Customer Service Information


Writing The Book On Great Customer Service


Q: One of the big chain bookstores recently opened up near my small book store. Already I can see my business starting to decline. Is there anything I can do to compete with the bigger store or should I just accept the inevitable?-- Peter Q.

A: A wise man once said, "The inevitable is never a sure thing."

Don't be so quick to close the book on your business, Peter. You probably can't compete with the superstore on volume of inventory or on price, but there are other things you can do to help keep the customers coming in your door. One of the best ways to ensure customer loyalty is to offer superior customer service.

It's funny that you're a bookseller. Let me tell you about my last visit to one of the big chain bookstores just a few weeks ago.

I took my teenage daughter in to find the classic book, The Once and Future King, for a school project that has to be done over the summer. It was a Sunday afternoon and the store was crawling with customers. We spent fifteen minutes scouring this great warehouse of a bookstore, but couldn't find the book anywhere. We also couldn't find anyone who worked there to ask for help.

Finally, I went up to the front counter and asked the apathetic looking teenager who was manning the register if they had the book in stock. She looked at me as if I'd asked her to do advanced calculus in her head and said, "I dunno."

I asked if she might check her computer for me. She looked at me again, this time as if I'd just asked her to rotate the tires on my car without a jack. After a minute of tapping the keys with her long fingernails (which were painted black, by the way) she said, "Yeah, we have it."

"Great," I said. "Where can I find it?"

She glanced at the screen again and said, "It says that it's in the classics section."

"Great," I said again. I use the word "great" a lot when I'm trying to restrain myself from strangling incompetent sales people. "Where might the classics section be?"

She didn't bother to look at me or the computer this time. She just shrugged and said, "Beats me, man. I've only worked her a week. "

I wanted to ask if there was anyone who had worked there long enough to know where the ^%$# classics section was, but by that time there were a dozen or so people lining up behind me to pay for books they had somehow managed to find on their own.

I went home and ordered the book online. So much for supporting my local bookseller.

It's a shame your store isn't located near me, Peter. I'll bet if I walked in and asked for a copy of The Once and Future King you would be able to tell me almost to the square inch where the book is on the shelf in your store. I'll also bet that if you didn't have a copy in stock you would go out of your way to order it for me.

That is what superior customer service is all about: going the extra mile to satisfy your customer. That is what will keep customers coming back to your store time and time again.

Superior customer service leads to greater customer satisfaction, which leads to repeat business, which leads to the holy grail of the retail business: customer loyalty.

Here are a few tips on how to deliver superior customer service and build customer loyalty:

1. Anyone on your staff who deals directly with the customers should be well groomed and dressed appropriately for the job. Customers over 25 years old will not get a warm and fuzzy feeling if the guy processing their credit card is wearing an Ozzy Osborne tee-shirt and matching nose ring.

2. Sales people should be knowledgeable about the product they are selling. I can't tell you how many times I have asked a sales person a simple question and only got a blank stare in return. A lack of product knowledge does nothing to instill confidence in the customer.

3. Your staff should know where every product is without having to ask a manager or consult a computer. At the very least they should be able to point out the ^%$# classics section without blinking an eye.

4. Make it a point to know your customer's name. Nothing makes a customer feel special like the sound of his or her own name. You can't remember everyone's name, of course, but you should strive to remember the names of those customers who come in regularly. I f requent one particular restaurant and the owner not only knows my name, but the names of my wife and kids. And every time I set foot in his restaurant he calls me by name and shakes my hand and personally leads me to a table. I don't feel like a customer. I feel like a friend.

5. Offer personal services that the big boys do not. Anything you can do to make your customer's life easier will be appreciated and remembered. If a customer comes in and asks for a book you do not have, offer to order the book and deliver it to their home so they don't have to make another trip to pick it up. All this is going to cost you is a few minutes of your time and you will not only save a sale, but also make a lasting impression on that customer. The next time they need a book they will head your way.

There are other things you can do to combat the bookstore Goliath, Peter, but offering superior customer service is a great place to start.

Here's to your success!

