Customer Service Training

customer service skills


Bookmark This Page

• TRAINING PROGRAMS

>> Customer Service Skills

>> Exceptional Customer Service

>> Managing Customer Service

>> Telephone Customer Service

>> IT Customer Service

>> Coaching for Customer Service

•CUSTOMER SERVICE TIPS:

Do 'Captive Customers' Deserve Customer Service Excellence?

When Customer Service Creates Customer Dissatisfaction

Customer Service Course for Service Representatives

Ten Steps to Poor Customer Service

What's Your Special Sauce? Customer Service Classes

Is Live Chat Improving Customer Service Class?

The Heart of Marketing is Customer Service

Customer Service Workshop Lessons From the Recession

The Many Facets of Customer Service Seminars

How Even Small Business Can Benefit From A Customer Support Training Seminar

Customer Service Training is For Managers Too

Good Customer Service Training is Essential For Business Growth

Profitability Through Customer Service Course - Customer Service Vs. Marketing

Customer Service Training Courses for Team Motivation

Using Social Media for Excellent Customer Service Class

The Importance of Customer Service Classes For Small Businesses

Customer Service Workshop - Foundation of Company Success

Become a Qualified Customer Service Representative

Employee Coaching and Customer Service Seminars

The Best Customer Service Training Seminars

Customer Service Skills Training Tips

Good Customer Service Skills Training

Your Strategic Plan and Your Customer Service Courses

Improve Your Speech, Improve Your Customer Service Skills

Customer Service Classes Eliminate Bad Customer Service

10 Steps to World Class Customer Service

Maintaining Customer Service in a Growing Company

Customer Service Workshop Essentials - The Golden Rules

Customer Service - Or Customer Care? Know the Difference!

Why Customer Service Seminars Are NOT Enough

Is Your Customer Service Phone System a Black Hole?

Customer Service Training Tips for a Successful Business

Exceeding Expectations in Customer Service Courses

Considering a Customer Service Course for Your Employees?

Customer Service Class - Important Skills for CSRs

Customer Service Classes - Customer Satisfaction and the Online Business

Signs of the Times - Technology in Customer Service Workshop

A New Take On Customer Service Workshop

Customer Service Seminar for Business Owners - Following Up

Great Customer Service Seminars

Customer Service Training Tip - Change Your Thoughts About Your Customers

The Rise Of Our Discontent With The Fall Of Customer Service Training

Customer Service Courses for Everyone In Your Company

Your Customer Service Course Expectations Need To Be Extraordinary

Customer Service Class Makeover

Customer Service Training Classes for Employees

Nurture Customer Service, And Success Is Yours

Grand Slam Customer Service Workshops

Customer Service Seminar Secrets Revealed!

Customer Service Seminar for CSR Candidates

More Tips

Customer Service Skills Training:

The Customer Service Training Institute has enjoyed over 25 years of successfully specializing in interactive, fun, skill based customer service skills training seminars. At the conclusion of our customer service training course you will know and understand what the ideas are behind the skills and how to use them in business situations to build customer satisfaction and loyalty.

The focus of our Effective Customer Service Skills Training workshops is to train your staff to:

  • Understand what your customers want and how that affects your job
  • Understand your own behavior and how to manage your customer's behavior better
  • Improve your communications skills
  • Learn to handle upset or angry customers
  • Implement proper phone skills
  • Understand and implement proper body language
  • Tell the customer what you can do and not what you can't
  • For more information and pricing on our customer service training seminars, please complete this form

 

Customer Service Training:
At Your Service: Gaining the Competitive Edge with Customer Service Training

More time is spent in stressful work. We have less time for leisure. Standards are changing. Aging baby boomers want to enjoy work; they demand customer service. The ever-growing demand for more customer service focuses us on gaining the edge. Smart entrepreneurs treat customers more than right. And customer service managers need to become "trainers" of customer service.

Top people seem to already have an edge in grasping the "rapport-building customer service" mentality. We discovered long ago that people often don't "buy" on the basis of need, and people don't "sell" based on their breadth of product knowledge. People "buy" people; the buyer buys you. All of us have bought at least one item we don't need, and we bought it out of the "relationship" we developed over a two-to-ten minute period with the salesperson.

