An Experience of a Life-Time

My wife Patty and I spent almost all of April on a vacation in Australia, Indonesia and Singapore. Eighteen days were spent on board The Crystal Symphony cruise ship. Crystal is and up-scale, up-service and up-priced cruise line. Fares are at least double Princess, Holland America, Norwegian, etc.

If you’re smart, you’re NOT trying to be the lowest priced alternative in your business in your market. That’s a great way to go out-of-business.

While you don’t necessarily need to be the most expensive choice, you should be offering a premium product or service and giving exceptional customer service that warrants a premium price.

When you deliver a premium product or service
to your customer it’s hard for them to go back to ordinary

Note that word experience in the title of this article.

I’ve been on about eight cruises and I’ve enjoyed them all, but NONE was close to the emotional experience of Crystal.

Can you make what you do an emotional experience?

Go to the internet. Google Louis Armstrong’s, “What a Wonderful World” and start playing it now.

Picture this. You grew up in a lower income family. Vacations were great. You loved them. You got to see your cousins, every year.

I certainly never pictured myself on a luxury cruise ship in Bali, Indonesia.

You’ve been aboard for seven days now. You’ve been served by wonderful people from all over the globe. People who learn your name, find out something special about you, know when it’s time for you to switch from iced tea to a martini, ask where your brother and his wife are when they don’t see them with you, people who give you a sincere smile that shines from their entire face.

You’ve just had a wonderful time ashore discovering a exotic new land. You’re dressing for a casual dinner. You realize you’re leaving port so you step out onto your balcony as the sun sets and you hear Louis Armstrong’s, “What a Wonderful World” playing over the ships speakers.

“I see trees of green, red roses too
I see them bloom for me and you
And I think to myself what a wonderful world

I see skies of blue and clouds of white
The bright blessed day, the dark sacred night
And I think to myself what a wonderful world

The colors of the rainbow so pretty in the sky
Are also on the faces of people going by
I see friends shaking hands saying how do you do
They’re really saying I love you

I hear babies crying, I watch them grow
They’ll learn much more than I’ll never know
And I think to myself what a wonderful world
Yes I think to myself what a wonderful world”

Now you hear a winsome single cry from the ships fog horn.

By the time we left our last port, everyone was outside to hear Louis Armstrong and wiping away tears. No one on that cruise will ever hear that song again and not think of their Crystal Cruise.

The ship’s captain said it well on the last night with an old Irish toast.

Here’s to tall ships.
Here’s to small ships.
Here’s to all the ships on the sea.
But the best ships are friendships so
Here’s to you and ME!
Until we meet again.

And yes, we made new friends. With only 850 passengers, verses up to 6,680 on the biggest ships it was easy to meet people. We plan to visit Willie and Elaine Montgomery in Ireland in two years.

Yes, Crystal does some BIG things that help build that emotional experience. Their ships are smaller. Their food is 5 star every night. You can dine in the main dining room, or four specialty restaurants, and not pay extra (OK, you paid thousands EXTRA up front – but don’t miss the free specialty restaurants). You get free premium alcohol (free?).

But the reality is, it’s the little things that made the emotional difference. The waiters in the restaurants. The servers by the pool and lounges. The maids! The maître d’ who knew your name by day two, knew waiter and table you wanted, and then joked with you when he saw you at specialty restaurant rather than his main dining room.

What did it cost to play Louis Armstrong over the ships intercom – nothing?

What did it cost for the captain to give his wonderful toast – nothing?

What does it cost to hire and train staff the delivers Make-You-Happy Customer Service? Yep, there is a cost for this, but I contend hiring and training to deliver exceptional customer service has the biggest cost benefit ratio of anything you can do.

Click here and discover how to create customer service so good that people come back time and time again and enthusiastically tell other about you.

We Messed Up FAR TOO OFTEN

I became a customer service GEEK in 1981 when I read Tom Peters and Robert Waterman’s book, In Search of Excellence.  I was then thrilled to hear they made a documentary on the book and it was going to be shown on PBS.  I recorded the show onto my VHS.

Every employee I’ve had (that’s well over 300) since then has watches the customer service sections of that documentary.  Since I wore out my recording, I eventually bought the VHS and then the DVD.

From 1981 on, we were REALLY GOOD at listening to our clients, putting ourselves into every client interaction and make things right when we messed up.

By 1991, we had grown dramatically, and while we did a great job of making things right when we messed up, we messed up far too often.  We wasted a bunch of time and money fixing things and I was totally burned out being the know- it-all King Solomon.

I had become a slave to my business.  It seemed like I was always responding to things and taking care of problems.  I had no time for myself.  It was not fun.

