Customer Experience Tip #1479
Hi-touch is making a comeback. Your customers are craving more human interactions. Is your customer experience too hi-tech? Does it help in fostering the loyalty you’re after?
Engineering the Customer Experience
Customer Experience Tip #1479
Hi-touch is making a comeback. Your customers are craving more human interactions. Is your customer experience too hi-tech? Does it help in fostering the loyalty you’re after?
Customer Experience Tip #1478
Saying “I’m sorry you felt that way.” is very different from saying, “I’m sorry I came across that way.” In other words, you can put the onus on the other person … or you can take full responsibility for their perception of you. You can already guess which response helps to save client relationships and which one works to undermine rapport.
Customer Experience Tip #1477
If a customer looks like she might need help, just assume that she does. Step 1: Approach, smile, and make eye contact. Step 2: Offer help.
Customer Experience Tip #1476
“You don’t turn your back after the transaction. You stay with it until I know how you feel … and that’s what I have to manage. And all the product is or the service is, is a vehicle to achieve that reaction.” –Jon Taffer
Customer Experience Tip #1475
Remember, they could’ve called your competitor instead. Before hanging up the phone with that new customer, pause and let them know how grateful you are for their call; for the opportunity to serve them.
Customer Experience Tip #1474
Each and every time you answer the telephone, be sure that you’re doing so in a friendly way that is not rushed; in a way that the caller understands every word of your greeting. Doing this will make a subtle promise of care and patience. After all, you are making a first impression and setting the tone for the rest of that call … and perhaps the rest of that relationship.
Customer Experience Tip #1473
What’s the one thing your customers would say is the most difficult thing about doing business with you? Now, what can you do to fix that and better their experience?
Customer Experience Tip #1472
When your coworkers arrive on Monday and complain about a customer experience they endured over the weekend, discuss how you can ensure — as a team — that nothing like that would happen within your own organization … to your customers and clients.
Customer Experience Tip #1471
“Being zero risk means having all your employees fully aware of the potential common service defects that can arise at each stage of the Customer experience cycle, then providing training and empowerment so employees can deliver great service recovery when defects do arise, making your company zero risk to deal with.” –John DiJulius
Customer Experience Tip #1470
Your brand reputation can be regarded as one that is totally committed to great customer experiences. The best part: you get to choose that … when you and your team wholeheartedly commit to that very thing.
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