This article was written by Harvey Mackay, from Minneapolis Star-Tribune, March 3, 2013, reprinted by permission
When I went into business many years ago, I told people I owned an envelope company. I had business cards printed that identified me as an ?envelope salesman.? I described myself as an entrepreneur.
All of those facts are still true, but incomplete. What I and our company really do is provide customer service.
Well sure, Harvey, you say. But isn?t that just a part of the whole operation?
Absolutely, positively, irrefutably, NO. I am in the service business, regardless of the product I make and sell. If my service is lacking, my business will be sent packing.
To validate my thinking, I recently visited with John Tschohl, president of the Service Quality Institute. John has spent 33 years focused on customer service. He has written hundreds of articles, as well as seven books on the topic. You?ve probably heard him interviewed on television or radio. He has been called the ?guru of customer service? by USA Today and Time and Entrepreneur magazines.
Even the most successful companies are in constant competition for business. What sets them apart often boils down to one factor: outstanding customer service. John offered up some stellar advice for creating a service culture, no matter what business you?re in.
First, you?ve got to understand you?re in the service business. ?Most companies think they are in manufacturing and retail; airlines don?t know they are in the service business,? he said. ?Southwest Airlines is successful because they understand they?re a customer service company ? they just happen to be an airline.?
Second, you have to look at all the policies, procedures and systems you have in place ?that make life miserable for customers,? John said. ?You could have the nicest people in the world, but you could have stupid hours, stupid rules, stupid procedures, that just burn the customer.? When you make it that difficult for customers to patronize you, they find someone else who is more accommodating.
Third, you have to have empowerment. ?Every single person has to be able to make fast power decisions on the spot, and it better be in favor of the customer,? John said.
Fourth, you have to be more careful about whom you hire. ?The service leaders hire one person out of 50 interviewed, sometimes one out of 100, but they?re very, very, very careful,? he said. ?Look for the cream, the A players, instead of bringing on B and C players.?
Fifth, educate and train the entire staff on the art of customer service with something new and fresh every four to six months. ?Let?s say you want to create the service culture. No matter if you have a hundred or a thousand or a hundred thousand employees, you better have something new and fresh, so it?s constantly in front of them,? John said. ?So when they wake up every day and they go to work, they say, ?Fantastic, I?m taking care of customers!? ?
Finally, measure the results financially so that you know the impact it?s making on revenue, sales, profit and market share.
Everything you do, according to John, should be built around the concept of creating an incredible customer experience.
Perhaps the simplest way of creating a service culture is a variation of the golden rule: Treat your customers as you wish to be treated.
Make your customers excited that you?re in business. Make them grateful that they have the opportunity to buy your services or products. Make them feel like each one is your most important client. Make your service so outstanding that they wouldn?t think of doing business with anyone else.
And then find a way to make your service even better!
Mackay?s Moral: Customer service is not a department; it?s everyone?s job.
Source: http://newsletter.score114.org/2013/04/we-all-in-customer-service-business.html
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