Posts Tagged ‘Service Customer’

Customer Service

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010
Customer Service
by Metro Transportation Library and Archive

Customer Service

Customer Service

 

 

 

The main ingredient that every single company in the world needs to survive and make a profit is “The Customer”. Seems simple enough, obviously without someone to buy your product or service, you have no business, you have absolutely nothing!

 

What most businesses today take for granted is “The Customer”, it is only when they start to dry up and disappear that they take them seriously. Stop and think about this statement, simple but true.

 

This is where “Customer Service” comes in. The truly successful businesses, the ones we can name in a heartbeat and have stood the test of time, realized early on the importance of getting and retaining “Customers”. They know it is cheaper to keep a satisfied “Customer” than it is to try and buy a new one.

 

With this fact in mind ask yourself the following questions:

 

Are our customers, happy customers?
Is our customer base growing, stagnant or shrinking?
Are we offering our customers real value for money?
Do our customers recommend us to others?
Will we still have customers in a down market, or even worse a recession?

 

Successful companies know the answers to these questions because they understand the importance of “Excellent Customer Service”. When I say they I really mean everyone in the company completely understands that their livelihood depends on “Customers”.

 

If everyone in your business is not on the same page, if providing your customers with the best service is not job #1, then I would suggest an immediate action plan. If it is not broken, don’t fix it, but if it is broken, take the time and fix it properly.

 

I am a business consultant, coach, author and licensed realtor. I have held senior positions for two Fortune 500 companies out of the United States, and have owned and operated several different businesses.
I was educated in Great Britain, Canada and the United States and held the position of President and director for the West Vancouver division of the Greater Vancouver Real Estate Board. My books and articles are based upon my own observations, experiences, facts and research with many different businesses and business leaders over the past three and a half decades.
Visit my site http://www.purchaserealestateinanyeconomy.com

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Courteous Customer Service

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010
Customer Service
by LunaWeb

Courteous Customer Service

Customer service and courtesy always go hand in hand. Customer service is not customer service if it is not courteous. Courtesy is usually defined as politeness originating from kindness and exercised habitually. This is what actually encompasses quality customer service. Basing from this you can actually say that the measure of good costumer service is courtesy towards customers.

The Importance of Courteous Customer Service

So how do you practise courteous customer service? First, determine the needs of your customers. By needs, we refer not only to the needs that they will pay you for but to any need that will provide them convenience while under your care. Just take for example when you are going to a hotel.

When you rent a hotel room, you primarily pay for the room, water and electricity or even food. However, the best hotels in the world are not renowned only for their rooms but for the very service that they provide. You certainly do not pay for the security guard to open the door for you but you consider it quality service when he does.

This implies that courteous customer service entails going beyond the job description or the need. Customers do not pay for politeness; they pay for their room and its facilities. However, if the establishment’s personnel have been polite and courteous, it is fairly certain that customers would go back and avail of the service from the said establishment again. For customers, satisfying customer service is a bonus that they get from an establishment. For the business, courtesy to customers is a crucial selling factor.

Courteous Customer Service Defined

Courteous customer service personnel are willing to help. As stated above, practicing good customer service means identifying the needs of your customers and venturing even beyond your customers’ needs. Once you have identified the need, address it right away without any further command or instructions. If you see a guest carrying too many bags, offer your help to carry the bags for her. That’s what differentiates exceptional businesses from mediocre ones. Five star hotels did not earn their place by merely providing their guests a place to stay. They are visited by customers because they are willing to perform a service that is beyond the formal scope of their business.

Discrimination does not have a place in courteous customer service. Courteous customer service knows no race, color or religion. A good customer service representative is blind to these differences in as much as he does not let these differences color his perceptions. However, a good customer service person is not blind to differences that affect how people would like to be served. In fact, he recognizes the needs of different people and provides it to them accordingly.

A courteous customer service agent is always on time. Being late is tantamount to being rude. Just think of yourself ordering a pizza only to find out that your order is an hour late. Think of the frustration that you will experience just because your pizza delivery is late. In some businesses, lost of time is lost money.

