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Customer_Service_A_Matter_of_Common_Sense
| Customer Service: A Matter of Common Sense
There's more to customer service dealing with order fulfillment,
returns, complaints and questions. Good customer service is
based on respect and concern --- qualities that can't be spelled
out in a company policy.
Consider:
The managers of two department stores frantically scrambled to
do damage control following employee-actions that sparked public
outrage.
In the first scenario, a sales person refused to call 911 when a
mother requested help for her child who was experiencing a
seizure. "It's not our policy to make phone calls for
customers," said the staffer.
In the second incident, a sales person walked away wordlessly
when a pregnant woman reported dizziness and asked for help.
Other shoppers assisted after she collapsed. "An unfortunate
incident," the manger told local journalists.
The media coverage of these two incidents could not have been
good for business. That old saying "No such thing as bad
publicity" isn't always true.
Meanwhile, in another department store in a different city, a
shopper suffered an injury to her arm when a heavy box fell from
a high-up shelf. The woman pointed out to a supervisor that the
boxes were unstable in their present position. She suggested
they be moved elsewhere before someone was seriously hurt.
Several weeks later, the supervisor merely shrugged when the
shopper returned and pointed out that the boxes had not been
moved.
The above incidents all involved large, international chains. Is
the situation any better with medium or small businesses?
We would like to believe that it is. However, the answer is "Not
always." In one example, a diner at a small mom-and-pop
restaurant was dumped unceremoniously on the floor when a chair
collapsed. The waiter snickered and walked away, leaving it to
other customers to ask if the person was hurt.
Undoubtedly, it was not store policy to refuse assistance to
customers experiencing medical emergencies. Undoubtedly, it was
not company policy to stack merchandise in such a way that
shoppers are at risk of injury, or to laugh at customers who are
victims of damaged restaurant chairs.
The problems occurred when employees were faced with situations
that called for good judgment and independent decision making.
In other words, they failed to display what most of us call
"common sense."
And, as most of us know, common sense cannot be written into a
customer service policy. However, you can do certain things that
will increase the likelihood that your employees will make good
judgments. Experts claim that small to medium businesses have an
advantage over big business when it comes to offering customer
service. Smaller size can mean a more personal atmosphere and
better opportunities for communication between management and
staff.
To make the most of that advantage, try the following:
1. Communicate your expectations to employees. Discuss emergency
situations and how to handle them. Stress that emergency
situations take precedence over company policy.
2. Make good hiring decisions then empower your employees to act
independently when the situation warrants it. If you have hired
good people and trained them well, you can trust them with a
degree of independent activity. This will work to your advantage
in a second area as well. An opinion survey demonstrated that
the public resents waiting while staff persons seek approval
from one or more supervisors before refunds, exchanges or
complaints are handled.
3. Set a good example by showing respectful attitudes to persons
both inside and outside of the company. If employees hear
management jeering at delivery persons, customers or other staff
members, the message received is that disrespect and lack of
concern is acceptable. Employees who know that internal respect
is the norm will extend that respect to customers and others.
4. Provide feedback to let employees know how they are doing.
When you catch an employee showing "good common sense,"
compliment him/her and do so in front of other employees.
5. Reward employees for providing good customer service. Rewards
can be informal (i.e. praise, mention at a staff meeting) or
formal (i.e. a regular award for employees who provide
exceptional customer service).
6. Avoid over-managing. Happy staff means happy customers. The
more involved in your business the employee feels, the more
effort he or she will put into satisfying the customers or
clients.
About the author:
How to Write Business Plans, Business Proposals, JV
Contracts,Human Resource Package, More! No-cost ebook "Beginners
Guide to Ecommerce". Business Writing by Nightcats Multimedia
Productions http://www.nightcats.com
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