I decided I didn’t want my business to grow anymore.  It seemed like the only things that grew as fast as my business were my headaches, and I sure as heck didn’t want any more employees… talk about headaches.  I might as well have been a babysitter.  I in fact, considered throwing in the towel and going back into sales.

Happily, that wasn’t the end of the story.

By 2005 I owned 5 profitable businesses and loved what I did.

But what happened?

How did I go from a guy who didn’t want to expand his business, who had more headaches than he could handle, to a guy whose business has grown dramatically, added four more businesses, loves his work, has the time he wants to spend with his wife, kids, and grandkids, has time for his many hobbies, and recently sold that original business for millions more than like businesses?

Now, since 1995, when I go on vacation, I never get interrupted.  I come back refreshed and excited to get back to work.  Instead of problems, I come back to a business running as well, or better, than when I left.

Before I sold my big business, I went on a 3-week Mediterranean cruise, with no cell phone and no email.  I told my Vice President of Operations the ship I was on, and I told her “You’ll have to figure out how to get in touch with me if you need me.”  I knew she wouldn’t need me.  Like I said, since around 1995 when I go on vacation, I never get interrupted.

How does the business get better while you’re gone?

It’s the system.  The entire system is designed for continuous improvement whether you’re there or not.

I invented THE small business management system that made me more money, made my job infinitely easier and more enjoyable… a system that our employees love and in fact led to us being named “The Best Small Business to Work for in Washington State” by Washington CEO Magazine.

It’s a system that creates great clients who love doing business with you.  At the same time it gives you, the owner, more time to work on the important things in your business: more time for your family, more time for your friends, more time for yourself and it is simply a lot more fun.

What they teach in business school doesn’t work for small businesses – I know, I’m and business school graduate.  I was using that crap when I was burned out!

Do you think this system just might work for you?  Frankly, it’s not right for everyone, so why don’t you schedule a free 30 minute consultation with me to see if it will work for you.

Don’t worry, I’m not going to sell you anything.  We’ll simply have a conversation.  If it’s not right for you, it’s not right.  I’ll learn about you.  You’ll learn about me.  We’ll still stay in touch and remain friends.

Go here to pick a time to schedule our 30 minute consultation https://keith12.youcanbook.me/

Create Customer Service Legends

“Create Customer Service Legends” 

The goal of Make-You-Happy Customer Service is to create a culture in which exceptional customer service is the norm. A culture in which indifferent customer service is simply not an option. Creating Customer Service Legends is a great way to do that and here’s a great way to create customer service legends.

We encourage every team member to send an ‘Atta Boy’ or an ‘Atta Girl’ whenever they notice another team member who has gone ‘Above and Beyond’ in providing Make-You-Happy Customer Service to another team member, or client.

When someone sees that a team member has gone above and beyond they simply send an email to the entire company with the subject line ‘Atta Boy’ or ‘Atta Girl.’ This simple idea is one of the best things we’ve ever done to create a culture of providing exceptional customer service. With no effort from management our “Atta Girls” and “Atta Boys” keep our Make-You-Happy Customer Service philosophy in the forefront continually.

Here’s an ‘Atta Boy’ from Mark Turner about our POS tech crew. Remember, this gets sent to the entire company.

“I asked the tech guys if they could answer a question (no charge) for a prospect who has RMS from another vendor in one store and is adding a second store. Her current vendor could, or would not answer and she tried the online help at Microsoft to no avail. Our guys agreed to help her, Brian called and left a message, the prospect called back and Peter took care of her.

I talked to her today and she said, ‘He was wonderful! Your quote was a few hundred more than the other guys and money is tight, but you guys are getting the business for sure.'”

Here’s another ‘Atta Girl’ from Ariane in sales about Dorothy in purchasing. See the article below for a discussion about internal customer service.

“Thank you Dorothy for helping me enter a Lozier order. This is my first one and Dorothy took the time to come sit with me to make sure I understood how to enter the order so it made sense for sales, purchasing, and the client! Way to go, Dorothy for an “..and then some attitude”

Atta Boys and Atta Girls have been a great addition for our company and I bet they will be for yours also.

Implement ‘Atta Boys’ and ‘Atta Girls’ in your business.

You can get my hardcopy book (not an e-book), The Happy Customer Handbook, 59 Secrets to Creating Happy Customers Who Come Back Time and Time Again and Enthusiastically Tell Others About You at www.TheHappyCustomerHandbook.com. Your cost is $2.97 and that includes shipping and handling.

How Would You Like an Unpaid Employee?