You may think that bringing the quality of your customer service up to this level will only mean added costs and may even result to more expensive products. It is a yes to both. Initiating changes for better quality service to your customers will involve expensive training of your frontline people. Now if you can’t afford to pay for these through existing operational capital, then you’ll have no choice but to increase your prices accordingly.

However, it is wrong to think that both of these are detrimental to your business. First of all, the training cost will pay for itself when word spreads about your exemplary service. As for price, look around. Any study will tell you that it is not only price that makes a person decide where to eat, where to shop and whose business to patronize. If you have a product that’s well worth the price and good, courteous customer service that make people want to come back, then you will definitely come out ahead.

Steven Taylor is a Marketing Consultant to http://www.Retronix.com – one of the most innovative and effective electronics services suppliers to the electronics & semiconductor industries. Services include BGA Rework.

Customer Service — Customer Loyalty Wins Sales

Friday, July 30th, 2010
Customer Service
by Graela

Customer Service — Customer Loyalty Wins Sales

Batteries not included. Three of the dumbest words.

Your Company spent millions of dollars to develop this wonderful product. Engineers spent countless hours creating and refining it. You spent additional millions of dollars in advertising to get me to buy it.

I bought it. I took it home and now it won’t work because YOU neglected to include the only part that WILL make it work. For a couple of extra bucks, your cost and mine, I’m frustrated and angry with you and your Company.

It’s the same with customer service.

No matter what you sell; whether it’s goods or services, big ticket or small, sales and customer service are not two separate pieces. Every sale must come with the customer service built in.

Exceptional customer service is NOT an extra cost of doing business. It is an investment in your own future success.

In the early 1950s, my uncle had a very small clothing store in Miami, Florida. In those days, Miami was a major entertainment center, with the biggest names in show business appearing at the major hotels, very similar to Las Vegas today.

One evening, as he was leaving the stage at the end of the early show, a young singer ripped his tuxedo jacket on a nail sticking out of the wall. It was after 8 P.M., all the clothing stores were closed.

The hotel management called the major stores and owners because the singer didn’t want to go on stage with a torn jacket or worse, no jacket.

None of the fancy clothing shop owners would leave their homes to accommodate the young man. Finally, in desperation, my uncle got the call. Would he come downtown with a couple of tuxedos?

Within an hour my uncle was at the hotel with 4 tuxedos. He did the fitting and tailoring right on the spot.

The young singer and the big hotel management were ecstatic. The singer tried to shove a few extra hundred dollar bills into my uncle’s hand, but he wouldn’t take the money, explaining that he was honored to have the opportunity to earn the business.

The singer promised that he would never forget my uncle’s kindness and would tell his show biz friends about my uncle. True to his word, the singer continued to tell his friends about my uncle, even as his singing career skyrocketed.

The young singer – Frank Sinatra.

My uncle – went from a tiny clothing store on the edges of oblivion to “Mickey Hayes – Clothier to the Stars”; his walls covered with hundreds of photographs of the biggest names in show business.

On the other side of the coin is INTEL, the major manufacturer of computer chips, and, a great company.

Some years ago, Intel’s newest chip had a design flaw that caused a problem in only the tiniest number of calculations, and only in highly complex situations. As this problem began to get reported in the press, owners of computers built with these new chips wanted replacements.

Intel’s management stated that these customers were somewhat stupid since only highly complex calculations in specialized situations would experience that problem and then, only on the rarest occasions. They said that they would replace the chip if the customer could substantiate the claim that their chip was flawed.

How stupid. If it only goes bad once in a zillion times, why not give a lifetime guarantee? Most of the customers would never run into that problem. If they had immediately offered the lifetime replacement guarantee, ALL of the customers would have had a very high degree of confidence that they would never need to take Intel up on their offer.

Intel finally did offer lifetime replacement – after worrying, offending and insulting millions of their customers.

