| If the phrase, “practice
makes perfect” is true anywhere, it is absolutely true
in customer service skills training. There is no better and
faster way to improve your ability to handle delicate customer
service issues than to actually confront them in a real-time
situation. Lectures and books can tell you what you ought to
do, but the only way to refine those skills and make them yours
is to practice them. In our Customer
Service Skills Seminar, we will lead you through a customer
service training simulation series, complete with videotaping
and coaching reviews. The immediate feedback you will receive
as you work through these real life customer service challenges
is worth the price of admission.
Standing Out
Q: Do you think a small business can really distinguish itself
through superior customer service?
A: Absolutely, but it can't happen overnight. Good service
is extremely hard to find these days. As a consumer, I'm always
on the lookout for good service and am frustrated by how seldom
I see it. Even when I do see it, more often than not it's
the result of a single person going out of their way to provide
the service and not the policies or practices of the business.
So what does this mean for you, the entrepreneur who is working
like crazy to get your business off the ground? You have a
million things to think about, and this is just one of them.
If you're looking to distinguish your business and offer something
that will be a real competitive advantage, then I suggest
you focus on customer service. Understand, however, that if
you choose this path, it has to be a long-term
strategy, and you'll have to be patient to see the results.
That's because anyone can claim to offer great service, and
that makes it hard for customers to distinguish between the
people who really deliver it and those who just say they do.
If you want to make customer service a key part of your business,
then you have to not only make the claim, but also consistently
back it up. If you do this, over time more and more people
will believe you, and they'll spread the word.
If you can establish a reputation for service, great things
will happen. It will be easier for you to get new customers,
get more business from your existing ones and increase your
prices. Many businesspeople seem to think that price is everything.
My experience has been that people will pay more if you give
them more.
But you can't just raise your prices and say that you have
more value. You have to prove it. When my brother-in-law and
I started Tucker Golf, we wanted our service to be second
to none. At our first trade show, people would ask about our
company, and at some point I'd mention that our goal was to
provide better service than any other golf vacation company.
Their response was almost always, "Oh, so you charge
a lot more!" That wasn't what I meant at all, and we
really didn't charge much more. The point is that no one believed
us because we hadn't been around long enough to prove our
claim. It isn't enough just to say it--you have to do it!
And not just for a few weeks--you have to do it day in and
day out for years.
Now, five years later, we have customers who call and say,
"Set me up with something similar to last year, and here
is my credit card number--just charge it with however much
it costs." It has taken Tucker a long, long time to earn
that kind of trust. We had to provide a lot of great service
along the way for people to hear about us, experience us and
recommend us to other people.
OK, maybe I've persuaded you that this could work. But how
do you get from here to there? Well, I admit it is a bit of
a chicken and an egg problem. When Tucker first got started,
we had many competitors who regularly sent thousands of golfers
on vacations, while we had never sent anyone. How do you make
a name for yourself against that kind of competition? You
work hard, be persistent and stay alive until enough people
experience your service to come back (and bring other people
with them). At Tucker, we started out slowly, but eventually
the first person called and booked their vacation, and then
a little later another one, and then another and so on.
It's one thing to talk about great service, but quite another
to provide it, day after day, for the months and years that
it takes to make a difference. But there's nothing magic about
it--just hard work
and persistence. You can provide it, I can provide it
and our competitors can provide it. But most of them don't.
And that opens a big door for us, if we're willing to do what
it takes to step through.
Keith Lowe
Miami, Florida

Customer Service Training Simulation - Refine Your Customer
Service Skills
Customer Service Training Quote
"If once you forfeit the confidence of your fellow-citizens,
you can never regain their respect and esteem. ."
Abraham Lincoln
Suggested Reading:
Complete Guide to Customer
Service (Wiley Series in Training & Development)
by Linda Lash
Branded Customer Service : The New Competitive Edge
by Janelle Barlow, Paul Stewart
The development of a customer
relations training program for field service personnel
by J. Jay Weber
180 Ways To Walk The Customer Service Talk
by Eric Harvey
Exceptional Customer Service: Handle
Customers With Skill and Confidence (Sixty-Minute Training
Series)
by National Press Publications
Customer service seminar for bank personnel: A video-assisted
training program leader's guide
by Mary Lee King
Customer Relationship
Management
by Francis Buttle
Secret Service: Hidden Systems That Deliver Unforgettable
Customer Service
by John R. DiJulius III
Winning the Service
Game
by Benjamin Schneider, David Earl Bowen
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