“You have reached the highest level in sales when your Client views you as an unpaid employee.”                                                                                           ~ Zig Ziglar

That statement has had a profound impact on my life and now that I teach customer service I change it to, “You have reached the highest level in sales when your Client views you as an unpaid employee.” 

I’m not bragging, but when I was a sales rep I did very well, and it was because I believed and practice the statement above from Zig Ziglar.

When I started at American Retail Supply (Thompson Marking Service) in 1978 the only products we sold were hand-held price marking equipment and labels.  My job was to drive, or walk, from one retail store to the next, sell price marking guns, service the guns for existing Clients, and sell them labels for their price markers.  I was paid on straight commission.

Zig’s statement of, “You have reached the highest level of sales when your Client views you as an unpaid employee” was right in line with what I learned from Dick Thompson, the founder of American Retail Supply.  Dick said, “You can only get in direct proportion to what you give.”

With Dick and Zig’s advice, along with parents who taught me the same principles, I headed out to sell price marking equipment and labels.  The Client’s in my territory hadn’t had anyone calling on them for almost three years and I found that most of them had started buying from another company who had a sales rep coming around periodically.

As I entered the Client’s store I looked at the labels on their product to determine the type of pricing equipment they used.  While I did this I looked for labels that weren’t printing properly.  In those days the price marking equipment needed periodic adjustments and the tracks needed to be cleaned for the price marker to work properly.

As I introduced myself, many of the Clients told me they didn’t buy from us any longer because we had not been around to service them and another company came in once in a while.

I had learned from my parents that what you say isn’t nearly as important as what you do, so I simply told them that’s fine, and let them know I would still love to clean and service their labelers.  If they hesitated, I would point out the labels that weren’t printing properly and almost always was able to clean and service their labelers.  Then I showed them what I did to fix the problem and often gave them a hint or two on maintaining the labelers.  Sometimes I walked out with an order.

Most of the time I thanked the Client and told them I would be back in a few months.  Most of the time when I told them I would be back in a few months they reminded me that they didn’t buy from us any longer.  I simply replied, “That’s fine.”

When I showed up a few months later I was often reminded that they no longer buy from us.  I again serviced the labelers and left with more orders.  Over the three years I was an outside sales rep almost every Client who originally told me they no longer bought from us became my Client and many are Clients today.

Zig’s lesson that, “You have reached the highest level of sales when your Client views you as an unpaid employee” served me well as a sales person, and is still our goal today at American Retail Supply.

I originally published my newsletter for my American Retail Supply in 1993 with the thought that I would research an issue and bring what I found to my customers with the hope that it would be of value and help their business thrive… which of course, meant they would need more supplies and fixtures.

“You have reached the highest level in sales when your Client views you as an unpaid employee.”                                                                                           ~ Zig Ziglar

You can learn more about Zig Ziglar at www.ZigZiglar.com

You can get my hardcopy book (not an e-book), The Happy Customer Handbook, 59 Secrets to Creating Happy Customers Who Come Back Time and Time Again and Enthusiastically Tell Others About You for free.  We just ask that you pay $2.97 to help cover shipping and handling.  Go to www.TheHappyCustomerHandbook.com.

Exposed!!! Owner of Company Named, “Best Business To Work For In Washington State” is a “Ruthless Manager

It was reported today that Keith Lee, the owner of American Retail Supply, which was named the Best Small Business to Work for in Washington State by Washington CEO Magazine is a Ruthless Manager.

How is that?  How can the owner of the company named “The Best Small Business to Work for in Washington State” now be revealed as the co-author of the New Edition of No B.S. Ruthless Management of People & Profits?

It was revealed today that Dan Kennedy, the author of numerous No B.S. books, chose Keith Lee as the co-author for his newest edition of No B.S. Ruthless Management of People & Profits.

Our intrepid reporter, Lois Lane, caught up with Mr. Lee as he was sneaking into his office today and asked him how he could head the Best Business to Work for in Washington State and be a Ruthless Manager.

Mr. Lee replied… “I don’t choose the names for Mr. Kennedy’s books, and Dan and I don’t agree on everything, but when it comes to managing a business and the people in it; we agree much more than we disagree.”

Keith pointed to page 14 in the No B.S. book where Dan Kennedy writes about business owners, “And one thing they all have in common: gripes, complaints, disappointments, frustrations, pain and agony with regard to their employees.  Much of this has to do with unreasonable expectations and a misunderstanding of the actual nature of employer-employee relationships.  Some of it lies squarely at the fault of the business owner for failing in one or more of the Three Requirements for Having Employees: Leadership, Management, Supervision.”