We can all learn a valuable lesson from Nordstroms; the department store famous for customer service. Their service to customers is so incredible, that people go out of their way to shop there.

Mr. Nordstrom calls it ‘customer heroics’. “We do it because we want more business – NOT simply because we’re nice guys.”

I’ve always told my employees – “don’t save me ‘MY’ money. If it helps the customer, SPEND my money. Even if they make a mistake, they won’t be criticized if it helped the customer”.

Nordstrom, over a period of many years, has developed a corporate culture of service to the customer. Any corporate culture, if it is going to endure successfully, MUST take on a life of its own, apart from the wishes of management. It has to be adopted by every employee, because THEY each think that it’s a good idea.

Whether you are a 1 person operation or the largest company, you know what good customer service is. It’s the Golden Rule applied to business – “Do unto others”.

Listen to your customers’ spoken requests – and unspoken. They’ll tell you what they want. Add a large portion of your own good common sense. Make a commitment to yourself that you will give your customers, service beyond their highest expectations

If you will do these few simple things, I can guarantee you success beyond YOUR expectations.

Gary Wollin is a Warren Buffet style investment advisor with 45+ years of Wall Street experience. He has been regularly featured in many financial publications around the world. He writes and speaks on sales, customer loyalty, and the stock market. http://www.garywollin.com

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Modern Trends In Customer Service

Sunday, July 18th, 2010
Customer Service
by Birmingham News Room

Modern Trends In Customer Service

Customer service can be seen as vital in the sphere of modern business. There are few companies who do not regard the importance of service as paramount. In today’s consumer world it would be foolish for many companies to disregard the wishes of the customer. Often providing exceptional service is the only dividing factor between two companies, with the internet providing ever increasing amounts of review based information companies have once again found the importance of providing a service that will spread through word of mouth.


Customer satisfaction has become so important that a professional body; the Institute of Customer service has been formed. Operating through a membership system it provides industry standards for service whilst awarding those who meet these standards each year. The institute also undertakes the training of representatives and undertakes a nationwide customer satisfaction survey twice a year to assess the overall standard of service present in UK business.


As a customer today we are faced with unrivalled choice, those as close as two generations before us could not have imagined how different the world of consumerism is. Only fifty years ago the local cooperatives still existed providing almost anything a customer might need. Although a local service was guaranteed, this can be seen as a distant memory for many. The trend has been to provide the customer with an increase in specialist services and product providers.


These specialist traders have led to an increased focussed on customer satisfaction when it comes to advice on buying products. The purpose of modern shops is to advise their customer base on what is the best option, not for the good of the shareholders but for the customer. This is the essence of modern customer service, at least in its advisory role. To provide a customer with the best product taking into account their budget and needs is the primary objective.


Another major component of modern business is complaint handling. Many of the previous generation will remember a simple shrug of the shoulders if a complaint was raised. Today the customer is better protected by laws and hence larger companies have responded to this. Many companies now implement complaints handling procedures that all staff must be trained in; the idea of this is to always provide the customer with the best customer service possible, subsequently improving their reputation in a wider sense.


Some companies have undertaken customer satisfaction in a more proactive manner. Through post sales customer surveys it is possible to achieve valuable knowledge of various facets of a business. Gaining an idea of how a customer feels they were treated, how well they thought the service performed and whether or not they think they received a good deal are extremely precious when searching for that competitive edge.


Like so many elements of the modern world the internet has revolutionised the customer service received by consumers. Although many still like to have a real person at the end of the phone when making enquiries, websites with frequently required information and automated telephone services have arguably simplified customer requests. What can definitely be asserted is that these technologies have reduced the costs for many companies.


Companies that combine these elements to create superior service will truly feel the benefit. Admitting accountability is a major part of this as customers are far more forgiving when a company has recognised its mistakes and is pursuing to resolve them. Delivery of consistent results to consumers and resolving issues speedily will give that particular company a competitive edge over its rivals; this is why modern businesses really have no choice but to provide exemplary service.

