Customer
Service Skills
One
of the most important customer service skills you can develop
is the ability to understand and effectively respond to the
customer’s needs and concerns. For a long time, sales
has been perceived to be mostly about trying to convince the
customer that he needs the product. Excellent customer service
starts by first taking the time to get to know the customer,
his situation, his vision, his frustrations and his goals.
Our Customer Service Skills seminar will guide you in how
to get a grasp of these key issues. Once you have a good handle
on what is on his heart and mind, then you will know how to
offer the customer helpful solutions that are attractive to
him because they have value to him.
Is
Customer Service Outdated
Tom
Peters tells us that 70% of customers hit the road not because
of price or product quality issues, but because they did not
like the human side of doing business with the provider of
the product or service. Research conducted by The Forum Corporation
supports this fact and indicates that 45% of these customers
said they switched to another company because the attention
they did receive was poor in quality.
Customers
today are often treated like a nuisance, instead of the reason
that a company is in business at all. Products and services
continue to increase in cost. Customer service, on the other
hand, continues to decline. Dealing with surly cashiers who
seem to have more important things to do than ring up your
sale are the rule rather than the exception. Having a product
delivered to your home means giving up hours out of your day
to wait. It seems that businesses today have forgotten how
valuable customers actually are. Without customers, no one
earns a paycheck.
In
the Pursuit of Wow, author, Tom Peters, talks about two things
that companies known for outstanding service do better than
anyone else - they step out and they stand out. Delivering
WOW service is a commitment to do whatever it takes to serve
the customer, and that commitment must be imprinted on the
hearts and minds of every single employee. Only then can any
organization stand apart from their competition.
Thousands
of books and articles are written on the topic of customer
service. Executives constantly tout the importance of providing
superior service, and everyone seems to agree that it is essential
to long-term business success, especially in today’s
competitive marketplace. Why then don’t more company’s
deliver?
Most
of us have come to believe that outstanding customer service
is just a thing of the past. Mediocre service (or worse) is
the norm. When a company actually delivers great service,
it is almost too good to be true.
Providing
great customer service is not that difficult, is it? IBM founder
Thomas Watson is attributed with saying, “if you want
to achieve excellence, you can get there today. As of this
second, quit doing less-than-excellent work. Words to live
by! Customers want to work with those businesses who demonstrate
a sincere desire to help them with anything they need, and
they are willing to pay for it. Yes, they want products to
work and services that meet their needs. More importantly
though, they want someone to care when something goes wrong.
During
my 20-year corporate career, I have watched more than one
employer overcomplicate the issue. Consistently, corporations
today are more internally than externally focused. Time is
wasted producing study after study trying to determine if
customers are satisfied, and if not, why not. Then, months
may go by while fancy customer service program is designed,
which is supposed to measurably improve customer satisfaction.
In the meantime, nothing changes.
Mediocre
service is delivered because corporations today do not hold
every employee accountable for delivering world-class service.
Everyone’s job is deliver service that knocks people
over, and research suggests that the winning, customer focused
companies treat their employees well. They motivate and reward
employees who deliver outstanding service. Bonuses and raises
can certainly be tied to customer service performance. Or,
employees can be rewarded and publicly acknowledged when they
put service about all else. Both approaches make it crystal
clear that service to the customer is the organization’s
number one priority.
Corporations
can also empower employees - through action, not words - to
do whatever it takes to keep customers coming back. The Ritz-Carlton,
winner of the 1992 Malcolm Baldridge National Quaility award
gives every employee the autonomy to serve customers in any
way they deem appropriate, which includes giving hotel housekeepers
the ability to spend up to $2,000 to solve a customer problem.
That is what I call empowerment.
Based
on my own professional experience, I have defined four rules
crucial to delivering winning customer service:
Rule
#1: Listen! When customers complain there is a reason.
More importantly, it is an opportunity to learn something,
so hear them out without interrupting or arguing.
Rule
#2: Don’t take it personally. Customer complaints
are about products or service that did not live up to their
expectations or the marketing hype. Taking it personally,
getting defensive, or getting angry only makes the situation
worse.
Rule
#3: Offer a sincere apology for the inconvenience. Put
yourself in your customer's shoes. Remember what it feels
like when something you have purchased did not do the job
it was supposed too, or caused an even bigger problem than
the one it was supposed to solve.
Rule
#4: Never say, “It’s not my job or my department
or my responsibility.” If you work at the company that
made the product or sold the service - it is your job! Make
a personal commitment to do whatever it takes to fix the problem
even if it is not in your job description.
In
the end, only those companies with an ongoing commitment to
listen and serve can consistently keep their customers delighted.
by
Barbara K. Giamanco

Customer
Service - Make a Lasting First Impression
Customer
Service Training
"If you work just for money, you'll never make it, but
if you love what you're doing and you
always put the customer first, success will be yours."
Ray Kroc
Suggested
Reading
180 Ways To Walk The Customer Service
Talk
By Eric Harvey
The Big Book of Sales Games (Big Book of Business
Games)
by Peggy Carlaw, Vasudha K. Deming
BE OUR GUEST : Perfecting the art of customer
service
by Disney Institute
The Firm of the Future: A Guide for Accountants,
Lawyers, and Other Professional Services
by Paul Dunn, Ronald J. Baker
CustomerCentric Selling
by Michael Bosworth
Moments of Truth
by Jan Carlzon
Clued In : How to Keep Customers Coming Back
Again and Again
by Lewis Carbone
Customer Service: Building Successful Skills
for the Twenty-First Century,
by Robert W. Lucas
Zingerman's Guide to Giving Great Service,
by Ari Weinzweig
What Clients Love: A Field Guide to Growing
Your Business
by Harry Beckwith
The CRM Handbook: A Business Guide to Customer
Relationship Management
by Jill Dyché
The SERVICE PROFIT CHAIN
by James L. Heskett
Think Like Your Customer : A Winning Strategy
to Maximize Sales by Understanding and Influencing How and
Why Your Customers Buy
by Bill Stinnett
ROI Selling : Increasing Revenue, Profit, and
Customer Loyalty through the 360 Sales Cycle
by Michael Nick, Kurt Koenig
A Guide to Customer Service Skills for the Help
Desk Professional
by Donna Knapp |