Make Your Customer Number Two!
Want to provide fresh customer service? Try ignoring conventional wisdom and make your employees number one..
Customer service experts have been chanting variations of the mantra: "Make the customer number one" since one caveman paid another caveman three clamshells for the skin of a sabertooth tiger.
Okay, as far as we know cavemen didn't chant mantras, but you
get my point. The vast majority of customer service strategies
use the idea of making your customer your top priority as their
cornerstone.
Since most customer service strategies are partially or wholly
based on making the customer number one, then obviously customer
service levels must be at an all-time high, right?
Everywhere you go, people are raving about how great their
daily customer service experiences are, and customer
satisfaction polls back this affirmation up with hard data.
I'll give you a moment to stop laughing before I continue.
Hopefully you didn't snort any of your morning coffee out your
nose. We all realize that in far too many cases, the one word
that best sums up the state of customer service today is
"disaster." Lines are long, information is scarce, products are
out of place or out of stock, and no two employees have the same
answer to the same question. If today's public-serving
organizations really are making the customer number one, they
have a funny way of demonstrating it.
Ironically, customer service levels are declining as competition
for customer loyalty is increasing. In this age of chain
expansion, a customer can find your services duplicated or your
products cheaper on the next block. The one way you can
differentiate yourself in a sea of similar competition is by
offering a world-class customer service experience. This will
never happen if you use the same stale, outdated, failed
approach to customer service that you and your competitors have
always used before. Namely, the "making the customer number one"
approach.
The business world needs a makeover. A new perspective. A fresh
approach that I like to call "Fresh Customer Service." Fresh
Customer Service demystifies the process of attracting loyal,
happy customers who return again and again and recommend your
business to their friends and families. This type of customer
reaction, what some may consider as a minor detail, can actually
tip the scales and prove the difference between a prosperous
organization and a bankrupt organization. So what's the secret?
The frontline employee.
This idea is the key to unlocking sustained long-term success in
whatever area of service or production your organization offers.
Throughout your organization's entire process of selling,
serving, marketing, cleaning - you name it - the only way you can
hope to deliver a world class customer service experience is by
listening to, equipping, empowering, involving, and valuing the
feedback and expertise your frontline employees provide.
I know, I know, the struggle to turn just-any-old customer into
a loyal customer is unyielding, and the burden of competition is
so stiff you don't have time to think about what Mary Jo at the
cash register and Frank the Janitor have to say about things.
But these are the exact people to whom you need to listen and
show your appreciation - the operator who answers customer
complaint calls, the construction worker who is building a new
home, the consultant who is trying to move a client, the greeter
who welcomes the customer at the entrance of the store, the
cashier who tallies the customer's total at the register.
The associate on the floor who explains why this appliance is
better than that one, who offers to help carry grocery bags, who
tidies up the restrooms, who smiles when he performs his duties;
and anyone else who comes in contact with the customer, be it in
person or via email, voice mail, snail mail, Instant Message,
Live Chat, or whatever internet-based form of communication has
sprouted up this week.
Remember this important business fact:
The employee is number one, not the customer. The customer is number two.
The key to running a successful operation is believing and
practicing the concept that customers should always come
second - employees matter more in the immediate sense and should
therefore come first. After all, happy employees unleash their
enthusiasm and passion from within, and that passion is
contagious. It infects everyone around them, including
customers.
And happy employees naturally provide superior customer service.
They smile. I've learned ways to make employees happy, and I've
listed some of the best below.
1. Thank your employees every day. Thank them for going above
and beyond their job descriptions. And why not thank them for
doing what they're supposed to be doing? It sure can't hurt
anyone.
2. Treat each employee with the utmost trust, honesty, respect,
integrity, and commitment to his or her well-being. The
Frontline Employee is the most important asset, resource and
ally to an organization's operations. He (or she) and his (or
her) quest to deliver a customer service experience
are paramount. We must take care of all of our Frontline
Employees first if we ever hope to effectively and consistently
reach the customer.
3. Seek to maximize the talent of each employee and work to
enhance his or her quality of life.
4. Value diversity among your staff and work to fulfill their
personal aspirations. Only then will the Frontline Employee be
more apt to pour his or her heart into providing a World-Class
customer service experience and delivering the goals and
objectives of the organization.
5. All employees should have the right to be involved in the
planning of the work affecting them. In addition to providing a
World-Class customer service experience to the customers, you
want to ensure that the Frontline Employee is an ambassador for
the organization.
For many individuals, organizations, corporations, mom-and-pop
stores, and entrepreneurs, delivering a customer
service experience through Fresh Customer Service will require a
cultural change. But embracing this experience, no matter how
much work it will take, will deliver a competitive edge unlike
any other.
Our customers are asking - no, begging - for Fresh Customer Service,
and they want it now! The Frontline Employee is the person best
position to fufill this immediate demand. Realizing this, we
must empower and equip the Frontline Employee with the tools
necessary to make it happen and by doing so, we will be able to
deliver an excellent customer service experience every time.
Serve the customer and beat the competition. No company is
successful, financially or otherwise, without Fresh Customer
Service.
If you are a manager, frontline leader, supervisor,
entrepreneur, director, HR rep, small business owner or CEO, you
must offer your Frontline Employees a healthy, fruitful,
cohesive working environment where their contributions are
valued and respected.
Remember that if you first take care of the Frontline Employees, they will take care of the customers, and the bottom line will take care of itself.
About the Author
Michael D. Brown, MBA is a successful motivational speaker, management expert and consultant and best-selling author. Michael delivers his signature programs with a commitment to delivering results and he has helped a number of Fortune 500 companies deliver world-class experiences that led to substantial growth. Info: www.52CustomerServiceTips.com and www.FreshCustomerService.com.