Shaun Parker has been involved in the process of market research for many leading companies. He offers advice to businesses that want to analyse their customer service.

Customer Service and the Human Experience

Thursday, July 15th, 2010
Customer Service
by Graela

Customer Service and the Human Experience

Historically, customer service was delivered over the phone or in person. Customers didn’t have many choices, and switching to competitors was cumbersome. Today, these methods are but two of the many possible touch points of entry for any given interaction. With all the options the Internet brings, competition is literally a click away. If, as has been reported, 65% of your business comes from current customers, then in order to stay in business, you best focus on winning the satisfaction and loyalty of those customers.

With continued attention on customer service, customer retention, and lifetime value of the customer, it is no surprise that contact center operations continue to increase in importance as the primary hub of a customer’s experience. The contact center is still the most common way that customers get in touch with businesses. In fact, Gartner reports 92% of all contact is through the center.

While much attention has been focused on the technology and benefits of providing multiple channels for customer contact, little consideration has been directed to handling the human part of the equation—training Customer and Technical Service Representatives to field more than just telephone communications. With the explosion of e-commerce, the need to reinforce keeping the human element in the equation is paramount. Certainly now more than ever before in history, customer-centric service is a necessity.

Twenty five years from now customers will still be human beings, still be driven by desires and needs. Virtual environments do not create virtual customers. Except for the simplest transactions, some customers still need to be connected with and nurtured by a live person. Amazon.com has learned this. They employ hundreds of traditional customer service representatives using phone lines to help customers with questions that cannot be dealt with online.

With the ability to handle simple transactions available by using sophisticated, self-service technology, customer calls, faxes, and/or e-mails are more complex, more complicated, sometime even escalated, heightening stress levels.

At the same time, research has identified the Customer Service and Technical Representative as one of the ten most stressful jobs in America today, with job stress costing employers an estimated 0+ billion yearly in absenteeism, lowered productivity, rising health insurance costs and other medical expenses (up from 0 + billion just ten years ago.) A recent NIOSH study reported that 50% of employees view job stress as a major problem in their lives–double from a decade ago.

Lines of demarcation have blurred and change is rampant in today’s center. Why? Because of our cell phones, voice mail, faxback, PDA’s, and e-mail. We are now more available and accessible than ever before. The lines are no longer clear as to where our jobs or projects begin and end—they can follow us home again and again.

In today’s competitive marketplace there is little difference between products and services. What makes the difference–what distinguishes one company from another–is its relationship with the customer. Who has the awesome responsibility for representing themselves, their companies, perhaps their industry in general? Front line representatives.

The ability of a company to provide human-to-human connections–back and forth live communication–continues to be critically important. The fact is voice is the most natural and powerful human interface, real time or otherwise. That isn’t going to change any time soon. To the customer, people are inseparable from the services they provide. Actually, the person on the other end of the phone is the company. It is no wonder, then, that companies with superior people management, invest heavily in training and retraining, reinforcing the human element.

Yet customers still leave. The latest statistics on why are:



45% because of poor service
20% because of lack of attention.

This means that 65% of your customers leave because of something your front line is, or is not, doing.



15% for a better product
15% for a cheaper product and
5% other

This is the good and the bad news. It’s bad news because that’s a high percentage. On the other hand, it’s good news because there is something you can do about it—it resides on the human side.

It is agreed that people, process, and ‘state of the art’ technology are what make companies work. For me, the people process is most important. After all, it’s the people who truly make the difference.

Never lose sight of the fact that we are human beings, not merely ‘human doings.’ The fact is 70% to 90% of what happens with customers is driven by human nature, having nothing to do with technology. Technology is meant to enable human endeavors, not to disable them.

Extraordinary service or lack thereof, separates the good from the great companies. As more and more organizations are turning to the contact center as a strategic player in the competitive landscape, it is in the throes of re-inventing itself to step up to the plate and become the heart of a company’s customer facing operations.

