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

[shared/articles.html]

Customer Service Training Classes:

The Customer Service Training Institute has enjoyed over 25 years of successfully specializing in interactive, fun, skill based customer service training classes. At the conclusion of our customer service training class 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 Training classes 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:
Customer Service Class and Customer Service Style

Whatever kind of customer service you offer - whether big or small, expensive or cheap, large-scale or small - do it with style.

Customer Service Style means doing things in your own special way -- with confidence, charisma, and class. Here are 7 ways to put on your own style.

1. Put A Smile On Your Face And You’ll Put A Smile On Theirs. Service with a smile is something of a cliché. But if you want to make people love your service, then do it with a sincere smile. The word "sincere" comes from the Latin "sine cire" meaning without wax, i.e. not false. A sincere smile makes people feel welcome, reassures them and leaves them with a pleasant glow.

2. Create Living Theatre. Management guru Tom Peters says that delivering great service is like putting on a show. And every new day is a golden opportunity to try something new. Think of yourself as a performer, magician, stage-manager, creator of good feelings, daredevil, and bringer of delights. Now who'd want to miss that show?

3. Reinstate Pride In Service. Ray Pahl of Kent University says that many service workers regard serving others as menial, second-class work with a low profile and little rewards. It is not much different from servility. If that’s the way your customer service staff view service, then you need to re-educate them and turn service into a prized profession which they can be proud of.

4. Reverse Bad Practices. One of the reasons why people don’t “customer-care” in some organizations is because the organization hasn’t shown them how. They buy second-class materials, let defects go through, and are sloppy about answering the phone. Put some style back into your service by aiming to be the very best at everything the customer gets.

5. Change Your Assumptions. Old assumptions about customer service staff can stand in the way of delivering customer service style. If you believe that your front-line customer service staff can’t make decisions by themselves, are only interested in their own jobs, and need someone else to tell them what to do, then you need to re-think your assumptions.

6. Get Closer To Your Customers. When organizations focus on the customer’s needs rather than their own, he or she becomes a partner, an ally, a friend. For example, South West Airlines businesses in the USA invite their customers to sit in on their recruitment panels when they take on customer service staff. And in the UK, the customer service staff at cosmetic retailers Body Shop get half a day paid leave a month to go and work on local community projects in the areas where their customers live. That’s getting close to your customers.

7. Keep Working At It. Customer service doesn't happen overnight. You have to work at it and so does your team. It may mean reversing bad attitudes such as "second-best is OK". Or updating management assumptions that say the customer service staff can't take decisions for the customer. (They can!). But in time a class act is yours for the asking.

Work on these 7 habits and you’ll quickly discover that not only will you bring a touch of magic to your customers’ lives, you’ll also add something special to your own.

Source: Eric Garner link

Related: Customer Service Class


 
  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