Posts Tagged ‘excellent customer service’

Increase your response rates hugely – not an idea we’d suggest

Friday, October 29th, 2010

Increase your response rates hugely! This is not an idea we’d suggest, but it is an interesting story nonetheless. Some of you may have followed the story already about how our regular (monthlyish) eflyer got caught in a loop back in September, and was repeatedly sending the same e-mail at minute intervals for over an hour. To say we weren’t too popular is a bit of an understatement. However I’ve written elsewhere about how this became an amazing and surprisingly positive experience. 

Keep your customers smiling - but don't do it our way!

Keep your customers smiling - but don't do it our way!

 

It’s got me thinking though. We prompted responses from customers and prospects in huge numbers, much larger than normal. OK, so they were negative responses, but it clearly left an impression. When calling people to apologise, many people commented that it is an effective way of getting people to remember you!

I was also amazed that out of it, 3 companies contacted us with sales leads. I never expected that! I’d like to think that because we were on the case quickly, and all our communication led with an apology it took the heat out of the situation in most instances.

The key learning point is then that thinking outside the square and coming up with new ideas and new ways of communicating them is the way to make people sit up and take notice. Even with a potential disaster, you’ll be amazed how you can turn this to your advantage so effectively, by following a few simple rules. Our previous blog sets out how we did this, here

Will we be doing this again though? Finding ways of irritating as many people as possible? No, No. However perhaps all we lack is courage! Be bold!

To Market runs telephone sales, telemarketing and customer service training courses across the East Midlands, Peterborough, Cambridge, Leicester, Northampton, Derby, Nottingham, Kettering, Corby, Wellingborough, Coventry, Birmingham, Lichfield, Solihull, Peterborough, Wolverhampton, West Midlands, Milton Keynes, Lincoln, East Midlands as well as wider parts of Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Cambridgeshire, Suffolk, Buckinghamshire, Warwickshire, Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire.

Great customer service tips from adversity

Monday, September 20th, 2010

Some great customer service tips in the face of adversity. Last week we suffered one of the largest setbacks in our 10 year history in customer relationships. And yet with it came one of the positive experience we have ever had in dealings with our customers and prospects. So much better than we ever expected. High response rates, sales leads and messages of support – all after creating chaos, frustration, anger and severe irritation among our customer base.

Great customer service can be achieved when the chips are down

Great customer service can be achieved when the chips are down

How so ?

We have been sending out our monthly eflyer to around 2,000 organisations once a month for the last 6 months or so. It is intended to be helpful with sales and customer service tips. Admittedly there are also some sales messages with details of forthcoming courses and links to www.associatedlearningsystems.co.uk where audio CDs of some of our training material are sold.

People tell us they like it and it all runs fine. Well at least it did until last Wednesday. During the time scheduled send process in America the server fell over and got caught in a loop. Consequently the same e-mail was e-mailed to each person once a minute for about 1 1/4 hours.  Imagine that, the same blasted e-mail hitting your inbox repeatedly every minute without you being able to stop it. To say customers and prospects got frustrated was an understatement. They couldn’t turn it off either, hitting the unsubscribe button only affects future mailings so that didn’t stop the deluge. People out and about were seeing their Blackberry or PDA clogging up with an e-mail they hadn’t requested, and in some cases batteries were running flat.

I returned to the office on the Wednesday evening to face the fury on the phone messages and by e-mail. 812 incoming e-mails and 25 phone messages as well as 4 or so on my mobile told the story. I sat down, read every e-mail, and wrote a plan. The aim was merely damage limitation at this stage and yet ……..

The outcome has been little short of incredible, and amazingly positive. What have we learned from this exercise and how you can turn a negative into a positive can be summarised in the following. You can benefit in any business by using some of the following principles ;

