Staff and customers a volatile mix – achieving great customer service standards!

Some basic must do’s

Staff must be trained and tested to ensure they can effectively communicate both orally and in writing. If you can’t invest in hiring or training great communicators at least design a broad range of idiot proof form letters that cover common situations and have a senior manager vet them before they are sent out.

Ensuring that proper telephone techniques are understood and practiced is another essential and one that in my experience is often overlooked. Even major international banks are known at times to hide behind their automated systems. How many times have you been lost in the call transfer process or been sent through three or four idiots before you got to the service section you needed.

Problem solving must be ingrained in all staff as a primary responsibility. I recently spoke to a HR department in a major hotel regarding an issue and was told “that’s not my job and you’ll have to speak to Mr so and so”. This person had no positive customer service attitude and was not at all interested in the impression her bad and disinterested behaviour left on the customer. In contrast I once watched a busy chief executive personally handle a basic question from a customer and after referring them on to the correct department followed up both the service staff and the customer with a call to ensure the query had been handled to the customer’s satisfaction.

Ensuring staff give “compelling customer greetings” is a key to being perceived as an organization that offers great customer service. There are many techniques for ensuring staff know who their customers are by name. With computerised tracking systems it is easy to build a data base of your customer association with your organization. Which do you like? “Hello sir how may I assist you?” (to a repeat customer) or “hello mister Jones nice to see you back how is your xyz widget performing” or “hello Mr Smith, wow you were only here in June you must enjoy our hotel we are really pleased you have come to stay with us again”.

EXCELLENT SERVICE IS A PHILOSOPHY, NOT A TECHNIQUE!

Questions to ask yourself:

Does our company/department/staff take customer requirements very seriously? If we are to be truly customer focused… no one is just doing a job, we are all satisfying customers. How long has it been since we have executed (metaphorically speaking) anyone for saying “its not my job”. Is our organization free of demarcation disputes? Do we have a total quality attitude to our work or is everybody working to rule.

Do we look at what we do from the customer’s point of view? How long has it been since we surveyed our customers; got feedback on how we are doing. (“Face-to-face” is best.) How much effort is really taken to make our customers feel important and respected? Try this… put a dollar coin in a jar every time you hear a phone sound for more than three rings and if the jar is too heavy to lift at the end of two months invest in some attitudinal changes in the corporate culture.

The latest wisdom suggests that partnering is the way to the future… do we show concern for our customer’s business requirements, communicate effectively our needs and demonstrate an understanding for theirs. Is there a follow-up system in place or do we just wait for complaints. When we get complaints do we conduct a ‘witch hunt’ or do we re-educate the staff to do it better next time.

DOES OUR ORGANIZATION PROFIT (LEARN) FROM OUR MISTAKES OR DO THEY JUST COST US CUSTOMERS?

www.orglearn.org management tips, resume tips and a free blank resume form

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