Chris Bell on Fixing Customer Service Woes
Chris Bell looks at what businesses must do to not only win, but also retain, customers.
The experience a
customer or client has with your company doesn’t just rest
with frontline staff – it is a reflection of every facet
of your business.
This means everything from the word
of mouth recommendation to your website, brochure,
advertising, and even the final invoice. Every way that a
company ‘touches’ the customer contributes to the total
experience, and hence, the total value of the company’s
product and services.
If the number one task of any
organisation is to attract and retain customers, then the
quality of the customer experience you deliver to each and
every customer is the 21st century strategy to achieve
that.
Retaining customers should be your prime goal.
Loyalty reflects the strength of your relationship with
customers. The better it is, the stronger the commitment and
loyalty. Relationships are not built on a one-night stand.
They take time to nurture and effort to sustain.
If
your customers/clients have consistently good experiences
with you, they will return. So, how do you deliver the
complete package?
* Develop a clear, well-communicated
vision. A vision is your purpose, your reason for being. If
your people don’t understand where your organisation is
going, how you are going to get there and the part they will
play in making it happen, they will be coming to work JUST
to do a job. Getting your people fired up takes more than
“JUST a job” in today’s market.
* Inspirational
leadership with strong people skills. Leaders see the
business from the customer’s view, not through a
spreadsheet. Leaders must have clear values and clear ideas
about what is important. They need great people skills to
look after their people.
* A clear customer
experience statement. Just like your company vision, unless
all your people understand the sort of customer experience
you want to deliver, they will make up their own.
Inconsistency is a killer.
* Total commitment from
the right people. Make sure you have the right people in the
right places and that they know the direction in which you
are traveling.
* Identify and prioritise what is
important to the customer. It’s all about the customer,
not what’s important to the organisation.
* What are
the crucial stages in your customer relationships? Customer
relationship building is no different from a personal
relationship. Be aware of which stage a relationship is at
with each customer and ensure that the experience you are
actually delivering matches what you say you will
do.
* Skill development on the delivery of the
customer experience. Educate your people to assume
responsibility for the delivery of your customer experience.
Ensure they have the resources and empowerment and then
allow them to do so.
* Measurement processes to
evaluate and fine tune. What gets measured gets done.
Everything you put in place must be measurable.
*
On-going development. This is a journey. You must have a
strong on-going development process in place that captures
all those great ideas.
The most powerful influencers
on a customer’s experience are your people. Their ability
to wow your clients will have a major financial impact on
both referrals and additional business. Bad experiences will
lead to a negative financial impact, both in terms of lost
business and damaged reputation.
A Cost or an
Investment?
Of course, it is going to cost. But what about the costs of high staff turnover, customer complaints, lost business, damaged reputations and margins eroded by price competition.
Businesses have a choice and that choice
has not changed: continue to pay lip service to the
importance of your people and customers and suffer the
consequences, or; adopt a total customer focused approach
based on the quality of the experiences you consistently
deliver.
Commitment to this sort of strategy will give
you an advantage your competitors will find hard to
copy.
ENDS