Presented by (insert instructor’s name)(insert organization)Developed by Grace Wittman, Steve Hines, Sarah Schumaker, and Susan Traver
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The Fundamentals
Delivering service that makes a positive, lasting impression takes more than simple courtesy–much more.It starts with understanding what the relationship is from your customers’ point of view:
• What you do • How you do it • How well it must be
done • Proving you can do it
again!
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Basic Customer Service
• Greeting customers• Clean establishment• Knowing the products or service• Providing a basic level of service which
results in the customer purchasing the product/service
But basics are not enough to keep your business competitive
today!
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Exceptional Service
The Golden Rule:
Treat your customer as you would
like to be treated.But it doesn’t end
there!
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What we see may not be what others
see
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Customer Relations Advantage
• What are the benefits of the product or service that you sell or provide?
• What is your competitive advantage?
• How can a paradigm shift to customer relations benefit your company?
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Why Customer Relations
• Based on ideal expectations• Language structures our environment
– What does the word service mean to you?
– Where is the customer service department?
– Who has the power to handle customer issues?
– How do you treat customer service in your business?
Imagine a new scenario…
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Keys of Customer Relations
Anchored in generosityGrounded in trustBolstered by a visionCoalition based on honestyBalance between customer and businessGrace—relationships appear effortless
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Generosity
• Generosity is an attitude—a focus on the relationship with the customer
• Customers who experience generosity feel valued—not used
• Generosity is providing more than expected
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Think About It…..
GenerosityThink of a business that does a superior
job of generosity.
What does it look and feel like?
What are some of the special things that business does to
make you feel welcome?
The BasicsThink of a business
that provides basically good service, but is
sometimes unfriendly. Why did they
earn that title? How do you feel
when you shop there?
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Generosity: Being “in the Moment”
• Think of a customer—a gem of the ocean. Think how easy it is to “be there” for that customer.
• Think about the customer—a crab—that no one wants to serve. How can you “be there” for that customer?
• After one month, examine how the “negative” relationship did or did not change.
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Trust
• Makes customers feel valued• Service guarantee• Trust customers, employees,
colleagues, and supervisors
• Trust employees to make decisions
“I couldn’t possibly mix decaf and regular
without my manager’s approval.”
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Trust is a Two-Way Street
Why do customers lose trust?• They don’t know how to register a
complaint.• They don’t believe it will do any good.• Trust can be lost when customers feel
they are not treated fairly when something goes wrong.
• They fear the service provider might retaliate.
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The Value of Regaining Customer Trust
• Customer loyalty drops by 20% if the customer has a problem.
• 1 out of 5 customers will leave or purchase another brand next time.
Good News:• Complaining customers who are
satisfied have loyalties approaching those who had no problem.
• In some companies, the customers become MORE loyal.
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Trust
Declare a 60-day trust period. Identify areas where “we don’t trust you” messages are sent to customers.
Faith is not belief without proof, but trust without reservations.
Elton Trueblood
University of Idaho Extension
Vision
• Vision: a dream of what the business means
• A commitment to take the customer/business relationship to a higher level
Everyone is rowing in the
same direction!
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Defining Your Vision
• Why do customers remember us?• How do customers feel after dealing with us?• What do customers tell their friends about
us?• How do we help each other meet customer
needs?
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Company Customer Relations Vision
“Musts”• A vision of “world-class” customer relations
must focus on employees first and then customers—happy employees make happy customers!
• Happiness is contagious.
Take care of the employees and they will take care of the customers.
J. Willard Marriott
University of Idaho Extension
Truth
• Candor • Openness• Dependability• Courage• Compassion• Cultivates long-term relationships
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Balance
• Balance requires respect• Balance requires participation• Balance requires breathing room
If you want to lift yourself up, lift up someone else. Booker T. Washington
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The Foundation of Balance:
Mutual Respect• Respect a sense of equality between
customers and the business.• Examine your business and see where
policies get in the way of quality.
Partners are not ruled by policies, instead, policies are crafted around customer needs.
Chip R. Bell
University of Idaho Extension
Grace
• A business is “graceful” when customers feel:Ease and comfortAn “at home” feeling
• Graceful relationships keep untidy internal issues away from the eyes of the customer.
Learn customers’ expectations
and then try to exceed them.
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Customer Relations
• Providing more than what is expected. • Providing what the customer wants—faster,
better, and the way the customer wants it. • Getting the customer to say
“I wouldn’t go anywhere else.”• Fostering partnerships that
build loyalty.
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The Payoff to Your Business
• Cost to business to attract a new customer(8-10 times higher than keeping a current customer)
• Keep customers longer (50% longer)• Lower sales and marketing costs
(20-40% lower)• Higher return on sales (7-12% higher)• Better net profits (7-17% better)
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Our Challenge
Commit yourself to performing one ten-minute act of exceptional customer service per day and ask your fellow employees to do the same.
In a 100-person company taking into account normal vacations, holidays etc., that would mean 24,000 new courteous acts per year.
Such is the stuff of revolutions.
Tom Peters
University of Idaho Extension
Final Thoughts
Have fun–it’s not rocket science!
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