Mr. Lee continued, “While I don’t think the nature of the employer-employee relationship need be as adversarial as Dan, the expectations and the nature of the relationship needs to be addressed during the employees’ first day of employment.  With our DVD training business owners who use our Make-You-Happy Management System set those expectations during the first hour of employment.”

Mr. Lee agrees wholeheartedly with Mr. Kennedy’s statement that business owners failing in one or more of the Three Requirements for Having Employees is the cause of many of their headaches.

Mr. Lee says, “Business owners usually lead, manage and supervise as they were led, managed and supervised, or how they learned in business school; neither of which work very well.”

Performance Reviews Suck

Mr. Lee pointed to Performance Management.  Every business owner knows that they need a Performance Management System but the only type of system they know about is Performance Reviews and they know that Performance Reviews Suck.  With this the business owner continues with Performance Reviews knowing that they suck, or they stop them altogether, and are left with no Performance Management System.

Mr. Lee informed this reporter than Dan Kennedy agrees that Performance Reviews are “like looking in your rearview mirror to drive your car.”  Mr. Kennedy’s tells the story of how the late Mike Vance, who worked personally with Walt Disney on the original Disney University and other projects, laughed and scoffed at standardized annual or quarterly ‘performance reviews.”

Mr. Lee’s management system replaces Performance Reviews with Personal Development Interviews.

Mr. Lee went on to explain.  “Just listen to what they’re called.  Which would you rather give… a Performance Review or a Personal Development Interview?  Would you rather review someone’s performance, or develop someone?

What if you’re on the receiving end?  Would you like your performance reviewed or would you rather have someone work proactively to develop you?

Which do you think gets better results, developing people and coaching them or reviewing their performance after the fact?

Traditional management focuses on catching people doing things wrong.  If every time I do something wrong the boss catches me, but he doesn’t catch me when I do things right, my creativity is stymied and I stop using my creativity, stop stepping out front, and stop helping the organization grow by using my creativity.

Conversely, when we start catching people doing things right, we encourage empowerment.  People start to do things in the organization.  Productivity improves on an ongoing basis.  Improvement doesn’t just come from management but from the whole organization interacting with each other and picking each other up.  The organization is permeated with a motivating environment.

Another benefit of this type of management is you create a learning organization.  Researchers tell us that as we move forward, people are going to stay with organizations where they have an opportunity to grow and learn.  There are going to be many more skilled positions than there are people to fill them.  And if there are a lot of skilled positions and not enough people to fill them, money isn’t going to make the difference.  Money is going to be a given.  You’re going to have to pay in the competitive market to get good people.  But they want to work in a place where they can grow, where they can enjoy themselves, where they can use their creativity to help the organization grow, and that happens in a learning organization.  That’s exactly why my company, American Retail Supply was named the Best Company to Work for in Washington, by Washington CEO Magazine.”

You can get Keith’s hardcopy book (not an e-book), How to Control Your Business and your Life, Proven Secrets to Creating Highly Productive Teams at www.HowToControlYourBusiness.com.  Your cost is $2.97 and that includes shipping and handling.

We Always Have Perfect Customer Service – NOT!

We Always Have Perfect Customer Service – NOT!

In all of my businesses, we make mistakes.    We spend lots of time and money to make our procedures as efficient and foolproof as possible, but we still make mistakes.  So, where do I get off telling people like you that you need to have Exceptional Customer Service?

While nobody likes to be at the receiving end of a mistake, we all know that people make mistakes.  Exceptional Customer Service requires that we first person your customer talks to solve the problem?”

Does everyone in your business know how to help an upset customer?

Do your customers know that Exceptional Customer Service is what they should expect from you?

I get a few phone calls each year from customers who don’t think they are getting Exceptional Customer Service from us.  Almost all of these calls start with, “I read in your newsletter that customer service is important to you, I don’t think I’m getting very good service…” or “A few months ago when I was on hold I heard that you wanted me to call you if I had a problem that wasn’t being taken care of…”  Sure nobody likes getting calls like this but in another way I LOVE GETTING THEM!

What’s the alternative?  For most businesses it’s a customer who really doesn’t want the hassle of complaining.  The customer who goes to the competition and not only doesn’t recommend you to others, but maybe even bad mouths you.  I love customers who give us the opportunity to MAKE THEM HAPPY.  Find a way to tell your customers that you want to know if they are not happy.

I stole an idea from Stu Leonard’s Supermarket in Connecticut.  He has a big sign with his picture that says, What Do You Like?  What Don’t You Like?  I’d Like to Know.  Every invoice we send out has a flyer that asks the same questions Stu Leonard asks.  While it is redundant to send it out with every invoice, we do.  I want to be sure that every customer knows that they should expect Exceptional Customer Service and that I want to know if they don’t get it.

