How to Be a Customer-Focused Company
It pays to please customers, because they will choose you over competitors even if they have to pay more to obtain your products or services. The following statistics show that companies can charge more for excellent service:
1. Most customers will spend at least 10 percent more for the same product with
better service.
2. When a customer receives bad service, he or she tells at least 20 people.
3. When a customer receives good service, he or she tells up to 10 people.
4. If customers’ complaints are handled quickly and pleasantly, at least 80
percent of customers will repurchase from that company.
5. If the service is bad, at least 90 percent of customers will not return.
6. If your employees provider take the time to establish a relationship and create a
rapport with the customer, almost all transactions were completed faster and
more efficiently.
You must close the gap between service and customer expectations. This creates a tremendous opportunity for your company to do better than your competitors and gain market share. You can only close the gap if you understand your customers’ needs. That means you must communicate with your customers. These are some characteristics of a customer-focused company:
1. Reward staff when they achieve customer satisfaction.
2. Managers support staff in doing their jobs well, and the staff focuses on
customer satisfaction.
3. Employees are promoted and rewarded for good customer service skills.
4. Emplyees are trained to provide outstanding customer service.
5. All employees know their customers and greet them by name.
6. Employee feedback is regularly sought and considered on key customer issues
before decisions are made.
7. Regular tracking of customer satisfaction is part of the business.
8. Customer satisfaction results are brought to every employee’s attention at each
level, from senior management to production workers.
9. Every department considers the results and has input on how to improve
the results.
10. Departments with the highest customer service scores are acknowledged and
rewarded.
Never underestimate the importance of ongoing, regular follow-up. You must constantly seek feedback from your customers, employees, and anyone who comes in contact with your customers. If management doesn’t continually seek feedback, then it risks the “gap.” Management must know without any doubt that their perception and the customers’ perception of good service are the same.
news via
Fast Company - co-design
in
Design
news via
Fast Company - co-design
in
Design
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