Tim Knox

Small Business Q&A is written by veteran entrepreneur and syndicated columnist, Tim Knox. Tim serves as the president and CEO of three successful technology companies and is the founder of DropshipWholesale.net, an online organization dedicated to the success of online and eBay entrepreneur.

Related Links:
http://www.prosperityandprofits.com
http://www.dropshipwholesale.net


MORE RESOURCES:

Marketing & Customer Service – NSW Sydney
MuMbrella
This position requires a dynamic person with customer service and marketing related experience. Role is based close to transport and involves leading the service program for our vast client base. We are a small but growing dynamic company that have ...



KeyBank Continues to Receive Industry Recognition for Exceptional Customer Service
MarketWatch (press release)
Greenwich cited Key for overall satisfaction with personal banking, as well as customer service with treasury management, both in the category of Small Business Banking. Key was also recognized for excellence by Greenwich in the category of customer ...

and more »


Business Insider

Customer Service At Big Banks Trumps That of Small Banks And Credit Unions ...
Business Insider
Given that information, we were a little surprised by a new RateWatch study that claims big banks are beating credit unions in customer service. RateWatch sent 120 Intellishop mystery shoppers to banks throughout the country to gauge their interactions ...



Sydney Morning Herald

Customer service still dogs Telstra
CIO Magazine
Telstra chief executive, David Thodey, has conceded that progress remains slow on improving the telco's customer service record, despite making it a top priority in the last 18 months. Speaking at an analyst briefing on the telco's financial results ...
Mobiles prop up Telstra bottom lineSydney Morning Herald
Telstra details benefits of social media service strategyTechnology Spectator
Telstra mobile growth up 11pcThe Australian

all 273 news articles »


Rediff

In Customer Service Push, Microsoft Invests In 24/7, Which Acquires Voxify
Wall Street Journal (blog)
By Deborah Gage People who are forced to engage in online chats with virtual customer service agents–or who are passed from agent to agent without getting their problems solved–are likely to get highly frustrated and take their business elsewhere.
Microsoft Joins Forces with 24/7 for Customer Service SoftwareITProPortal
Microsoft strikes deal with 24/7, promises to 'redefine' customer serviceEngadget
Microsoft Teams Up with 24/7 on Customer Service SoftwareDestination CRM
PCWorld -The Seattle Times -MarketWatch (press release)
all 58 news articles »


Pique newsmagazine

Whistler Blackcomb shares customer service secrets
Pique newsmagazine
Madaan explained the importance of hearing the message of customer service and staff motivation repeated. "We all know these things, but it's refreshing your memories," he said. Josh Anderson, guest services co-ordinator at the Squamish Lil'wat ...

and more »


American Airlines Employees Recognized for Excellence in Customer Service
MarketWatch (press release)
8, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- American Airlines is recognizing its employees around the airline's network for excellence in customer service, specifically measured by improved customer experience and innovative problem solving for the fourth ...

and more »


What are you saying: Telstra's customer service slowly improving, SA minister ...
Computerworld Australia
If Mr Thodey wants to improve customer service at Telstra, he will need to bring back customer service call centres to Australia. I have never received satisfactory outcomes to billing disputes by talking to reps in the Philippines and going by ...



Customer service is key
Leduc Representative
25 at the Best Western Denham Inn was clear: customer service counts. “If you are in business, you are in the customer service business,” said Don Shay, consultant with Accrescent Consulting. With experience in both business and military sectors, ...



Virtela Named Stevie Awards Finalist for Customer Service of the Year
Sacramento Bee
8, 2012 -- /PRNewswire/ -- Virtela, the world's largest independent managed network, security and cloud services company, today announced that it has been named a finalist for "Customer Service Department of the Year" in the 6th annual Stevie Awards ...
Minacs Named as Finalist in 2012 Stevie® Awards for Sales & Customer ServiceMarketWatch (press release)
Office Depot Named as Finalist in Stevie® Awards for Sales & Customer ServiceEON: Enhanced Online News (press release)
Salesify Co-Founder, Raj Hajela, Selected to Chair Judging Committee for 2012 ...San Francisco Chronicle (press release)

all 26 news articles »

Google News

home | site map
© 2007