Impeccable Listening

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #767

“One of the most powerful drivers of customer delight is simply listening, and responding to complaints and suggestions. A company’s commitment to listen and respond proves that it values its customers and takes care of them – basic requirements for any good relationship.”

–Fred Reichheld, The Ultimate Question 2.0

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Impeccable Follow-Through

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #766

Oftentimes, after a “fix” has been made, the client is left feeling hopeful — at best —  that this fix will be a lasting one. So, what level of follow-through is your standard?

Level 1) “I hope this solution works for you.”

Level 2) “Will you call me and let me know how this solution works for you?”

Level 3) “Would it be okay if I call you within the next 48 hours to check in and be sure that this solution worked for you?”

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Impeccable Consistency

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #765

Your idea of a remarkable client experience may differ from that of your team. In order to be “on the same page” and delivering with consistency, you must regularly discuss this and share stories that illustrate it.

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Impeccable Impressions

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #764

The way you treat your vendors is a sign of the way you might be (at least occasionally) treating your employees and customers. A great service demeanor should not be selective. Instead, aspire to treat everyone with the same patience and kindness.

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Impeccable Professionalism

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #763

Resist declaring your shortcomings with clients, expecting to be excused for them. You won’t, and this will only make you appear less professional.

The only reason to tell a customer of something that is not your strength is when you’re proposing a solution.

For example, “Since paperwork is not one of my strengths, we’ve just hired a fantastic, organized, exceptionally prompt, detail-oriented person to handle it, so we can deliver the best service for you.”

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Impeccable Loyalty

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #762

“Loyal customers, they don’t just come back, they don’t simply recommend you, they insist that their friends do business with you.”

–Chip Bell

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Spring Forward 2015

Spring Forward

Spring Forward

Remember to set your clocks FORWARD one hour, this Saturday night before bedtime.

*Also, remember that this is a great time to:
– Replace the batteries in smoke/gas detectors
– Turn and/or flip your mattresses

 

 

*As recommended by the product manufacturers

Impeccable Preparedness

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #761

If you’ve never role-played — both common and not-so-common-but-difficult customer scenarios — with your team, then your customer experience during these ‘moments of truth’ will be unpredictable; inconsistent at best.

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Responding vs. Reacting

How pausing can have you solve problems with logic … rather than emotion

One of the many subtleties underlying impeccable customer service is responding vs. reacting. At first glance, there seems to be little difference between the two, but the following story illustrates how profound that difference can be and how it can affect your relationship with your customer.

The Dilemma . . .

As the trainer for my client’s events booked at a local hotel, I arrived early on the appointed day, a Friday morning at 7:30 am, because one never knows what last-minute issues might need attention. But the one I found facing me on this particular morning was a whopper.

Jeremy, a hotel employee whom I had met and worked with before, was the lone banquet server on staff, and he’d just prepared all four of the banquet rooms for a series of events that — collectively — over 200 guests would be attending. Jeremy was in charge of all service elements — everything from audio/video requirements to food and beverage, and some of the guests had already begun filtering in. My client — a group of about 50 people — was scheduled to be seated in one of these rooms … or so I’d expected.

After greeting Jeremy, I asked him: “I didn’t see my client’s company name on any of the room entrance placards, so I wonder which room we’re in today?” Jeremy looked surprised, paused for a brief moment, and said, “I can double-check the contract, but I believe we weren’t expecting you until tomorrow.”

Reacting vs. Responding = Emotions vs. Logic

Uh oh! I began to panic, my mind racing as emotion took over. I felt myself reddening and beginning to perspire. In short, I reacted.

But Jeremy remained calm. He needed all of about five seconds to begin offering solutions, responding by jumping immediately into a “can-do” mode. “Well, that room around the corner is actually already set up for you guys in anticipation of tomorrow,” he said. “Our hotel was going to hold a team meeting in there this afternoon, but obviously your event takes priority over that. There’s just one thing I’ll need to check, and that’s whether the chef can have your breakfast buffet food ready on time. I’ll find out now and be right back.”

Jeremy’s recovery was so logical and so seamless that, to this day, there are only three of us (on the client side) who even became aware of this scheduling miscommunication. It caused not even a ripple of distraction for our 50 attendees because Jeremy responded swiftly and confidently, reminding me a little of a duck — graceful above the water, where all could see him, but moving forward at a million miles a minute with powerful and determined feet just below the surface.

So Whose Fault Was It?

Fact is, it didn’t matter to me and it certainly didn’t matter to Jeremy. What mattered was that Jeremy responded to the need that 50 people expected to have a comfortable and equipped space . . . and he made it happen. And Jeremy teaches us a valuable lesson: that responding to a crisis with logical problem solving is far more effective than reacting emotionally. Your customers, clients, guests, members, patients, users, etc. do not expect you to be perfect, but they do expect you to work with them to make things right, to reach resolution, to recover quickly. And you are held in a positive light when you do this without any finger pointing or even a hint of defensiveness.

As we wrapped up our half-day training, I asked to see both the hotel’s general manager and the president of the hotel group to express our gratitude for Jeremy’s solution-oriented attitude and responsive approach. Although I already knew and liked Jeremy, this episode turned me — an average customer — into an enthusiastic promoter for the hotel and its services.

Bottom Line

By responding to your clients instead of merely reacting, you too are promoting your business. And promotion translates into profit!

Your Turn

When have you witnessed — or been a part of — reacting vs. responding? Please comment below…

Impeccable Engagement

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #760

You can tell when someone is multitasking while on the phone with you. So can your clients. Whenever possible, focus on giving them your undivided attention.

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