Act

The video, In Search of Excellence, says most suggestion boxes get little to no use.  They say the reason is customers know that their suggestions will get no action.  Stu Leonard’s box is filled, mostly with good comments, every day.  Why do people take the time to write?  The video says it’s because they know something will be done.  If customers take the time to contact you, take the time to let them know what you are doing.

Every customer who writes to us at any of our businesses, whether it’s a good comment or a complaint, gets a response.

You can get my hardcopy book (not an e-book), The Happy Customer Handbook, 59 Secrets to Creating Happy Customers Who Come Back Time and Time Again and Enthusiastically Tell Others About You at www.TheHappyCustomerHandbook.com.  Your cost is $2.97 and that includes shipping and handling.

Think Upside Down

Think about growing your business. What are you going to do to grow your business this year? Take a minute right now and think.

If you’re like most people, when you think about growing your business you think about getting new customers. The mega retailers spend millions of dollars each year trying to get new customers to come into their stores… and it continually amazes me that once they get me into their store the customer service is often so bad I won’t ever go back.

I’m suggesting that when it comes to growing your business Think Up-Side-Down. In order to grow your business, rather than thinking about getting new customers first, think first about keeping your existing customers.

Let’s look at the numbers. Assume that “Their Store” wants to grow by 10% next year. Let’s further assume that their customer service is typical of most major retailers and 2 out of 10 customers decide they are going to take their business elsewhere because of the lousy service. Let’s assume another 5% go somewhere else for a multitude of reasons. So they lose 25% of their business each year. So now, rather than growing by 10%, “Their Store” needs to grow by 35% to hit their target growth rate of 10%.

Now let’s look at “Your Store”. You also want to grow by 10%. But because you and everyone on your staff understands that customers give each and every one of you your paycheck, and your vacations, and your raises, and everything else you get; you simply do not lose customers due to poor customer service. You do lose about 5% of your customers each year for a variety of reason – they move, they die, misunderstandings, whatever. So after you take into account losing customers, you need to grow 15% to reach your 10% growth rate.

So the morale of the story is… It’s a lot easier to grow your business if you take care of your existing customers.

When you think about growing your business Think Up-Side-Down. Think in this order:
1. What can I do to keep my existing customers?
2. What can I do to increase business with my existing customers?
and finally…
3. How can I get new customers?

Concentrate on keeping your existing customers and doing more business with your existing customers and you’ll get the Happy Customer Bonus… dozens, hundreds, maybe even thousands of people selling for you. You’ll have Happy Customers telling others about you. And then you’ll have the absolutely best kind of advertising – advertising that money can’t buy – “WORD-OF-MOUTH ADVERTISING”… and you’ll have those new customers walking into your store.

  • Here are ideas in Out-Nordstrom Nordstrom, Creating the World’s Best Customer Service that will help you keep existing customers, increase business with existing customers, and get new customers.
    Be sure everyone in your company understands Who’s The Boss. See secret #40 in Out-Nordstrom Nordstrom.
  • Be sure everyone in your company understands How To Take Care Of Upset Customers – Secret #43.
  • Can your business pass the acid test of Exceptional Customer Service? Are the huge majority of customer complaints resolved by the first person who talks to the customer? Secret #23.
  • Does everyone in your company know what exceptional customer service is? Secret #4.

You can get my hard copy book (not an e-book), The Happy Customer Handbook, 59 Secrets to Creating Happy Customers Who Come Back Time and Time Again and Enthusiastically Tell Others About You at www.TheHappyCustomerHandbook.com.  Your cost is $2.97 and that includes shipping and handling.

A Pleasant Customer Service Surprise

I’m often amazed at the places where I expect to get Make-You-Happy Customer Service and don’t get it, and the places where I would expect less-than Make-You-Happy Service and get great service.

Where would you expect to get Make-You-Happy Customer Service?

  • At a Denny’s Restaurant or,
  • The Expensive 5 Star Resort Hotel on the beach?

I’ll let you decide which actually had Make-You-Happy Customer Service.

The first morning, at the hotel, I got up and headed out for breakfast.  I asked the guy at the bell desk if the Denny’s was still across the street and down a couple blocks.  He replied, “It’s just across the street.”

So I went out to the street, looked across, and didn’t see a Denny’s.  So I thought, OK it must be somewhere in that shopping area across the street.  So I went across the street and into the shopping area and eventually found that the Denny’s was actually, through the shopping area, down the alley and over another 1/2 block.  It certainly wasn’t anywhere near, “just across the street.”

