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•CUSTOMER SERVICE TIPS:

Customer Service Courses Create Customer Service Dynamos

Customer Service Course for Perfect Customer Service Representatives

Customer Service Class and Customer Service Style

The Unbeatable Laws Of Customer Service Class

How To Revolutionize Your Customer Service

Raising the Profile of Customer Service

Four Ways to Motivate Customer Service Professionals

The Perfect Customer Service Seminar - Bigger is Not Always Better

Customers are Us! The Golden Rule of Customer Service Skills Training

Great Customer Service Starts with Great Customer Service Training

How to Get Better with Customer Service Courses

The Principles of Customer Service

The Value of Customer Service Classes - What Could You Do With Half a Million Dollars?

How to Deliver Great Customer Service

Outstanding Customer Service Workshops Revisited

Is Customer Service Fact or Myth?

Customer Service Training Seminars - Deliver Top-Notch Service in Your Small Business

Real-Time Online Multichannel Customer Service Seminar

Effective Communication Skills Training For Customer Service

Measuring Customer Service

Customer Service Tips - 8 Ways to Improve Customer Service

Customer Rants and Raves

The Importance of Consistency in Multichannel Customer Service

Customer Service Class - Turn Around a Service Disaster

Fed Up With The Lack Of Customer Service?

The Most Valuable Customer Service Skills Workshop

Customer Service Is a Philosophy, Not a Department

Customer Service Training Seminars for Achieving Exceptional Customer Service

Customer Service Training - How Leaders Can Learn From It

Customer Service Training Basics Are Timeless

Customer Service Course Tips: How to Teach Your Employees to Deliver Great Service

How Important Are Customer Service Courses?

Customer Service Classes - The Answer to Your Problems

Five Ways to Increase Your Customer Service Class

Customer Service Workshop - Is Customer Service Better Than Sex?

Customer Service Workshop - Improving Customer Service Efficiency

Excellent Customer Service Seminar - Advantage Yours

Business, Customer Service Seminars Are Important

Customer Service Skills Training in the Virtual Age

Internal Customer Service Training - The Secret to External Customer Service

Customer Service Courses - Getting It Right

Customer Service in the Course of Serving Nonprofits

How Small Businesses Can Offer First Class Customer Service

Looking on the Inside - Internal and External Customer Service

Customer Service Training Workshops in a Down Economy

8 'Must-Haves' In a Customer Service Training Workshop

3 R's of Customer Service: Can You Relate?

Using Live Chat for Customer Service

How Sure Are You That You Are Delivering Exceptional Customer Service Training?

Customer Service Training Tip - Excess For Success

Not Your Grandmother's Customer Service Course

You Need a 'Ruler' to Measure Your Customer Service Courses

Keeping It Friendly - Good Customer Service Classes for Businesses of Every Size

5 Ways To Provide Excellent Customer Service Classes

Extraordinary Customer Service Workshop - Where To Begin?

How Technology Can Kill Customer Service

Great Customer Service Seminar - Attitude, Individuality, and Freedom

Legendary Customer Service Seminars

Focus on Soft Skills - The Formula For Excellent Customer Service Training

Reading Customers with Improved Customer Service Skills Training

Pro Secrets from a Customer Service Training Course

Customer Service Courses - Your #1 Marketing Tool

Customer Service Classes - Handling Customer Conflict

Customer Service Class Takes A Back Seat To Uncommon Sense

Customer Service Workshop for Survival In a Bad Economy

Customer Service Workshop for Small Business Owners

Customer Service Seminars - Your One Chance to Make a First Impression

5 Basics of A Great Customer Service Seminar

6 Tips To Help You Provide Good Customer Service Training

Caring for Customers Beyond Customer Service Training

6 Principles of Customer Service Etiquette

Customer Service Course - Give Great Service Every Time

How to Establish An Effective Customer Service Team

Customer Service Class Tips to Handle Complaints and Keep Customers Happy

Unite Sales & Customer Service To Build Customer Loyalty

The Customer Service Survey

Measuring Customer Service Performance

Why Is Common Sense Customer Service Not Common?

