You don’t need a million dollar marketing budget or even a large staff to deliver great customer service.
Whether yours is an organisation of 1000 employees or just one, you can deliver the kind of "knock your socks off" service that will boost customer loyalty and grow your business.
Here are 21 easy ways you can deliver great customer service:
- Smile
Did you know that smiling takes fewer muscles than frowning? It is a universal sign of friendliness and transmits your desire to begin new relationships that can last a lifetime.
- Learn and use the names of your customers
Take pride in knowing and correctly pronouncing your customers' names. It's a sign of respect and shows that you know your customers and value them as individuals.
- Use magic words and phrases
In addition to hearing their names, customers love to hear words and phrases like, "Yes, we'd be glad to", "Consider it done", "We're sorry", and "Let us fix it for you".
- Say thank you
This is perhaps the second most important phrase after "We're sorry". Thank customers for their patronage and referrals, and for taking the time and having the courage to complain. This is doing you a favour - now you know what to fix and why other customers may have left.
- Look professional
Show respect for your customers by dressing the part. While attire varies by job and industry, looking professional will help you act more professional and be seen as such by others.
- Ask questions
The skilled professional - whether in sales or service, management or on the front line - asks questions to better understand customer needs, desires and fears.
- Listen actively
Listen with your ears, eyes, mind and heart. Use body language to convey comprehension, agreement or consternation. Give great eye contact and avoid distractions, and let your customers know they've been heard.
- Master phone etiquette
Learn to answer your phone with confidence, poise, sincerity and a caring attitude. Ask customers for permission before putting them on hold, and thank them for their patience.
- Keep in touch
Building lasting relationships with customers means staying in touch throughout the year. Vary the mechanisms: phone calls, hand-written notes, e-mails, newsletters, etc.
- Create a system
For tracking and remembering key customer details to help you serve them better. Don't tax your memory - write it down.
- Cross-train your employees
The better your employees understand other roles and functions in your organisation, the stronger your organisation becomes. Teamwork and efficiency will improve and the negative impact of unexpected sick leave and vacations will be minimised.
- Be a customer for a day
A great way to think like your customers is to become a customer of your own products or services. When you live their experience, you can review your own policies, procedures and protocols and improve them for your customers' convenience and benefit.
- Give something away
Often you can generate new customers through freebies, so identify something of value you can give to prospects.
- Demonstrate a touch of class
Seize the etiquette edge through the classy way you value and treat your customers. When you treat customers like royalty, they will respond with loyalty. Find elegant ways to show your appreciation for your customers.
- Empower your employees to make it right
Teach employees to use common sense in correcting mistakes and fixing problems customers bring to their attention, without involving you or their manager. Solving problems quickly makes customers happy, and it ultimately saves your company money.
- Replace negative language with positive
Focus on the positive in resolving customer problems. Emphasise what you can do instead of telling customers what you can't or won't do, or what is unavailable to them.
- Think about the lifetime value of each customer
A well cared for customer can be a customer for life, potentially buying thousands (or even millions) of dollars worth of products and services from you. Focus as much (if not more) on keeping existing customers as you do on attracting new ones.
- Value Kaizen, the Japanese concept of continuous improvement
Be attentive to improving all aspects of your business. This will help you stand out from your competitors and prosper over the long term.
- Ask your customers what else and what more you can do for them
It's that simple: Ask customers how you can serve them better. Many times your customers will offer insights into ways you can improve, expand and grow with them. But you have to ask, listen and act upon this information.
- Honour the diversity of your customers
Learn about their culture, religion and values. Show respect and appreciation for their needs, preferences and desires. Don't assume "one size fits all", because there is great variance by nationality, religion and generations. Become a student of all these variables and more.
- Give customers "lagniappe"
A little something extra. Apply the Cajun concept of lagniappe to give customers more than they expected ... a treat, bonus or unexpected surprise.