How to Foster a Make-it-Right Customer Service Culture

Enabling and Empowering Employees to Think on Their Feet

In 1995, I embarked on what would become an 11-year sales career with Rosenthal Acura. I felt I’d lucked out. You see, after having spent the previous 8 years in the hospitality industry, I was now working for a luxury auto dealer that genuinely focused on … hospitality. We would eventually become the glowing sought-after example for Acura in the United States – not based on our high volume of sales, though. It was based largely on receiving high marks from clients. Our fanatical, dealership-wide attention to the client experience consistently earned us top C.S.I. (Customer Satisfaction Index) rankings.

Within my first 18 months with the organization, David, our general manager, rolled out an employee empowerment program. Simply put, this meant that every staff member – from the janitor to the courtesy shuttle driver to the service manager – could spend up to $100 to fix a customer problem and reach resolution. No approval needed. No questions asked. Just make it right. What did that mean for the client? If you were the client and …

  • Got tire-shine on your pants while standing too close to a display car, we paid for your dry cleaning
  • Discovered a scratch on your door after having the car in for an oil change, we had it buffed out (often while you waited)
  • Drove an hour to purchase a rare car part that was no longer in stock, we called around, located the part, brought it in, and shipped it (next-day, at no additional charge) to your home or office

For the record, I don’t recall being given specific examples like these to draw from. We simply knew that the spirit of the program was to (quickly) make things right for the customer and create a WOW experience.

“Whatever you do, DO NOT open the elevator doors.”

I recently read the firsthand account of a hotel guest who was (1 of 12) trapped in the elevator. Instead of trying to help 12 panicked patrons, the hotel staff chose to look out for the company’s interests. You can read the entire story here, but to summarize, the guests could have easily rescued themselves by prying the doors open, but the hotel made them wait until a repairman showed up. Why? The hotel didn’t want to risk having to foot the bill if something went wrong mechanically, as a result of those guests’ efforts. Wine & cheese were later delivered as what they must have felt were appropriate “Apology Offerings.”

Having read the remarkable hotel elevator story…

You might agree that instead of being empowered to do the right thing for their guests, this hotel’s staff was more focused on operating costs.

I can only imagine their “Make-it-right chart” looking something like this:

  • Your kid loses his teddy bear; we’ll give him a grape soda. If we happen to be out of grape soda, your kid gets an oatmeal raisin cookie.
  • We gave away your reservation; we’ll give you a couple of free oatmeal raisin cookies. If you’re still upset, we’ll throw in a shuttle ride to nearest Motel6.
  • You get trapped in our elevator; we’ll bring some wine and cheese up to your room (but not our high-end stuff). Don’t drink? Lactose intolerant? We have plenty of oatmeal raisin cookies.

Had those hotel employees been empowered to make decisions that put their guests’ well-being, interests, and personal safety before anything else, the outcome (and the stories that followed) would likely be more – shall we say – flattering.

Bottom Line: Define It

It’s not enough to declare that you provide world-class customer service. It’s not enough to have your staff sign off on a formal employee manual and job description. It’s not even enough to have thoughtful hiring standards in place. These aren’t bad ideas, but the rubber doesn’t meet the road until you have effective communication, employee empowerment, and an implementation plan to put your policies to work.

You must have regular conversations that encourage and invite your staff to define impeccable customer service. You must discuss scenarios – real or made-up – that force your employees to think critically and shape solutions. And this must all take place with a spirit of humanity and genuine concern for the customer.

Remember: Your ultimate goal is to make every customer feel 1) taken care of, and; 2) as if you’ve thought of everything. This can only result from regular trainings and conversations on the topic. Remarkable, impeccable, noteworthy, world-class customer service isn’t an initiative, it’s a quest; a relentless pursuit.

Your Turn

Have you seen or been part of a situation where the company clearly acted only in its own best interest? Share your stories in the comment section below…

Impeccable Engagement

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #749

Ever notice that when you have too many applications open on your computer, everything slows down? Well, when you’re trying to multitask while interacting with a customer, you slow down. Focus your attention on that customer. The other stuff can probably wait.

CLICK to ENLARGE

CLICK to ENLARGE

Impeccable Impressions

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #748

As a subscriber of these tips, you’re not likely to possess a “That’s not my job” type of attitude. As you reach in the opposite direction of that mindset, what little thing will you choose to surprise and delight your customers and clients with next?

CLICK to ENLARGE

CLICK to ENLARGE

Impeccable Awareness

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #747

“Clients want experts. Nobody refers someone to a great generalist. You won’t stand out by saying you are a ‘full service’ anything. You won’t stand out by saying you ‘take the time to learn about your customers.’ Let’s face it. Everyone says those things. Shift your thinking to what your customers want.”

–Ian Altman, Forbes Contributor and Bestselling Author

CLICK to ENLARGE

CLICK to ENLARGE

Impeccable Perspective

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #746

Leafing through reports is nowhere near as valuable as getting into the trenches with your frontline employees and interacting with your customers firsthand … at least every once in a while. (Just look at any episode of the CBS television show, “Undercover Boss.”)

CLICK to ENLARGE

CLICK to ENLARGE

Impeccable Leadership

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #745

Want to earn customer loyalty? First, resolve to earn the loyalty of your employees.

CLICK to ENLARGE

CLICK to ENLARGE

Impeccable Proof

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #744

Start documenting your customer service “home run” stories and fill a notebook with the stories for all to share and see.

CLICK to ENLARGE

CLICK to ENLARGE

Impeccable Impressions

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #743

Just as a smile can be heard and felt on the other end of the phone, so too can a frown.

CLICK to ENLARGE

CLICK to ENLARGE

Impeccable Differentiator

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #742

“The key is to set realistic customer expectations, and then not to just meet them, but to exceed them – preferably in unexpected and helpful ways. If you are seizing on a new business opportunity, deliberately move your customers’ expectations up a few notches and consistently over-deliver on your promises – you will leave your competitors struggling to catch up.”

–Sir Richard Branson, Founder, Virgin Group

CLICK to ENLARGE

CLICK to ENLARGE

Impeccable Approach

Impeccable Customer Service Tip #741

You might disagree with your customer … but don’t let yourself become disagreeable or defensive. A response is likely rooted in logic … while a reaction is largely driven by emotion.

CLICK to ENLARGE

CLICK to ENLARGE