When I finally found the Denny’s and entered the restaurant, I was greeted by a nice clean wooden sign that said.  “Welcome to Denny’s.  It Will Be Our Pleasure To Seat You.”  I thought, they really understand Make-You-Happy Customer Service Secret #28.  Are Your Signs Positive or Negative?

I was, almost immediately, greeted by a lady with a sincere smile and greeting who showed me to my seat, gave me a menu and took my drink order.  Within seconds I had my coffee and orange juice.

When I ordered my breakfast the waitress told me that I should get a different item on the menu because it was the exact breakfast that I ordered but it included coffee and orange juice and my bill would be less.

She then proceeded to give me great service during the rest of my breakfast.

When I visited the restroom on the way out I saw a sign that said, “Please tell any Denny’s team member if this restroom needs attention.”  It didn’t say what I usually see in restrooms, “Please notify a manager if this restroom needs attention.”  “Ya sure, I’m going to ask for a manager and wait around until (s)he shows up to tell them their restroom needs attention.”  But if the restroom needed attention, I would have taken the time to tell a team member on my way out.

Secret #29 in The Happy Customer Handbook is “Are Your Signs Positive or Negative?”

Signs are not passive.  They are capable of delighting as well as disappointing.  Review each of your signs and ask yourself, does the way it is written create a feeling of delight for the customer?   If the answer is “No”, change the sign to produce the intended emotion.

Minimize the use of words like “no”, “don’t”, “can’t”, “policy”, and “prohibited”.  Instead, tell people what they can do.  Instead of “No refunds after ten days” maybe “Refunds gladly accepted up to ten days after purchase.”

Rather than “Two forms of identification are required to pay by check.” How about, “Please share two forms of identification when paying by check – Thank You.”

Getting back to the question of, who would you expect Who’s The Boss Service from, The Denny’s Restaurant, or the 5 Star Resort.

The next day I got done with work early enough to make it down to the pool for an hour before it got dark.  When I got to the pool I found that it was closed for a private party.

“OK, no big deal, I’ll go for a swim in the ocean.”  When I got out of the ocean I found that not only was the pool closed but towel kiosk was closed for the private party.

“OK, no big deal, I’ll just rinse off and dry off in my room.”  Well, you guessed it the showers were turned off.  “So, I’ll just walk through the lobby with my sandy feet and salty body dripping wet.”

Like I said, I’m often amazed at the places where I expect to get Make-You-Happy Customer Service and don’t get it and the places where I would expect less-than Make-You-Happy Service and in fact get great service.

Remember, according to the Harvard Business Review, if you can prevent 5% of your customers from leaving you, you can increase your profits 25-93%.

You can get my hardcopy book (not an e-book), The Happy Customer Handbook, 59 Secrets to Creating Happy Customers Who Come Back Time and Time Again and Enthusiastically Tell Others About You at www.TheHappyCustomerHandbook.com.  Your cost is $2.97 and that includes shipping and handling.

11 Customer Service Lessons from One Phone Call

I called one of our very good clients who has a brick and mortar store, excellent mail order business, superb telemarketing organization, and a top notch web site.  They don’t have a retail store in my area, so I usually order online or call them.  I order from them for a number of reasons:

  • They are a very good client of ours.
  • Their products are superb.
  • Their service is almost always at the Make-You-Happy level.

 

But even the best businesses fall short, and that’s why we need consistent and persistent reinforcement of Make-You-Happy Customer Service.  One of the areas that continually amazes me is how often people assume they know what you are going to ask and therefore don’t really listen to what you’re saying.

 

I had ordered top quality expensive wading boots from them – I use them for fly fishing in rivers. When I got them, they were too narrow.  I looked through their catalog and saw that the only boot they had in the catalog that was available in wide widths was a lower price model.  Now, I’m not snobby, but my feet are old enough that I need the support and extra sole thickness that most low price models don’t have.

 

So I called the 800 number to ask if they had any higher quality boots in wide widths.  A very nice, good customer service person told me that was the only boot that actually came in a wide width, but suggested that I call back in the morning and ask for a “boot product specialist” and see if one of the boots “ran” wider than the model I ordered.

 

I thought that was a great idea!  I buy New Balance Tennis Shoes for that reason.  I don’t need to get a “wide”, their shoes just “run” wider.  So I called back the next day and asked for a product specialist.  I told him that I had already found out that the only boot they carry in a wide was their inexpensive model and that the customer service person suggested I call back to see if any of the more expensive models “ran” wide and might work for me.  He said, “Let me check.”

