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:

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:
Restoring Customer Satisfaction After Failure - Customer Service Workshops

A customer service failure, simply defined, is customer service performance that fails to meet an individual's expectations. Typically, when a service failure occurs, a customer will expect to be compensated for the inconvenience in the form of any combination of refunds, credits, discounts or apologies.

The success of such customer service recovery efforts is determined by the individual's expectations and perceptions of the organization. Two key elements impact any effort to restore customer satisfaction: the strength of customer relationships and the severity of service failure.

Service failure: Service performance that fails to meet expectations

The strength of the customer relationship with the organization prior to a customer service failure has a buffering effect in the event of failure. Research suggests that customers who expect the relationship to continue actually have lower service recovery expectations, and in turn, are more satisfied with customer service performance after recovery.

While this may seem counterintuitive at first glance, consider the expectations of customers with a stronger relationship with the organization. A customer who does not have much commitment to the organization tends to be more transaction-focused and expects immediate service recovery when a particular transaction fails to meet expectations.

Conversely, a customer with strong commitment may demand less immediate compensations with the expectation that strong future interactions may correct the customer service failure over time. Such findings suggest that service providers not only have measures in place to identify the strength of customer relationships but also the ability to react to customer service failures.

The severity of the customer service failure moderates the relationship between customer satisfaction and commitment. Even with strong service recovery, research indicates that customers may still be upset, engage in negative word-of-mouth, and be less likely to develop trust with and commitment to the organization, if the original customer service failure was really bad.

In these cases, managers may need to do more to mend the strength of customer relationships and restore commitment. To identify such cases, service organizations need to track and identify occurrences of customer service failure as well as the severity of each.

The data available at the point of any customer service failure, most notably the information provided by the customer at the time of the complaint, should be viewed as critical marketing research data necessary not only for immediate service recovery but for improvement of future performance.

Remember, a customer service failure is defined as a failure to meet customer expectations and the success of any recovery effort is measured by each individual customer against his/her own expectations. Therefore, managers would be well served to conduct a post-recovery assessment of customer expectations and perceptions of recovery performance against those expectations.

Classic customer service failure: serving cold

The impact of service failure recovery on customer satisfaction can be easily illustrated with a familiar example. Consider the case of a restaurant patron complaining about his meal being served cold. In all likelihood, this is not a severe customer service failure if managed properly.

If the customer's server fails to offer a sufficient apology and brings back a reheated meal after a 20-minute wait, a first-time customer may be immediately deterred and never return. If this is a long-time customer who has always received excellent service, he may or may not write this failure off, but either way will expect this sub-par service to be countered with excellent service in the future.

While you may expect the customer with a long history of having received excellent service to be more demanding in the case of such a failure, in reality the new customer has the higher expectations. His perceptions of the restaurant are impacted by only this one experience where customer service performance failed to meet his expectations. Without a formal apology from a supervisor, a refund, and perhaps a future credit, this new customer may allow this experience to so alter his expectations of customer service performance at this restaurant as to prevent him from returning.

The long-time customer has his expectations set by a long history of excellent dining experiences and may be easier to satisfy in the immediate wake of a customer service failure.

In either case, the restaurant manager must immediately begin to turn his focus on ensuring future service delivery levels and enhancing the strength of customer relationships with each of these patrons.

Source: Brian Backer link

Related: Customer Service Workshops


 
  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