Is Customer Service Skills Training A Good Investment?

Customer Service is a Serious Consideration

Customer Service Course Tips That Generate Referrals

The Basics of Good Customer Service Courses

Customer Service Class Guide to Starting an Online Business

Customer Service Classes - The Truth About Lifelong Loyalty

If You Never Do A Customer Service Training Workshop, Do This

Customer Service Workshops Are Key

Customer Service Seminar - Heroic Service Ensures Lifelong Customer Loyalty

Customer Service Seminars - Service in the Recession

More Tips

Customer Service Training Workshops:

The Customer Service Training Institute has enjoyed over 25 years of successfully specializing in interactive, fun, skill based customer service training workshops. At the conclusion of our customer service training workshop 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 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:
Customer Service Workshops - Keeping Up With the Vigilante Consumer

If you increase customer retention just 5% more, your profits will increase 100%.

  • U.S. population growth is projected to be 1.1% in the next twenty years.
  • Disposable income in the US is growing only 2% every year.
  • US businesses w+ill invest more than $1 billion this year on computer technology, just for customer service departments.

The interesting bits of information above basically mean that the numbers of customers are dwindling. This is why customer service is today’s competitive advantage. If we don't have masses of potential customers, we'd better keep the ones we do have happy. (Ecstatic!)

What is a vigilante consumer anyway?

First, is a little historical perspective. Conventional marketing wisdom always urged us to sell either to the classes or the masses. If you're selling $100,000 cars you appeal to the classes, and if you you're selling Hyundai’s, you appeal to the masses. That's simple enough.

But then came retailers like Wal-Mart, who are known for good buys, and whose hallmark is superb customer service. Wal-Mart gave the masses appreciation and recognition. "Now the masses know class," said futurist Faith Popcorn, who also coined the term "vigilante" consumer. The vigilante consumers are not as dangerous as they sound. They just want value, service, convenience, choice and lots of attention.

Don't think of all this as bad news, quite the contrary. This is a great time to be alive and in business. Armed with the facts, drive and an open mind, we can begin planning strategies that will bring us challenge, fun and . . . profit.

Start at the beginning

What is your philosophy, your vision for doing business? "We treat you right." "Solutions not problems." Think it through carefully and, when you've decided, design your business operations and activities to support that vision. Now, state your product or service in one simple, short sentence that everyone will get. For example, one of my favorites is: "We sell stuff with your name on it." That's the statement of Jonathan Stone's specialty advertising firm Another Dancing Bear Production.

People do business with people they know because they've heard about them from a friend, read about them in a magazine. So your job is to make yourself known to prospective customers. I follow advice given to me by a multimillionaire client from my hair salon days. Manny Lozano said, "I don't care if you can't squeeze another customer or hair stylist in the salon, you still keep promoting. Because you have to keep convincing your customers that yours is still the salon to which to come." In other words the real sales come after the sale. I have followed his advice all these years and became an unabashed, relentless self promoter of my business.

All I ever wanted for my business was an unfair advantage. I'm not talking about lying or cheating. Exactly the opposite. An unfair advantage is doing every tiny little thing better than your competition. In this instance, your competition can be your best teacher.

Who knows what your customers want?

In a shuttle bus taking me to the airport after a speaking engagement, I began schmoozing with the driver as I am always looking for material. Knowing his service was not affiliated with any of the resorts, I asked if the guests he drove told him about their experience at the hotel. "Yes," he said, "in fact, the general manager of the property where you were staying brings a big box of donuts and has coffee with our drivers once a month. We not only tell him everything we hear about his property, we tell him everything we hear about his competitors." Think of all the businesses that have spent a fortune on management consulting firms to find out what this resourceful general manager gets for a box of donuts and an hour's conversation every month.

Think about whom in your business knows what your customers want. Is there a service that provides you and your competitors something that might just provide you with an effective, economical market sample?

