Stop driving away your customers or members and learn about what we should all know about "relationships".
Call it a blind spot. Call it regimented thinking. Call it
the-way-we-have-always-done-it. But by any name, there are actions and
practices that far too many businesses engage in that can unknowingly
drive customers away.
When I observe such practices, I move from being angry to just plain
sad. Really sad. Because the truth of the matter is that no one
CONSCIOUSLY set out to ruin my day. No one sat in a board room and
dreamt up procedures that would have us leaving in droves. No one woke
up and said, "I can hardly wait to make you miserable." It happened
"because". Because the truth of the matter is that it takes courage to
stop and ask the critical question: Does this serve our customer? Our
member? Our community?
We all "know" the rules of service. But sadly, sometimes we don't take
the time to think through just what our actions might be do or say to
the customer. Here are some actions guaranteed to drive folks from the
doors of an enterprise. It's time for all of us to sit up and notice!
Over promise and under deliver.
Bring people to the conference with the promise of cutting edge
material. Lure attendees into thinking that the hotel is a four-star
marvel. Tell customers that they'll have all the material they need in
three days. Promise the meeting planner that the press kit will go out
overnight. Then sit back and watch. Really watch. If it isn't true 100%
of the time, it's a bait and switch promise.
Take the idea of "cutting edge material". I've attended conferences in
which the only cutting edge was the serving knife on a buffet table.
Same ideas. Same methodology. Same format. Get a clue! Shake it up. Be
provocative. If we say it, we better deliver.
How about that four-star hotel? Brochure looks great. The conference
walk through is stunning. But then, could that ghastly-looking luncheon
plate REALLY be the same chicken marsala you were served in the
tasting? And, how about the fact that the hotel "forgot" to tell you
that the major dining room would be undergoing renovation. Yikes!
The three-day guarantee. If you can't deliver it all the time, it's not
true! Now, perhaps Three Day Blinds has reversed its practices, but
years ago, I ordered window coverings for our new house. My mother was
coming to visit us over Christmas and I needed shades. Alas, the third
day came and went. I discovered that only "some" shades are three-day,
not all. Beware of the implied promise.
Never walk the talk.
The brochure for the conference said, "a celebration of members", a
"community that listens." Too bad it didn't play out in reality.
The setting is New Orleans. A couple thousand folks have gathered for
the "celebration" and the "community". Alas, the reality is another
fact. I discover that people are invited to parties based upon their
status in the organization. The luncheon session I am addressing has
some 50 "important people" file into the banquet hall and take their
places on a stage that is three tiers deep. Talk about a "we"/ "they"
set up. I am told, "This is the way we have always done it." The intent
to "honor" these 50 people was to have hundreds watch them eat and to
also set up the boundary between the "us" and the "them".
Come on. There are a few more creative ways to showcase the "us" that
is far more inclusive, educational, and community building than a
camera shot of folks eating. I end up addressing an audience while have
my back to 50 plus people. It's rude, off-putting, and the exact
opposite of what the organization, in all good intentions, wishes to
create.
Our lives had better mirror the words we use and the beliefs we profess
to all. Otherwise, we're merely impersonators. I watched a very well
known speaker who specializes in relationship building turn into a
snarling, demanding customer who treated the flight attendants like
personal servants. How many disbelievers were created on that day?
Make technology your primary form of communication.
Make sure there's a voice mail doom loop from which someone will never
emerge to actually speak with a live human. Conduct all business via
e-mail, assuming that a message sent is a message received. And while
you're at it, hit send as soon as a message is written.
These three practices can doom any business relationship. Amazing isn't
it: having a person answer the phone can actually be a competitive
advantage! How easy do we make it for people to do business with us via
the telephone or even our web site? I tried to book a reservation in a
lovely hotel, only to be treated to a lovely online tour of the
property without ever finding a contact number!
E-mail is great for data but not perfect for relationship building or
critical pieces of information. In fact, often the E in e-mail stands
for escalation and error. Two colleagues almost became bitter enemies
over rapid fire e-mails that had the sting of a viper and the warmth of
the Arctic. Neither thought to pick up the phone and talk things out.
Thus, the lop-sided "chats" turned into internecine warfare. Talk about
beating folks up!!
I discovered fascinating information about a client when we talked
through my normal pre-program survey rather than depend upon an
electronic transmission. I had thought my online survey was a time
saving device. Instead, what it became was a gatekeeper, preventing me
from digging deeper into an issue. Likewise, multiple choice answers on
written or online customer service surveys will never result in
information of substantive depth.
Forget the wisdom of the outer circle.
In organizational life, there's always an "inner circle" of power and
control. Boards of Directors wield it. So do powerful departments. When
practices and policies come only from the inner circle, the rank and
file is not only unheard, but can turn its back on the organization.
Members leave associations when they feel discounted and "not in the
know".
Never say "thank you".
Mother was right when she made us kids write notes to relatives after
Christmas. It's a forgotten habit that can go a long way to letting
people feel appreciated. Likewise, pick up the phone and call a client
or member who has a complaint and THANK THEM for making that complaint
known. You'll discover a huge dividend in goodwill after they recover
from the shock of your call.
Three Practices to KEEP customers and members.
Common courtesy isn't common. Be uncommon.
Service is an unnatural act. It takes emphasis away from ourselves and gives it to others. Be unnatural.
Time is the only non-renewal resource. Never waste people's time.
Hope I haven't wasted yours!
(c) 2005, McDargh Communications. Publication rights granted to all
venues so long as article and by-line are reprinted intact and all
links are made live.
Named by Executive Excellence Magazine as one of the top 100 thought
leaders in business, Eileen McDargh, CSP, CPAE authored one of the
first books on work/life balance. Eileen is an award winning
professional speaker, consultant and facilitator. Find free articles,
surveys, book reviews and more at her professional speaker website.