Seven Tips to Deal With Unhappy Customers
A good response to a customer complaint ensures you'll receive that complaint only once..
No one likes to receive a complaint - but complaints are worth their weight in gold if an organization learns from them and then uses the information to improve the customer experience.
Customer complaints can be used to build a better customer
experience and turn a dissatisfied customer into a raving fan.
Customer complaints are usually not personal. When employees
understand that the customer's anger is directed toward the
company, not the employee, they are better able to deal with the
emotions of the customer.
If the employee doesn't take a customer's comments
personally, it will help them remain calm. Remaining calm will,
in turn, help calm the customer more rapidly.
Focus on the customer rather than the complaint. Customer-focus
will help the employee empathize or "walk in the shoes" of the
customer. It will help them listen more sympathetically to a
complaining customer - which is often all the customer wants.
Plus it will help them remain calm and polite while a customer
vents his frustrations.
Attitude is everything in creating satisfied customers. Even the
most irate customer will usually calm down when dealing with
someone who is obviously doing their best to understand the
customer's situation.
If employees truly listen to a customer complaint, valid or
not, the customer will at least feel as if they are being heard.
Sometimes that's enough to completely diffuse a negative
situation.
Empower employees to handle customer complaints themselves.
Obviously, there will be a point when a more senior person must
make a decision in dealing with a complaint, but empowering
employees to deal with common complaints and issues on their own
will go a long way toward creating a more positive customer
experience and increasing employee engagement.
Verify before taking action. Make sure that you ask what would
make the customer happy and then verify before taking any
action. Customers will rarely ask for more that we are prepared
to offer, so ask what will make them happy first.
Once they have made their suggestions, then verify that if
you are able to provide that remedy, the customer will be
satisfied. Nothing worse than working to resolve an issue only
to find that the customer is still not happy.
Move quickly to resolution. Once a resolution is agreed, move
quickly. When an upset customer calls and receives an immediate
resolution to their problem, they will be much more likely to
return as a customer. In fact, a good recovery builds greater
customer loyalty than simply delivering as expected - so make
sure to use this to your advantage.
The exact opposite is true, however, if the customer is
"given the run-around" by being transferred from employee to
manager to higher level executive before their problem is
handled.
Provide tools. Give employees options when dealing with
difficult customers or those with an issue the employee can't
resolve. For example, if a customer bought an item on clearance,
and the store's policy is to never accept returns on clearance
items, allow employees to offer the customer a complimentary
gift card, an extended warranty on the item, or a similar bonus.
While it may not be exactly what the customer asks for, it will show customer appreciation and help them see that the company is going out of its way to satisfy the complaint.
There will be times when nothing can be done to satisfy an unhappy customer. At that point, the customer service employee must simply defer that customer to a manager or supervisor.
Employees who handle customer service complaints quickly, efficiently and professionally will minimize those issues and will give employees a sense of ownership in their jobs and in the company.
About the Author
Bill Hogg is a widely recognized as the Performance
Excelerator™. This is due to his ability to create profound
change and deliver extraordinary results within the most
demanding organizations. He works with senior leadership teams
to navigate change and transform organizations into high
performance, customer-focused cultures that create long-term,
profitable relationships with your customers and excelerate
performance and productivity with leaders and employees. Info:
http://www.billhogg.ca.

