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Every single
contact your organization has with its customers either cultivates
or corrodes your relationship. That includes every letter you
send, every ad you run, and every phone call you make. This
includes every employee contact, from the CEO to technicians,
sales force, support staff, and maintenance crews.
In other words,
your business is only as good as your worst employee! It's a
sobering thought, isn't it? How well are you training your
employees to cultivate your customers? Is anyone too high or too
low to count?
Make heroes of your
employees.
At a meeting for
the Gap stores, Ed Stair, Senior VP of Gap Outlets, wanted to make
everyone think of ways to serve customers and at the same time
identify wasted resources that could be directed to customer
benefits. He started his talk by saying, "We are here to talk
about HEROES. They may be sitting in front of you, or behind you,
or they may be you. In the trenches, Gap Heroes!"
He went on to
describe how one Gap Hero in the mailroom noticed 7 FedEx packets
going to the same Gap location, on the same day, with the same
material inside the company newsletter. He repackaged them into
one, with directions to distribute at the final location. Making
the same observations everyday saved the Gap $200,000 in one year.
This saving could be directed into another jeans size not created,
18 miles of shelves to make it easier for us to find what we need,
a month more to watch the fun Gap Swings, Gap Jives, Gap Rocks
commercials!
See yourself
through your customers' eyes.
On a visit to New
York, my brother and I decided on a whim to see a movie. It was
the last show of the evening, and, though we were ten minutes
late, we didn't feel missing a few scenes would matter. (It was a
Jean-Claude Van Damme film, not the deepest plotline!) The cashier
refused to sell us tickets because she had closed the cash drawer
for the night. We asked her if it were possible to enter the money
in the next day's records. She said no. After speaking to two more
employees including the manager, we left without seeing the film.
They couldn't take our money because the drawer was closed.
Had the theater's
employees been trained to see situations through the eyes of the
customers, we would not have encountered three uncooperative and
uncaring individuals. Taking money after the drawer is closed is
undoubtedly a nuisance, but it is revenue after all. Obliging
customers brings repeat business, and repeat business is what we
all strive for.
See your company
through the boss's eyes.
One of the goals of
customer service training is to instill in all your employees the
sense that it is their business, too. Build this sense of
ownership by encouraging employees to see situations from the
owner's point of view. If the theater employees had had any sense
of ownership, they never would have turned down money. Which day
the ticket sale is rung up is irrelevant. Taking in money is what
keeps the doors open and what the business is all about.
Take the case of a
manager for American Express in Phoenix, Arizona. He visited a
local mall to buy ten boxes of chocolates for his employees as
thank you gifts. There were two candy stores across from each
other. He entered the first store and asked if they accepted
American Express credit cards. Assured that they did, he selected
candy totaling $150. Then he noticed the store had only posted
Visa and MasterCard signs. Through the window, he saw that the
candy store across the way had the American Express logo clearly
visible on its door.
The manager
explained to the salesperson that, as an American Express
employee, he couldn't in good conscious give his business to a
store that did not advertise the card. "I hope you'll understand
that I'll have to take my business to a store that does," he said.
Just then, a
sixteen-year-old stock boy asked him to wait a moment. The young
man ran to the other candy store, picked up an American Express
application, ran back, cut out the American Express logo, and
taped it to the register. "Is that good enough, sir?" he said.
Needless to say, he made the sale.
Now that employee
had no long-term career strategy with the candy store, yet he
instinctively knew to take the initiative, creatively removing the
problem, saving the customer. He also knew that if he didn't act
as if his name were on the door... it never would be. The best
strategies are usually the simplest aren't they?
Everyone makes a
difference. As noted broadcaster Paul Harvey says, "For a
company's advertising strategy to work, it has to be handled not
only corporately but also individually." No one is too important
or unimportant to leave out of your positive PR loop. Seeing your
business like a customer and a boss is a winning combination and a
good place to start.
Patricia Fripp,
CSP, CPAE is a San Francisco-based executive speech coach, sales
trainer, and award-winning professional speaker on Change,
Customer Service, Promoting Business, and Communication Skills.
She is the author of Get What You Want!, Make It, So You Don't
Have to Fake It!, and Past-President of the National Speakers
Association. She can be reached at: PFripp@Fripp.com, 1-800
634-3035,
http://www.fripp.com. |