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Obituary - Customer Service is Dead
For many people (if not
most), Customer Service is synonymous with a department with
people who have phones glued to their ears. A phone number you
can call to complain. An e-mail address you can write to, and
maybe get an answer back. If you think about it that way,
customer service is sad.
The time has come to
bury it.
This kind of customer service has become very old indeed, and
outlived its purpose.
This is a wake-up call for
anyone thinking that customer service is something handled by a
customer service department, provided by customer service reps
diligently typing at their help desk applications...
Stop chasing that ghost!
You're beating a dead horse!
The time has long gone,
where your customer service was the only place unhappy customers
could go. The Internet is a common place to talk about just
about anything that's on your mind. Forums, social sites like
MySpace and Facebook, Youtube for videos, blogs, customer
complaint web sites, the list goes on and on.
These days, it's much more
likely that your mistakes are plastered all over the Information
Superhighway instead of coming to you. It's only human to get
mad, and get even.
You need
much more than 'just' a customer service department to make
and keep happy customers.
Every time a customer comes
into contact with your business, you either add or
take away from that relationship:
· When they come to your web site... Fast and easy to use: add.
Slow loading web site, with unnecessary 'features' as an
animated splash page: take away.
· When they read about your products... A comprehensive
description of features and benefits: add. One-liner, and half
of that is the type code: take away.
· When they come into your store... Light, clean, easy to move
around: add. Lanes filled with re-stockers blocking the way:
take away.
· When they talk to one of your sales persons... Friendly and
helpful: add. Obnoxious, ignoring, or rushing: take away.
· When they use your products... Easy to use and set up: add.
Easy to break: take away.
· When they get an invoice... Correct, understandable: add. One
big puzzle, and if you solve it the figures are wrong: take
away.
· When they talk to your other customers (either face-to-face
or online)... Good stories: add. Bad stories: take away.
I could go on and on with
this list.
Think of it this way:
whenever your customers come into contact with your business,
it's like they're sliding on a surface you provide.
Whenever you do something
to add to the relationship, you make that surface smooth, and
your customers easily slide into whatever you want them to do
(buy products again and again). If you take away from the
relationship, you make the surface rough, making it harder and
harder for the customer to reach your destination. Until they
stop and go away.
If you consider this, the
old school way of doing customer service is just a secondary
response. Things have gone wrong along the way, literally
rubbing the customer the wrong way. And when (if!) the customer
finally reaches the customer service department, it's up to them
to straighten things out. If they still can that is, and it's
not too late.
So if you
really want to service your customers, you need to get better
than setting up a customer support hotline and all that it
entails. The entire company needs to become customer obsessed,
constantly thinking about how to make things going smoother for
the customer...
In this scenario,
everybody is a customer service rep. From the product
designer, to the webmaster. From the production line operator to
the financial administrator. From the sales person to the CEO.
Every business needs to find out what each of these individuals
can do to make things smoother for the customer.
The truly successful
examples of great customer service have always done this. They
are obsessed with making lives easier for their customers in
whatever they do. They are touching the customer in a good way.
That's the new kind of
customer service, risen like a phoenix from the ashes of the
old. But that old way of doing customer service is dead, and
businesses that hang onto it, are destined to go the way of the
dodo as well.
Rest In Peace.
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