  1. Devise a plan – Gather together all the major decision-makers in your organisation who can influence the outcome with your customers, adopt a siege mentality and form a plan of how you’re going to deal with the crisis as a team. Divide up responsibilities and commit to keeping communication lines open between all departments. Even schedule crisis meetings for a period of time if this helps. This was relatively easy for us, as we’re a small business.
  2. Be quick - You only have a limited opportunity to run events, otherwise the risk is that they’ll run you. You want to be ahead of the game. It feels much more comfortable to be proactive instead of reactive. Identify which of your customers and prospects poses the greatest threats or aggression. 
  3. Be courageous –  Deal with it head on, go straight for the people who are most angry, upset, have the most to lose etc. Deal with them first. Give the the chance to complain, shout etc. You’ll be amazed how many will respect you for doing this. As a result actually  – they don’t shout at you. This was my personal experience. I gave them the chance to lay into us – and they didn’t. Some actually apologised for the tone of their messages or e-mails! How incredible is that?! After what we’d done?!
  4. Honesty - goes a long way and is appreciated and respected. No excuses, no weasly words, no corporate speak. If you or your company fouls up, put your hands up, admit it and it diffuses much of your customers anger or frustration. Actually people are good natured on the whole, and they’re reasonable. They appreciate things go wrong, that humans make mistakes. Be honest, admit your mistake and they have little to shout at you about anymore. Again this was my personal experience.
  5. Take responsibility - this is closely tied in with point 4 about honesty. There’s nobody really to blame once you’ve admitted it is your fault. They don’t have to prove it was your fault. Get the senior man or woman to make the contacts to your customers or prospects. When you’re under fire, a leader leading from the front inspires both customers and internal staff.
  6. Be human – We consciously tried to reinforce the fact that we’re humans and that we wouldn’t have liked to have been on the receiving end of what we did to others. You may be able to use a little humour, but of course it has to be appropriate. In our case we pointed out in e-mails and on the phone that because we are a customer service and sales training consultancy – bombarding all our favourite people with constant emails was about as bad as it could be for us. This irony was noted by many. Particularly as the lead article in our eflyer about customer service was on the subject of efficiency!

What we have learned is that even when things look as bad for your business as they could possibly be in terms of your communications with customers, there is still room to shine, to impress them, and to offer them a level of customer service they weren’t expecting. You can achieve all of these things. Actually though, your customers will be open and are ‘willing’ to let you impress them.

In our case, we appreciate we’re not out of the woods yet, but certainly the whole experience has felt very positive and a lot, lot better than expected.

You can use the same principles to maximum effect. This saga will no doubt be retold many times over during our customer service training courses in Leicester, Northampton, Birmingham, Coventry, Derby, Nottingham, Loughborough, Melton Mowbray, Kenilworth, Stratford on Avon, Warwick, Solihull, Lichfield, Milton Keynes, Kettering, Corby, Wellingborough, Cambridge, St Ives as well as wider parts of the East Midlands, West Midlands, Northamptonshire, Leicestershire, Cambridgeshire, and Warwickshire.

 

 

Great customer service is about EFFICIENCY – right ?

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

Great customer service and exceeding the customer’s expectations is partly about efficiency. All good customer service training should cover this important subject. And yet I think it is an interesting concept as efficiency in a customer service environment is about 2 different things and they are opposing forces.

Exceptional customer service is about efficiency

Exceptional customer service is about efficiency

First, if you are going to describe customer service as efficient it needs to be quick. Whatever is going to be done needs to be done rapidly. However, not only must it be quick, but it also needs to be accurate or quality.
It’s all very well it being quick, but if it’s wrong or slapdash – you probably wouldn’t describe it as efficient.
And the interesting thing about these 2 issues is that they are opposing forces. To improve one is usually at the expense of the other. If you increase the speed of doing a job, you can often achieve this by letting your quality standards slip. Conversely, if it is important that you eliminate and avoid any mistakes when doing something, it normally means you do it more slowly and carefully.
Achieving exceptional customer service and exceeding customer expectations is partly about working out what the right combination of speed and quality is for your customer base and market sector. Oh, yes and it is always good to remember that you can’t please all of the people all of the time however you set your stall out !!
This topic is one that comes up on most of the interactive customer service courses we run. So whether you are in Derby, Nottingham, Leicester, Northampton, Warwick, Leamington Spa, Stratford, Wellingborough, Kettering, Corby, Loughborough, Coalville, Market Harborough, Melton Mowbray, Oakham, Coventry, Birmingham or Cambridge this is a valuable business topic to address.

 

Good customer service – it’s all about attention to detail

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

Good customer service – it’s all about attention to detail.

Something we noticed recently. I was travelling with a friend who is a retailer through a large urban area recently in the car. I was driving, he was in the passenger seat, and I stopped at some traffic lights. On the left was a large Indian restaurant with a plate glass window. My friend turns to me and says “why would you do that?” “Why would you do what I replied?”

He pointed to the window of the restaurant and commented that it was filthy. “Why would you do that?” he persisted. His point was that there was no excuse for having such a dirty front window to the restaurant. “All they need to do ….” he reasoned was “pay someone (the 17 yr old junior) to turn up for work 5 minutes earlier in the morning, and give him a bucket of warm soapy water to wash the window. “Because if that is how they keep the front window, which you can see, what does that say about the state of the kitchen which you can’t see?” Attention to detail is key to great customer service

And it’s a good point isn’t it? Good attention to detail is about making sure all the little things are right in how you deal with your customer or client. They know that if you spend amounts of time and energy getting the little things right, chances are you’re on top of the big things too.

