Service is More Than a Smile Four Service Strategies That Improve Business by Mark Akerley Other than monopolists, everyone agrees that good customer service is a fundamental necessity for the success of his business ? great service seems to be synonymous with great companies. Since service is so critical, it only makes sense that you realistically assess your level of service and find ways to maximize it. Here are a few simple but very effective tips for improving service in your business.
1. Develop a Clear Picture of Superior Service. Providing "excellent customer service" is a great goal, but just isn't specific enough to generate any real action or commitment. As a business leader, you must identify exactly what it is that you intend to provide. In doing so, be sure to get beyond the platitudes of "fast," "friendly," and "reliable" to the specifics of service deliverables, e.g., one-day turn around, twenty-second call waiting, error-free contracts, 24/7 availability, 99% accurate listings, etc., ? something that customers deem valuable! Only by defining superior service and communicating it clearly to your front-line people, can you deliver it and delight your customers.
2. Define, Analyze, and Track Service Metrics. Reporting service results is not nearly as difficult as some make it out to be ?. provided that clear expectations have been established as referenced in # 1 above. Keep in mind that if you can't measure it, it is unlikely that you can improve it. To develop useful service measures, determine the "unit of count" for the measure, e.g., hours, days, points, dollars, number of errors, etc., and develop a method of gathering the information. Technologically generated counts are ideal, but if that's not possible don't let that deter you. A well-thought-out manual counting process, or a reasonable sample, is much better than no measure at all. Also, when tracking and analyzing the measures, do so with comparisons in mind. Report the result, but also the goal, as well as previous results over a meaningful time frame (week, month, quarter, etc.). Finally, post the results using simple but vivid graphs and charts that don't just report a number, but really communicate a larger story or condition. As the saying goes - "a picture is worth a thousand words."
3. Develop Recovery Strategies. Although we design our business operations to perform flawlessly, it is unlikely that they will ever be perfect. Unexpected events are inevitable and will periodically throw our carefully crafted processes out of control. The best buffer for these events is to have a set of options available for out of control conditions. Options that can be put into action by service providers using their best judgment and acting decisively. Examples might be comp-ing a room night at a hotel, sending a package next day delivery at no charge, returning a customer call after closing hours, giving a customer a free gift for their patience, providing an extra service at no charge, etc. These types of on-the-spot actions tell customers that you're doing your best to resolve their problem. The extra expense is small, but keeps customers coming back. To be useful, these actions need to be initiated at the point of customer contact and immediately. Demonstrating that you care is always good customer service.
4. Develop a Passion of Support for Front Line Personnel - Your business reputation depends on the quality of the service provided by the first line of customer contact. Accordingly, you must provide your front-line people with the tools and authority to meet customer needs. Your service providers will thank you if you do ? and if you take care of them they?ll take care of your customers.
Whether you're a one person shop or a multinational conglomerate, these service strategies will work for you. Put them to work and you'll experience great results!
If Everybody Agrees, Somebody is Redundant by Rand Golletz I always ask a client, "What do you do to stimulate disagreement in your organization?" Most of the time, the response is, "huh?" Once in a while, the client will state with pride that she rarely encounters disagreement, that the people in her organization serve at her pleasure and almost always do her bidding without question. Infrequently, I'll get a response from a leader who "gets it." In this case, here's what "gets it" means:
Successful leaders recognize that great ideas and solutions come from all quarters and that they, themselves, do not have the market on wisdom cornered. They start with the end in mind. That end is the achievement of planned results and the fulfillment of the organization?s mission. They accept the notion that the right to impose their will does not automatically confer the wisdom to use it judiciously and infrequently. These unusually gifted leaders "walk their talk." They take actions to demonstrate their commitment to "the brutal truth," regardless of its origin.
Some examples of what successful leaders do:
? They always encourage and sometimes reward people for disagreement. They never "shoot the messenger."
? They employ language in decision-making meetings that evokes contrary points-of-view.
? They read body language really well. When they see people signaling disagreement, they insist on its expression.
? They hire people whose perspectives, preconceptions, ideas and approaches to problem solving differ from their own. They construct their team with an eye out for mavericks.
? They constantly and consistently ratchet-up expectations ? of themselves as well as others.
? They are life-long learners.
? They model the essence of constructive conflict in their own demeanor.
? They use questions to stimulate dialogue. Effective executives ? especially senior executives or business-owners ? accept the proposition that while earlier in their careers they got paid to have good answers, they now get paid to ask great questions. When someone proposes an idea to increase sales, for example, an effective executive might ask: "What do you think the implications are for our order-fulfillment commitments?" or "What were the alternatives you considered before making this recommendation?"
Questions are powerful. They can facilitate executive learning; they can impart a more strategic perspective; they can reveal the quality of thinking that went into a recommendation.
All too often, questions get asked with implied judgment or with the tone of an indictment. They can, however, serve much more powerful purposes.
Copyright 2006 Value Connection, All rights reserved.
At Value Connection, our mission is to enable business chiefs to create and execute a meaningful value proposition for business and personal growth. The partners, Mark Akerley and Rand Golletz, each have more than twenty years experience leading businesses, from the inside and outside, to achieve outstanding results. Their resumes include the titles of CEO, Chief Marketing Officer (Fortune 100 company) and consultant to the senior executives and boards of many companies in a variety of industries. Value Connection maintains offices in Chicago, Illinois (lead by Mark Akerley) and Washington, D.C. (lead by Rand Golletz). For more information, please visit http://www.value-connection.com or e-mail us at rand@value-connection.com or mark@value-connection.com. To subscribe to our free monthly newsletter, The Brutal Truth, visit: http://www.value-connection.com/newsletters.php.
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