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Customer Complaints - Degrees of Losing
I'm a pretty good salesman, a darn good sales
manager, but I am the best complaint solver you will ever meet.
I have been on every type of complaint you can imagine.
Complaints typically start off unpleasant. My job is to save the
customer. In my consumer product years, I have driven up in my
company car and have had customers yell at me before I even open
the door. I have had to ask the complaining customer on the
phone if I should bring the sheriff with me. I have had people
actually crying before I had the chance to look at the problem.
In my web hosting years when a server went down
the customers would just scream and scream. They all had sites
that were losing thousands a second. I have had web designers
run scripts that will take a server down then blame it on the
hosting company because the script worked at every other host
they have ever had.
What do I think about all of the complaining people and what makes
me so good at solving their issues? The following 5 golden rules
will help you become great at solving complaints. The first two
are easy, the next three take skill:
1) The customer is always right! (Even when they are wrong!)
2) I understand that before I even contact the complaining customer
I can't "win." Complaints are really just degrees of loosing.
3) Listen to the complaint. When I say listen I mean shut up and
let the customer speak uninterrupted. Even if they are yelling
at the top of their lungs just sit there and take it. This could
take 20 seconds or it could take 10 minutes. The point that you
have heard it all before so you can go ahead and interrupt the
customer to move on is moot. This particular customer wants to
tell you their problem. They don't care if you have heard it
before they want you to hear it from them. If you interrupt they
will just get madder and you know what - you will get madder
too. But if you just sit there and take it in...the complaining
customer will eventually tell you what went wrong.
Through all of the "...your company is responsible for this
mess...," and the "...you are going to pay for that....," you
will actually hear, if you wait long enough, what the customer
did to your product to make it not perform as planned. Works
every time, the complaining customer actually tells on
themselves. Once they have stopped talking and they have told on
themselves it’s time to move to the next step. You know when you
can move on if you can have 5 seconds of complete silence. Use
this rule: Don't say anything after the customer has stopped
talking for 5 long seconds then move on with educating the
customer.
4) If you have completed step 3 successfully the customer has told
you what went wrong with the product. Now its time to educate
the customer on how the product should have performed. The
education process is critical in solving the complaint. It's
critical because the customer is going to have to use your
product to finish the job. You know you have sold a lot of these
items so you know it works. How your customer is working your
product may be a different answer. Remember this is a complaint
and the customer assumes he did everything right. Your goal here
should be to explain how the product was intended to work. Don't
admit that your product has problems in specific areas but point
out to the customer that had it been done this way (not his way)
it would have worked. When "educating" the customer be careful
not to offend them. They are already a bit touchy so if they are
trying to make a strong point just let them.
It's during the education process where you have to make the
distinction between your product and others as well. When the
customer says this other product worked extremely well, you then
say "you know I heard that was a great product." Don't get into
a competitive product match or you will be back at the listening
section again. The point of the educational process is if you
are refunding money or giving more product away the customer
will know how to do it next time and will thank you for the
advice. You will need the thank you because the hard part is
coming.
5) The hard part is the settlement of the complaint. Now if you
have done steps 3 and 4 correctly the settlement should be
fairly easy. However I'm a realist and you probably have some
work to do here. Remember complaints are degrees of losing. You
have lost your time, your money, your patience and most of all
your reputation. The customer has also lost those items and they
are gone for good as far as your product is concerned. Since you
are going to lose something, the degree of your loss is up to
you. In your settlement the bottom line is to be fair and
equitable and let the customer know that this is fair (yes you
are in sales so sell the fair factor).
During the settlement phase you may get to sell the customer an
upgrade, or more product or whatever. In a losing situation that
is the best you are going to do. More often you end up giving
away product, extra months, full refunds or whatever. You and
your customer have lost regardless if you were able to sell
something or give something away. It took so long, so much
effort to gain even that complaining customer that you owe it to
yourself and your company to salvage some type of relationship.
If you can agree on an equitable solution then you may still
have that customer for life and that adds to the bottom line in
any business.
In conclusion complaints are just degrees of losing. However, by
using the 5 rules above you will become much better at solving
complaints. If you get better then you will protect the bottom
line. It's the bottom line that counts in business.
David Peterson is a Managing Partner at ProactiveSale.com. He
has extensive knowledge in Internet Marketing and Internet
Sales. His motto is "You have a website, you might as well use
it!" David turns his expertise over to you after being
responsible for over $50 million worth of goods being sold.
Visit his site
http://proactivesale.com
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