Women often more easily grasp the "go-the-extra-step-customer service" approach, as they've had to go many extra steps to achieve quasi-equal footing with men in the workplace. We know how to nurture, and the concept of "taking care" of the customer comes naturally. The "basics" of good customer service training, however, are not gender-based. Managers can coach customer service representatives to answer the phone, channel potential buyers to salespeople, answer questions and handle complaints and calm agitated customers. They must handle huge volumes of calls and be compassionate while being efficient! Most people view this is an impossible task. It's not.

Here are the 5 basic steps of customer service with grace and control:

1. Be clear on your purpose. What do you want the customer to do, think, or feel after your communication with them? Managers are smart to coach people to "write it down!" In the "do" column, you may list: "pay, renew, expand the order, and fill out the form correctly; tell friends to buy; give us repeat business; not call my boss; never again call to complain." In the "think" column may be: "think we're an excellent company; I'm a capable, intelligent, professional person; think our product is worth the investment." In the "feel" column may be: "feel taken care of; feel they're in capable hands; feel satisfied and confident in their decision to buy; feel trust in our company and in me." When people are clear on their purpose and write it down in their own words, their focus improves. It's also the necessary step to provide focus for the next four steps.

2. Be appropriate. Appropriate is one of the best words in the English language. The dictionary definition is "proper, fit, and suited to a given purpose." In I Ching, the Book of Changes, a source of oracular wisdom in Chinese philosophy for three thousand years, a most important concept is Li, which means "conduct". An excerpt: "One's purpose will be achieved if one behaves with decorum. Pleasant manners succeed even with irritable people." To the manager or entrepreneur who is a service person, this means that every word uttered, every action performed must be suited to the purpose they defined in Step #1.Logic prevails as people start examining their behavior. If your purpose is that this customer come back, would you be rude to him to prove your point? Of course not. If your purpose is having the customer thinks your company is professional, would you answer her query as to the whereabouts of a salesperson, "Oh, she's around here somewhere - we never know where she is.” Ridiculous. These comments defeat your purpose. They're not suited to your given purpose, so they're not appropriate. But how do you stop these sentences before they come out of your mouth? This leads us to the next step.

3. Know your "hot buttons" and don't get sucked in. Certain words or phrases used by customers push our buttons. Examples: "What are you gals doing over there anyway?" "It's your fault." "Let me speak to the man who knows something or who owns the company." "You must have lost my payment." "Why is your product so expensive?" Be aware of what your "hot buttons" are. Make a list; read it over; desensitize yourself, so the next time you hear one of them, you do not have to lash back with a defensive remark, or a "yeah, but." Instead, you can...

4. Push the "pause button" to gain control. Our "pause button" separates us from the animals. My cat, Linguini, is a stimulus-response machine. When he hears the sound of the electric can opener, his response is consistent and predictable. He will come running, and howl incessantly until the stimulus is removed - until the sound of the can opener stops. Linguini has no pause button. He can't pause at the kitchen door and before he expends all that energy, check to see if it's my tuna fish or his. He doesn't know the difference. (I do. It's about a buck thirty-three.) Some customers you know act like stimulus-response machines. Their upsets are consistent and predictable. But your reaction doesn't have to be. When you are aware of your hot buttons and one gets pushed, you can pause - very briefly - and choose the appropriate response. One appropriate response -- suited to your given purpose and efficient at the same time -- is described in the final step of customer service.

5. Give the customer 6-second empathy. Using empathy is demonstrating with words that you understand what the customer is saying and how they are feeling. It is a statement that is calming, comforting, positive, and specific. A good one takes only six seconds. "I understand how frustrating it is not to get the information when you want it." 6 seconds. "I understand how easy it is to get impatient with that machine." 6 seconds. "It sounds like you're very upset. I see you need our full cooperation." 6 seconds. A sincerely empathetic statement can defuse a hostile customer. It also gives you time to think of the response you can make which will satisfy your customer (i.e. achieve your purpose) while staying within the boundaries of your company's policy. These five steps have proven effective for thousands of people and will prove effective for you.

Source: Mimi Donaldson link

Related: Customer Service Training


 
  HOME OPEN SEMINARS TRAINING PROGRAMS CUSTOMIZED TRAINING CONTACT US SITE MAP BACK TO TOP


Copyright © 1995-2009, Customer Service Skills Institute, Inc.
All rights are reserved

customer service seminars training programs customized training