written on this subject – so what am I to put in these 800 words that will actually help you the reader improve the service you provide to your customers?
Never one to back down from a challenge let me drill this
down to the essential things you have to do in your business to
enhance customer service.
First: Beginning at the top of the organization, there must be a
passion to service customers. If the business
Owner/President/CEO does not have this passion, don’t expect the
rest of the organization to have it.
The drive to delight customers must be a top down philosophy
that is lived and breathed every day throughout the
organization. With all due respect to Vince Lombardi: The
customer isn’t everything – He is the only thing!
Second: Don’t treat customers like they are an interruption to
something more important you need to do. When a customer calls,
drop everything and focus completely on that customer and their
needs. How do your customer contact people treat customers?
Face to face or speaking with them on the phone. Is their
tone of voice helpful and sincere? Do they smile? (Yes, you can
hear a smile on the phone.) Do they give the customer the time
and attention necessary or are they pushing on to the next thing
whatever that might be?
As you build your top down passion for servicing customers make
sure everyone gets the message that the customer is THE most
important person in the organization. Leave the CEO on hold to
talk to a customer – not the other way around!
Third: Find out what your customers like about the way you treat
them and what they don’t like about how you treat them. What you
don’t know will hurt you. Never be afraid to learn from the
customer. You may be surprised by what you learn.
For example, most customers do not expect perfection – but
they demand responsibility. If there is a mistake or error –
take complete accountability for it and fix it. Your customer
contact personnel need to have the power to fix what is wrong on
behalf of the customer. Remove any barriers to making that
happen.
Fourth: Invert your organizational chart putting your customer
service reps at the top and the President/CEO at the bottom. In
short, satisfied employees satisfy customers.
An unhappy employee might be difficult within the company but they are poison to your customers. Reward the behaviors that satisfy customers. Recognize employees who do what it takes to make your customers happy.
We work with customer service reps that handle 80 to 100 customer calls each day. Not an easy task. Doing it well all day long requires a skilled and dedicated employee. Your job is to keep them fresh and excited about what they do.
They need to know that you understand the value of those 80
to 100 contacts. In my mind, there is no more valuable employee
in any company than the people who touch the customers on a
daily basis. Nurture them. Reward them. Serve them.
Fifth: Pay attention to the little things. When ever I am asked
the key to providing service that creates delighted customers I
smile and say: “You already know but probably take it for
granted.” That’s because it is the little things that add up to
superior customer service. Here is a brief listing of those
little things:
· A friendly tone of voice on the phone; a warm smile and eye
contact in person
· Empathy with the feelings a customer may have – but unspoken
empathy is worthless – let the customer know you understand
· Never say any of the following to a customer: NO; I CAN’T;
THAT IS NOT OUR POLICY. I always get a funny look with this one
and someone will ask, “But what if the customer wants something
shipped to arrive tomorrow and the last shipment is gone?”
My response – you say this: “I am so sorry. Our last shipment
left about 30 minutes ago. I will take personally responsibility
to get this out on our very first shipment tomorrow, which means
you will get it early on Thursday. Will that work for you?”
· Never rush a customer or do anything that might make then feel
rushed. You have no business without them so what could possibly
be more important than giving them the time and attention they
need.
I’m at 754 words so I will close with a final thought. 68% of
customers who stop doing business with you do so because of a
perception of indifference.
If customer service is not your passion, it will be for your competition. Something to think about..
About the Author
Bill Gessert is President of TeleSolutions Consultants LLC, a New Jersey based firm providing consulting services and customer training programs to the customer service and call center industries. He can be reached at 732.767.1421. www.tsc-online.com.