It stands to reason doesn’t it? So check that the customer is seeing your products and services in the way you want them to. Like the client’s reception I sat in recently in Birmingham. You sit in a souless, small area on low plastic easy chairs and you can’t help notice the very dead palm plant across from you! What impression does that give potential customers?!

Customer Service training for your service desk

Tuesday, November 10th, 2009

Customer service training for your service desk is an important training topic at the moment it seems. Increasing numbers of companies are talking to us about customer service training for their after sales or service desk team.

Customer Service training for after sales is a hot topic

Customer Service training for after sales is a hot topic

This is partly about making the customer enjoy the experience of dealing with you. Customers with computers, cars, fork lift trucks, floor scrubber driers have a choice of where they go to for after sales servicing. It is  important they leave feeling cared for, that they’ve been treated fairly and they aren’t being ripped off.

There are many situations in your car dealership or service area that have to be handled sensitively. For instance how do you handle presenting a larger bill than the customer was expecting – in these trying times ?!

How do you also ensure that when your technician identifies some work that needs doing, this gets converted into business for your service team ? How do you avoid the person driving out and getting the work done elsewhere ? Many car dealerships are monitoring these figures now, and often conversion rates are poor. In fact less than 40% on 2 occasions we’ve been involved in recently.

Think what an increase to 50% conversion would do for your business. Talk to us if you’re serious about making a difference – with a strong desire to improve the experience  your customers have of dealing with your organisation.

Finally – How do you deliver bad news ? Using positive language will make a big difference. A separate article has been added on this issue recently.

To Market runs customer service, telesales and telemarketing training in many service lead organisations including car dealers, fork lift truck dealers, industrial washer scrubber dryers, machine tool companies, computer software providers, I.T. support companies, car dealerships, agricultural machinery suppliers, motor factors, computer retailers as well as a wide range of business to business, and industrial sales organisations.

Using positive language to influence customers – part of exceptional customer service

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

Using positive language to influence customers is all a part of exceptional customer service. And exceptional customer service is what your customers deserve. It is also what you have to aim for all the time, because if you don’t and one of your competitors does – you come second. There are no prizes for second in sales. 

Use positive language with customers - even when saying No !

Use positive language with customers - even when saying No !

You may have to give customers messages they don’t want to hear. But how many times do business people make the situation worse by the WAY they deliver the message ?

We talk about this on customer service training courses in the Language to Influence module. One of the first words we talk about is the word ‘No.’ It is just such a confrontational word. It leaves no room for manoeuvre on either side and it sounds like there isn’t any further discussion to be had.

And if it sounds confrontational the customer is not going to like it are they ? And who is going to win in that situation. Well it’s not going to be you is it ? The customer is in the stronger bargaining position. It is far far better to use conciliatory language such as

  • “while  I can’t do that for you, what I could offer you is ………”
  • or “well actually we don’t do it that way and it’s because ……” (then you explain policy)
  • I can think of a better solution in fact – what I suggest is ……..”
  • alternatively …..

These are all much more powerful as they keep the dialogue going with the customer, and that after all is what you want.

Customer service training issues – the first point of contact is vitally important

Wednesday, December 31st, 2008

On a recent trip to the States I was keen to find out about their level of customer service across as many areas as I could observe. Overall the standards were excellent. I will post more of my observations over the coming weeks, but lesson number one was unfortunately a negative one.

It is extremely important that whoever represents your business at the front line is ‘on message’ and diplays a positive, enthusiastic and professional approach. The very first person we met representing the United States was at immigration control (the extra bit you have to go through with your visa, where they take a picture of you and take your fingerprints.) The guy there clearly had some issues, he was surly, didn’t make eye contact at all, and didn’t smile at all – or even offer any positive phrasing such as “have a nice stay” or whatever.

Now you could argue that this matters less in his role, but if this was a commercial organisation, you could quite understand why someone wouldn’t want to go back. It doesn’t matter how good the quality of your products or services is, and how clever your marketing and sales activity is if the person interacting with your customers doesn’t present a positive, cheerful attitude.

So regularly check by calling into your own company or asking your customers what they think to ensure you offer exceptional customer service. It doesn’t matter whether you are in Birmingham, Cambridge, Milton Keynes, Leicester, Northampton, Solihull, Lichfield or Peterborough – you are dealing with human beings and they like a bit of personal contact. 

Our customer service training covers this http://www.tomarket.co.uk/customer-service-training.php and a host of other top tips on communication with customers.