Empathetic Responsiveness
The ability to put yourself in another person’s shoes and see their point of view—not agree with them, not make them right and your company wrong—but hear what they are saying. After all, basic needs of all of us are to be heard and treated with dignity and respect.

I think of a call as an ABC process. ‘A’ represents the customer presenting their question, request, complaint or problem. ‘C’ is the ultimate resolution. Most times ‘B’ is either skipped or left out—because of metrics, calls in queue, or simply because you know the answer before the customer is even finished speaking. ‘B’ is where the agent acknowledges what they hear—be it upset, anger, frustration, or fear. Or, a simple ‘thank you for taking the time to call and bring this to our attention.’ After all, if a customer calls in to complain, you have the opportunity/challenge to turn them around. If they don’t call, and only complain to other people, you have no opportunity. Does going through ‘B’ take longer? Not at all. It allows you to move the customer to a more productive interaction and close the call. I’ve heard many customers repeat their opening paragraph (A) over and over, while at the same time the agent is trying to get them to resolution (C). Red alert! Red alert! Acknowledge what is behind the words and you will move them quickly to ‘C.’ I believe you can’t go from A to C without going through B.

If all customers wanted just the facts (and some do), they could ascertain the information online. Most customers (people) want the human interaction, someone to hear them, someone to care. A simple, “I’m so sorry that was your experience. My name is Rosanne and I’m going to do my best to help you right here and now.”

Self Service
When asked the question in a recent study, “What is the biggest barrier your company encounters to self-service effectiveness?” only 14% of the customers replied they don’t know about it.’ This means that the 86% who do know about it and attempt to use it (1) find it too hard to navigate, (2) can’t find the answers, and/or (3) don’t trust the system or the answers they do find.

Research shows that customers prefer to deal with companies who are the most consistently accessible. When customers experience a level of service from email and chat support, for instance, that equals or exceeds voice support, then and only then will they gladly migrate to those channels to resolve their problems and inquiries.

To increase customers’ satisfaction, be sure to:

1) Phone: Have a ‘zero out’ option on your system
2) Website: Have your phone number or a button to speak with a human
3) E-mail: Rephrase the issue in the opening paragraph.

 



Purchasing Process
In an interview with Delia Passi Smalter, the former publisher of Working Woman and Working Mother magazines, we found very interesting statistics regarding female demographics (Incentive Magazine, 2003). It seems that women are making over 85% of consumer purchases and influencing more than 95% of total goods and services. Smalter distinguishes the purchasing process women and men go through. The biggest one, she says, is that women need to feel more of a connection to the TSR; they need to trust the corporation and the brand. Price becomes secondary. Women take in a lot of information, including recommendations from friends and family, company and brand reputation, feelings about her contact person, and how the brand will impact her life. Not so for men. Men take a systematic approach, allowing outside influence to some degree, but mostly they are focused on price.

One of the most influential documents in the world, the U.S. Constitution, begins with “We, the people…” Yes, ‘we the people’ are what makes the difference.

ROSANNE D’AUSILIO, Ph.D., industrial psychologist, consultant, master trainer, customer service expert, President of Human Technologies Global, provides needs analyses, customized customer service skills trainings, agent/facilitator certification through Purdue University’s Center for Customer Driven Quality,and authors Wake Up Your Call Center: Humanize Your Interaction Hub, Customer Service and the Human Experience, Lay Your Cards on the Table: 52 Ways to Stack Your Personal Deck , How to Kick Your Customer Service Up A Notch: 101 Insider Tips,and a newsletter at http://www.HumanTechTips.com

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Svp Customer Service – the First Customer Communications Management Sponsors Meeting

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

Svp Customer Service – the First Customer Communications Management Sponsors Meeting

You will need cross-functional sponsorship at executive level to ensure the successful delivery of a customer communications management infrastructure. We’ll talk about all the SVP roles within the business over time but for today, lets talk about the SVP of customer service and lets talk about outbound communications in this article. (I’ll cover inbound benefits in another post).

