1 Good Customer Service Made Simple.
Good
customer service is the lifeblood of any business. You can offer promotions and
slash prices to bring in as many new customers as you want, but unless you can
get some of those customers to come back, your business won't be profitable for
long.
Good
customer service is all about bringing customers back. And about sending them
away happy - happy enough to pass positive feedback about your business along
to others, who may then try the product or service you offer for themselves and
in their turn become repeat customers.
If you're
a good salesperson, you can sell anything to anyone once. But it will be your
approach to customer service that determines whether or not you’ll ever be able
to sell that person anything else. The essence of good customer service is
forming a relationship with customers – a relationship that that individual
customer feels that he would like to pursue.
How do
you go about forming such a relationship? By remembering the one true secret of
good customer service and acting accordingly; "You will be judged by what
you do, not what you say."
I know
this verges on the kind of statement that's often seen on a sampler, but
providing good customer service IS a simple thing. If you truly want to have
good customer service, all you have to do is ensure that your business
consistently follows few rules following:
2 Answer your phone.
Get call
forwarding. Or an answering service. Hire staff if you need to. But make sure
that someone is picking up the phone when someone calls your business. (Notice
I say "someone". People who call want to talk to a live person, not a
fake "recorded robot".) For more on answering the phone, see How to
Answer the Phone Properly on google.
3 Don't make promises unless you will keep them.
Not plan
to keep them. Will keep them. Reliability is one of the keys to any good
relationship, and good customer service is no exception. If you say, “Your new
bedroom furniture will be delivered on Tuesday”, make sure it is delivered on
Tuesday. Otherwise, don't say it. The same rule applies to client appointments,
deadlines, etc. Think before you give any promise - because nothing annoys
customers more than a broken one.
4 Listen to your customers.
Is there
anything more exasperating than telling someone what you want or what your
problem is and then discovering that person hasn't been paying attention and
needs to have it explained again? From a customer's point of view, I doubt it.
Can the sales pitches and the product script? Let your customer talk and show
him that you are listening by making the appropriate responses, such as
suggesting how to solve the problem.
5 Deal with complaints.
No one
likes hearing complaints, and many of us have developed a reflex shrug, saying,
"You can't please all the people all the time". Maybe not, but if you
give the complaint your attention,
you may be able to please this one person this one time - and position your
business to reap the benefits of good customer service. Properly dealt with,
complaints can become opportunities.
6 Be helpful - even if there's no immediate profit
in it.
The other
day I popped into a local watch shop because I had lost the small piece that
clips the pieces of my watch band together. When I explained the problem, the
proprietor said that he thought he might have one lying around. He found it,
attached it to my watch band – and charged me nothing! Where do you think I'll
go when I need a new watch band or even a new watch? And how many people do you
think I've told this story to?
7 Train your staff.
Train
your staff (if you have any) to be always helpful, courteous, and
knowledgeable. Do it yourself or hire
someone to train them. Talk to them about good customer service and what it
is (and isn't) regularly. (Good Customer
Service: How to Help a Customer explains the basics of ensuring positive
staff-customer interactions.) Most importantly, give every member of your staff
enough information and power to make those small customer-pleasing decisions,
so he never has to say, "I don't know, but so-and-so will be back
at..."
8 Take the extra step.
For
instance, if someone walks into your store and asks you to help them find
something, don't just say, "It's in Bay 3". Lead the customer to the
item. Better yet, wait and see if he has questions about it, or further needs.
Whatever the extra step may be, if you want to provide good customer service,
take it. They may not say so to you, but people notice when people make an
extra effort and will tell other people.
9 Throw in something extra.
Whether
it's a coupon for a future discount, additional information on how to use the
product, or a genuine smile, people love to get more than they thought they
were getting. And don’t think that a gesture has to be large to be effective.
The local art framer that we use attaches a package of picture hangers to every
picture he frames. A small thing, but so appreciated.
Good
Customer Service Pays Big Dividends
If you
apply these eight simple rules consistently, your business will become known
for its good customer service. And the best part? Over time good customer
service will bring in more new customers
than promotions and price slashing ever did!
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