 

It was quiet for a while, so I thought he was “checking” with someone else to see if any of their boots “ran” wider.  But then I heard him mumbling on the phone.  He was reading from the web page.  I told him I had already read everything on the web and none of the other boots came in wide widths and asked again if he or anyone there knew if any brands “ran” wider.  He just went back to reading the catalog.  Finally, I just said, “Never mind” and hung up.

Keith Lee's Free Book

I went to the local fly shop that is not very convenient for me to get to and found that they didn’t have any boots that came in wide widths either.  But they did have a great boot that ran wide.  I bought a $139.00 pair of boots.  And yes, you guessed it.  The company I called in the first place has the same boot.

 

The “product specialist” was very nice and polite and I’m sure he had customer service training.  The company’s customer service is consistently too good to think it just comes about without training.  With that said, there are at least 11 lessons to learn from this one call.

 

  1. Train your team to truly listen.

    Pay particular attention to people in your organization who tend to answer questions from you and others before they listen to the entire question. Pay particular attention to those who like to finish questions for others.  Truly listen and don’t assume that you know what someone is going to say.  You know what happens when you assume.  You make ass-u-me.

 

  1. Monitor your customer service.

    This seems almost too obvious, but while it may be obvious, almost no one does it. Whether you use secret shoppers, your own people, or recordings, don’t ass-u-me that your people are doing what they’ve been trained to do. And don’t ass-u-me that they do the same things when you or another manager are around and when you’re not.  You surely can’t monitor every customer service interaction, but in this case, over time, the business I called would certainly hear a similar customer service interaction and be able to address it in their training.

 

  1. Make sure your customers know what to do when they are not being served properly.

    This is included as Customer Service Secret #4 in The Happy Customer Handbook. Be sure your Customer’s Know Your Extraordinary Customer Service Expectations.  But they not only need to know your extraordinary customer service expectations, they need to know what to do when they don’t get Make-You-Happy Customer Service.  In as many ways as you can, tell your customers what them to do when they don’t get Make-You-Happy Customer Service.  Tell them when they are on hold on the phone.  Tell them in any communication that you send to them.  Tell them with signage.  At American Retail Supply we tell our clients to call us at 800-426-5708 if we ever let them down and if they are still not happy call me, Keith Lee, the owner of the company, at 253-859-7310.  If I had been told, “If we ever let you down, please call Bill at xxx-xxx-xxxx I would have likely called Bill who would have found out that they do have a great brand of wading shoes that runs wider.  They would not have only thrilled me, they would have me writing an entirely different story about their Make-You-Happy Customer Service and I would have told you their name and I would have spread a huge amount of positive word-of-mouth advertising!

 

  1. Know Your Product.

    I’m not going to harp on this too much because we are human and we can’t know everything. But I do think that a “boot product specialist” should have known if any of the brands “run” wide.  And if not he should have been trained to do #6 below.

 

  1. Know Your Customers.

    I am a very good customer for the company I called. Good enough that they send me a hard back version of their master catalog that is about an inch and a half thick. I believe in giving every customer Make-You-Happy Customer Service.  With that said, your best customers should be taken care of even to a higher degree.  Yes, the customer that buys $200,000 a year from us gets Super Duper Make-You-Happy Customer Service.  But you say, “How can they know that you’re a great customer?”  That’s Make-You-Happy Customer Service Secret #27.   Have a Great Data Base. I’m going to be blunt here.  With the price of computers and software today, there is simply no excuse for not knowing who your great customers are, and you are throwing money away by not marketing to and treating them differently.  And that difference should not affect giving your other customers Make-You-Happy Customer Service.  In this instance, the product specialist should have pulled up my account, saw that I was one of their best customers and done something special to take care of me. What could he have done?  He could have called someone in the company that knew my answer and called me back.  He could have called his manufacturers and called me back.  He could have gone to the warehouse and tried on some boots to see if any “ran” wide. He could have done something.  Should he have done those things for someone who buys $3.95 a year?  Probably not.  But he should have for one of their best customers.

 

  1. Train people to know where to go to get answers.

    I covered this a bit in #5. There are a lot of things he could have done to answer my question, but the biggest frustration was that he never seemed to listen well enough to hear the question properly. We have a lot of products at American Retail Supply. So regardless of how much training we give them, there is absolutely no way our new reps can know everything when we put them on the phones.  So we spend a lot of time in our training teaching them where they need to go to get answers.  When they start, we constantly remind our reps of the most important sentence to learn, “I’m sorry, I don’t know, but I’ll find out and get back to you by …”  And then get back to them when you told them you would.

