To ensure customer service becomes a driving force in your organization, you also should develop a plan. Here are 8 steps to help you get started.
All too often, service is not a priority for management. Instead of focusing on people—on their customers—they focus on numbers. What they don’t realize is that, if they simply pay attention to their customers’ needs and then fill those needs, the numbers will follow.
In order to increase sales and profits, organizations must provide the type of service that will gain—and retain—customers. That doesn’t mean advertising that “the customer is king,” or that “the customer is always right.”
Those are mere words. Customers will decide for themselves what kind of service you really provide.
You must act, not profess. You must make customer service a priority. You must do whatever it takes to provide your customers with what they need and want and to do so quickly, enthusiastically, and accurately.
To ensure that service becomes a driving force in your organization, you also should develop a plan, much as you would for any other goal, personal or professional, in your life.
Before you develop a Customer Service Plan and put it in writing, take these steps:
1. Understand What Your Business Is
Regardless of what you are selling—whether it’s life insurance, automobiles, or printing—you are in the customer service business. You must build everything you do around the customer experience.
2. Identify the Elements of Superior Customer Service
Eliminate the obstacles that prevent you from providing superior service. How can you make it easy for people to do business with you? Are your hours convenient? Are your employees well trained? Is someone in the organization available 24 hours a day, seven days a week to answer customers’ questions and to help solve their problems?
3. Identify Your Customers’ Needs and Wants
If you don’t know who it is you are trying to satisfy and what their needs are, it will be difficult, if not impossible, to meet them. Gather information you need to set goals that will include average revenue per customer and the market share you want to achieve.
4. Compare Your Organization
How you operate to role models outside your industry? Look at the best of the best and model your behavior after those businesses. What do they do that you aren’t doing?
5. Put your Money Where Your Mouth Is
Create a service guarantee that gives customers peace of mind. Northeast Delta Dental did just that by guaranteeing that it will provide its customers with certain services within certain time frames. For example, if it does not send a member identity card within 15 calendar days after the enrollment form is completed, it will pay that member $50.
6. Track Your Progress
Use mystery shoppers and surveys to evaluate how you are doing and to assess the impact of your focus on customer service. Look at your sales and market share before you implemented the plan and compare it with where you are every six months afterwards.
7. Drive the Program
Provide continuous training that will instill in all employees an enthusiasm for—and commitment to—customer service. Reinforce the focus on service by rewarding high-performing employees and enforcing and reinforcing service standards.
8. Make a Commitment
Creating a customer service culture takes time. If you aren’t committed, you will fail. Dell built its business on customer service but, after Michael Dell stepped down, the stock dropped 25 percent, because his successor was not committed to providing the customer with the best experience possible.
When organizations know what is important to their customers, and when they realize the shortcomings of their current service, they are ready to write a Service Plan. Planning, drafting, and implementing that plan requires management commitment, a long-term strategy, and continual effort to improve service. It will take some work, but the rewards will be well worth the effort.
About the Author
John Tschohl, internationally recognized service strategist, is founder and president of the Service Quality Institute in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Described by USA Today, Time, and Entrepreneur as a “customer service guru,” he has written several books on customer service.