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Whats_The_Customer_Service_Buzz_About_Your_Business
| Whats The Customer Service Buzz About Your Business?
Small Business Q&A with Tim Knox
If you're a regular reader of this column you know that my
number one pet peeve is bad customer service. Nothing chaps my
backside more than paying hard-earned money for a product or
service only to have the provider of said product or service
become apathetic, obnoxious or just downright rude after the
transactional smoke has cleared.
The bottomline, my entrepreneurial friend, is this: it doesn't
matter if your product is fast food, slow food, retail goods,
computers, lawn mowers, books, real estate or automobiles, if a
customer is willing to pay you good money in exchange for your
product or service that customers deserves to be treated with
gratitude and respect, before and after the sale. Period.
I'm constantly amazed at how many business owners and the
frontline employees who represent them seem to forget this
simple fact.
It's like the old saying about getting a little respect in the
morning. If you court me before the sale, you damn well better
respect me afterward. Just because you have my money in your
pocket and I have your product in my hand, that does not mean
that my needs have been fully satisfied or that my expectations
have ceased to exist. To the contrary, our relationship is just
getting started. It's up to you how well we will get along and
how long our relationship will last.
Here's the point: customer service should not stop after the
sale. In fact, customer support AFTER the sale can have greater
impact on the success of your business than customer support
before the sale.
Nothing generates negative buzz about a business like bad
customer service, and nothing will drive nails in a business'
coffin faster. News of bad customer service travels like
lightning and spreads like wildfire. Think back to the last time
you were on the receiving end of bad customer service. I'd be
willing to bet that you immediately went out into the world and
told everyone you met about the experience. You probably also
warned them to "never do business with those &^%$ or you'll get
treated the same!" As a business person, it should be your
mission to make every customer a repeat customer, and one of the
best ways to do that is by delivering superior customer service
every time that customer comes through your door. Superior
customer service leads to increased customer satisfaction, which
leads to repeat business, which leads to customer loyalty. It is
also much cheaper to keep a customer than to obtain a new one.
The fast food industry is especially prone to customer service
problems. This is due in large part to the fact that every
transaction is a face-to-face sale and the average fast food
worker is a disgruntled teenager who would rather be lying on a
bed of nails than standing behind a fast food counter schlepping
fries.
However, that doesn't always have to be the case. This is not
meant as an ad for Chic Filet or as a slam at Taco Bell, but the
difference in customer service between these two fast food
titans is astounding.
I used to frequent both establishments (fast food is my crack),
so this is the voice of experience speaking. Behind the counter
at the local Chic Filet are young people who seem genuinely
happy to be of service. They are clean cut and polite. They
don't wear their baseball caps sideways or have anything visibly
pierced. They look me in the eye, they smile like there is no
place on earth they would rather be, and they ask for my order
in clear, concise English. They thank me profusely and invite me
to come again. Excellent customer service after the sale.
Inversely, a recent trip to a local Taco Bell almost ended on an
episode of Cops because the young lady behind the counter grew
angry when I politely pointed out that my nachos were stale and
asked for a fresh bag (pet peeve #132: stale nachos).
Miss Mary Sunshine snatched the offending nachos from my hand
and slam dunked them in a trash can, then tossed a replacement
bag (which were also stale) on the counter in front of me. She
then gave me a look that clearly said that if I had any further
complaints she'd be happy to escort me outside to discuss them
in detail. I like nachos, but not so much that I would risk
getting my behind kicked by a disgruntled teenage girl wearing a
sideways Taco Bell cap. Not-so-excellent customer service after
the sale.
Now, which restaurant do you think I will go to the next time I
feel the need to feed my fast food monkey? And which restaurant
do you think I enthusiastically recommend to my friends? The one
that understands the importance of good customer service before
and after the sale, of course.
The worst customer service experience I've ever had involved the
purchase of a vehicle at a local used car lot. I purchased the
used Ford Expedition on a Friday evening and when problems arose
with the vehicle over the weekend, I went back to the dealership
on Monday morning to speak with the sales manager.
To say the least, the sales manager (who acted like my best
friend on Friday) was not thrilled to see me on Monday. To make
a very long story short, when I pointed out that he wasn't being
very helpful after the sale he came around the desk yelling at
the top of his lungs and waving his hands in my face.
By the time the receptionist managed to calm him down, the sales
manager had gone so far as to call me "a retarded idiot" (which
may be considered redundant) and had instructed me to do
something with the vehicle that I believe is anatomically
impossible.
It was an Expedition, I'm a little guy. Use your imagination.
Though the dealership owner later apologized and offered to take
care of any problem I had, the damage to his business had
already been done. The bad buzz machine started the second I
left his lot.
Do you think I told everyone I met about my experience with that
dealership? You bet your stale nachos I did. Do you think I will
ever buy another car from that dealership? Not on your life. Do
you think anyone I've told about the experience will buy a car
from that dealership? Probably not. Do you think the owner and
sales manager learned anything from the experience? We can only
hope.
In the end, what is the value of great customer service before
and after the sale? Priceless, my friend.
Simply priceless.
Now, can somebody please get me some fresh nachos…
Do you have a customer service horror story? I'd love to hear
it. Email me at the address below.
Here's to your success.
Tim Knox tim@dropshipwholesale.net For information on starting
your own online or eBay business, visit
http://www.dropshipwholesale.net
About the author:
Small Business Q&A is written by veteran entrepreneur and
syndicated columnist, Tim Knox. Tim serves as the president and
CEO of three successful technology companies and is the founder
of DropshipWholesale.net, an online organization dedicated to
the success of online and eBay entrepreneurs.
Related Links: http://www.smallbusinessqa.com
http://www.dropshipwholesale.net http://www.30dayblueprint.com
http://www.timknox.com
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