 

The Senior Vice President (SVP) of customer service within your business may be one of the biggest benefactors from customer communications management. In a full scale roll-out you are almost certainly going to need to enlist the SVP of Customer Services support.

 

Customer Communications Management will have a significant impact upon the call centre and the way that call centre operatives will work. Below I set out some of the items of discussion that you should table with the SVP of Customer Service.

 

Customer Correspondence and Communications (Outbound Communications)

 

In your first meeting with the SVP of customer service you will need to make her aware of the likely impacts of the following:

 

Ability to deliver ad-hoc messages to the customer via a range of channels – not just voice and not just email.
Ability for the company to control and manage the content. Standard paragraphs, greetings, thank you’s and so on. Standards of quality can be met.
The need to develop and design communication authorisation workflows.
The need to develop standard, compliant texts for insertion into letters.

 

The ability to give customer service centre users the ability to construct customer communications, to provide standard paragraphs and texts to suit particular situations  and to have them authorised for quality and compliance prior to sending will impact key performance indicators.

 

The most benefits to be impacted through correspondence applications are:

 

The customer is assured of quality, meaningful, relevant content that addresses his needs. This will impact customer satisfaction and customer loyalty. Sending relevant correspondence that resolves customers issues will likely reduce further follow up call backs to the call centre.
That by integrating into an overall enterprise customer communications management system, in the case of mail, the cost of postage will be reduced due to participation in the overall mail discount program that the document production centre will be executing.
That by integrating into the CCM system, there will be much higher levels of assurance that the mail item will leave the building – so when a customer calls and says “you didn’t send a letter” you can validate that this is not the case – perhaps important in late payment scenarios. Customer Service centre agents will be able to drill down to visual data within the Automated Document Factory reporting system and identify the individual mail piece, when it was sent and by what class of mail.
When using electronic communication channels, query resolution may be faster in fact, almost immediate. Whether a simple message, questionnaire or a short response to say something has been done such as “Your address details have been updated”, or, “Your subscription has been upgraded”. These all add to the levels of service and care that the customer gets.
All correspondence whether physical, electronic or voice can be automatically stored in the electronic document vault. The document vault will allow instant recall of documents and indeed if desired can make documents available to customers across the web. Should a customer call back, all communications whether inbound our outbound are available to the customer service agent. This will improve query resolution hugely, reducing overall call duration and it will also reduce callbacks and time and resource spent searching for documents meaning that the agent can handle more calls in a day.

 

Summarising the conversation with the SVP of Customer Service you can say:

 

Quality & Reliability of service improved – Customer Satisfaction, Customer Loyalty and in hard to differentiate businesses, retention performance.
Customers who use Instant Messaging to communicate with the customer service centre have the benefit of convenience and no long telephone waiting times.
Clarity of communication. Well thought out, clear, plain language, well articulated communication content, will reduce call centre loadings and will less likely sew further seeds of doubt in the customers mind.
There will be a direct impact upon the bottom line due to participation in mail savings programmes within the document production centre.
Customer can choose to speak to an agent without making phone calls. As well as offering convenience, anonymity and minimal interruption to the customers day, it offers a lower cost of service than by other methods of customer communication. No phone calls, no loading call queueing systems, no mail.
There will be a higher level of accountability and audit-ability overall. Tracking data, time data and authorisation data will provide evidence and proof that the company has done its job – should it be needed.
Customers will feel that they have more control over their relationship with your company – Hopefully driving repeat business and greater product portfolio buy in.
There will be a positive impact in respect of call durations and time wasted searching for documents.

 

For over 100 more articles like this please visit Document Projects

The author owns and runs the website Document Projects. The site provides commentary, news and articles related to the world of Customer Communications Management.


The author provides consulting services to companies wanting to improve the way they communicate with their customers.

Watch top international motivational speaker Frank Furness share his hilarious stories on customer service. Download free Ebooks at www.frankfurnessresources.com as well as 39 sales closing scripts at www.frankfurness.com
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