 

  1. Create loyal customers.

    In this instance, one of my favorite places to shop let me down. But that’s unusual.  Their service, products and delivery are usually superb and because they are, I’m loyal and I’ll continue to shop with them.

 

  1. You can learn multiple lessons from poor customer service in your business.

    The normal response to bad customer service is to simply blame the person who delivered the poor service. As you can see by the ten things we learned from this one phone call, you can learn a great deal from one instance of poor service and there are lots of things that could have been done so that this didn’t happen.  It’s not just the reps fault.

 

  1. If you truly believe in, and practice, Make-You-Happy Customer Service you will have multiple ways to catch and fix poor customer service.

    When you implement Make-You-Happy Customer Service, you have many more ways to identify, catch, and fix service that is less than Make-You-Happy. One of the basics of Make-You-Happy Customer Service is that you can only expect what you inspect.  In others words you need to have systems in place to inspect your customer if you expect Make-You-Happy customer Service.

 

  1. Your customer service will improve when you implement the Make-You-Happy Management System with the Make-You-Happy Customer Service.

    When you implement the Make-You-Happy Management System all team members are trained to recognize service that falls short of Make-You-Happy Customer Service. They are trained to not only recognize it, but also do something about it.  I don’t have room to go into the Make-You-Happy Management System here, but it not only reinforces Make-You-Happy Customer Service, it creates it!

 

  1. Three Fingers Pointing Back at You.

    I learned a lot of wonderful lessons from my mentor Dick Thompson. One of them is, “remember, when you point your finger at someone else, three fingers are pointing back at you”.  If I’m with someone else and we get poor customer service the other person will often say “I can’t believe how rude (stupid, incompetent, whatever) that person was.”  My response is always the same, “That’s management’s fault.”

 

You can get my hardcopy book (not an e-book), The Happy Customer Handbook, 59 Secrets to Creating Happy Customers Who Come Back Time and Time Again and Enthusiastically Tell Others About You at www.TheHappyCustomerHandbook.com.  Your cost is $2.97 and that includes shipping and handling.

Grumpy Must Have Been a Make-You-Happy Customer Service Fanatic

A story from a Customer Service Fanatic…

Often when I speak to a crowd, I ask people in the audience how often they get “Who’s the Boss” Customer Service” (See secret #40 in my book – The Happy Customer Handbook)  It’s the kind of customer service that shows they really understand that “you, the customer, are the boss.”

When I ask, “How many of you get that kind of customer service most of the time?”  No hands go up.  When I say, “Half of the time,” a few hands go up.  When I say “25% of the time,” most hands go up.

Frankly, I’m surprised that people say they get “Who’s the Boss” customer service 25% of the time, because for me it’s more like 10% of the time.  I think it’s because I’ve harped on exceptional customer service so long that maybe I have gotten a bit jaded.  Maybe my expectations of exceptional customer service have gone beyond what’s likely to happen.  Well, I do get it 10% of the time so I know it’s possible so I’m going to stay where I am.  I’m going to stay with my fanatical approach to exceptional customer service.

But I need to warn you…

When you get to the point where I am, you’re likely to be grumpy more often, because you’ll go into places wanting and expecting exceptional customer service, and you’re not going to get it.  Like today, when I went to lunch.  Most of the time when I go shopping or to a restaurant, I’ll say something to the clerk whether the clerk says anything or not.  But every once in a while, because I’m a customer service fanatic and a guy who writes customer service newsletters and gives customer service advice, I don’t say anything.  I want see what their customer service is like if I don’t saying anything.  I’m absolutely amazed at how often the clerk on the other side of the counter says absolutely nothing.

When I went to restaurant today, I did my little test and planned to not say anything until the clerk did.  The clerk came to the register and looked at me – no smile – not a word.  She just came to the register and looked at me.

I gave her my order, she told me the price – I gave her my money – she gave me my change – and said nothing.  In the entire process the only word that was spoken by the clerk was the price of the meal.  No greeting, no thank you… nothing – just the price.

While you may be Grumpy more often when you become a Make-You-Happy Customer Service Fanatic, it will also put a smile on your face when you realize how crummy most service is.   You’ll smile as you realize that the more people get crummy customer service, the easier it is for you to give what is perceived as Exceptional Customer Service!

You can get my hardcopy book (not an e-book), The Happy Customer Handbook, 59 Secrets to Creating Happy Customers Who Come Back Time and Time Again and Enthusiastically Tell Others About You at www.TheHappyCustomerHandbook.com.  Your cost is $2.97 and that includes shipping and handling.