Don't overlook opportunities close to home

In your role as an unrelenting self-promoter, start off in your own backyard. How many people in your office building know you and what your business is all about? Introduce yourself to people in the hall, in the elevator of your building. Let everyone in the immediate vicinity of your office know who you are and what product or service you offer.

During my hair salon days, a friend, whose hair salon in Oakland was not thriving, said, "I have clients who drive from Fresno for one of my haircuts." I was forced to tell him the truth. "Rod, will you get a life. People who drive 18 miles for a haircut feed your ego. What feeds your family is people who walk out of their offices, their homes, their apartments and walk or drive five minutes to you." Do not overlook the opportunities close to home. Tell them about your superb product or service and how you do things differently than your competitors and you're right there five minutes from their doorsteps.

What can you do to make your vigilante consumers feel special and appreciated?

We know now, great customer service is no longer good enough. We have to exceed the vigilante consumers' expectations. One individual knew this way before the rest of us caught on. I met Gary Richter at a banking conference several years ago. He runs a small boutique bank in Naples, Florida. He told me about a situation at his bank that speaks volumes about his bank's position on customer service. At 5:20 one Friday afternoon, the bank received a call from an elderly woman who needed to cash a $200 check. The bank closed at 5:30 and she was 20 minutes away. Many of us would say, "Of course, please come over, we'll stay open for you." But Gary's bank believes in giving exceptional service so they told the woman that one of their employees would bring her $200 on his way home and that he would pick up her endorsed check.

As it turned out the woman had her extensive financial holdings at a large national bank, and after her positive experience with Gary's bank, she moved all her assets and investments to his bank.

Today, Gary's bank continues to focus on superior customer service. "I tell my employees, if we roll out the red carpet for a billionaire, they won't even notice. If we role it out for millionaires, they expect it. If we roll out the red carpet for thousands, they appreciate it. And if we roll out the red carpet for hundreds, they tell everybody they know." And you can take that to the bank. In six years since the bank opened, it has grown from 16 employees to 180; and they've grown from $6 million to $330 million.

Build relationships with your customers

There are really only two types of customers: those who know and love you, and those who never heard of you. All businesses spend relative fortunes trying to get new customers and that will always remain important. But don't spend the entire fortune on just attracting new customers. Spend some of those dollars keeping in touch with existing customers because you want to keep them.

One of the goals in growing your business should be that the same person you sold to today will still be spending money with you ten years from now. So don't celebrate the close of a sale. Celebrate the beginning of a long relationship. People want to do business with people who appreciate them and look out for them. This brings me to yet another salient point.

Seek strategic alliances

Strategic alliances are a relatively new term for something I learned long ago in business and that's what I call "professional friends." I developed friends in my business community who were looking for the same type clientele as I, but who offered noncompetitive products and services. Alan White, a professional friend, owned The Wright Shop that sold custom made suits and good shoes. I realized that if his customers could afford to buy custom made suits, they wouldn't be scared off by a $30 haircut. So, I had gift certificates printed up that read: "To further enhance your appearance, The Wright Shop would like to present you with a gift certificate for a free haircut at Miss Fripp's." I paid for the printing of the certificates. It was a great plan. Alan looked like a hero to his clients. He was happy. They were happy, not only for the free haircut, but for the quality of hairstyling "Miss Fripp's" stylists offered. And I was happy to be beginning relationships with these new customers.

These are a few suggestions to help you in building your business into a prospering dynamo. I know they work, because I continue to use these customer service tips and techniques myself with great success. You can gather even more customer service tips and techniques, by going to customer service conferences, customer service seminars, listening to competitors, customers, neighbors and friends. We can learn from everyone. Even if you think a technique won't work for you, twist and turn it, see if you can put an adaptation of it to work for you.

As we slip into the 21st Century, we will no doubt create new buzz words for the sales and marketing game. No matter what new terms and phrases we develop, bottom line, we need to keep attracting new customers, cultivating and deepening relationships with our existing customers and treat them all with the kind of appreciation, consideration and integrity with which we want to be treated.

Source: Patricia Fripp link

Related: Customer Service Workshops


 
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