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customer who complains and criticises you for the bad service you deliver. You
ought to be grateful that he is giving you the opportunity to correct yourself
and make amends in some tangible way.”- Kissmetrics
I love barbecue popularly known as Suya. Especially if its well spiced and garnished. There are two Suya spots in my neighbourhood, both at an acceptable hygienic standard. I should be one of their most frequent customers if not the best customer. You know who I am talking about. I’m the one who never complains, never shouts, never performs or causes a scene when I am unhappy with their service. I don’t ask for jara (bonus) even when I feel am cheated, I just keep mute and walk away.
I don’t even say anything when someone who came
in after me is served before me. I am patient and polite and I am prepared to
wait even longer for their attention.
The same attitude is
what I display when I come into your store or business premises, I don’t act
the arrogant, belligerent, or sarcastic customer who tries to draw attention to
himself because I consider myself more important than anyone else present and
expect you to jump to my ever wish and whim. In fact I am very polite when you
get upset because I want to look at more than one product before making up my
mind.
I am not like so many
other customers who wouldn’t hesitate to get nasty with you if they are kept
waiting or don’t get the answers to their enquiry. NO, my dear friend, I am
your nicest customer you will ever meet, in fact, I’ll tell you what else I am!!
I am the CUSTOMER WHO WILL NEVER COME
BACK!!!
You see, I have a
different style of behavior. This behavior is also far more deadly than
screaming and shouting to vent my anger. A customer who never comes back will make
you lose your profits, respect, good name, as well as potential business from
other customers who he/she speak to regularly.
I start to amuse
myself when I see the vast sums of money being spent by companies to entice customers
or attract new ones to come into their store, when they could have saved their
company that expense by providing good customer service.
Consider the customer
who complains and criticizes you for the bad service you meet out. You ought to
be grateful that he is giving you the opportunity to correct yourself and make
amends in some tangible way.
For
service organization like mine, always remember: The customer, who knows he
gets good service, becomes very forgiving when mistakes are made. Just as Jeff
Haden puts it in his article 8 Guaranteed Ways to Drive Customers Away – “Your
most profitable customers are almost always long-term customers.” Don’t lose
them by making any of the following mistakes:

Since
relationships are the lifeblood of a small business, don't rotate salespeople,
customer service reps, or key contacts unless you have to. Do everything
possible to protect and foster the relationships your employees forge.
Employees are rarely interchangeable where strong business relationships with
customers are concerned.
2.
Treat
new and existing customers too differently. Offering discounts or
incentives to land new customers is often necessary, but existing customers can
quickly resent the fact their loyalty is not rewarded.
Think
hard about the carrots you offer new customers and make sure you “reward”
existing customers just as much-;if not more. Never forget that while new
customers create an immediate top-line impact, sales to existing customers
typically result in a bigger impact on your bottom line.
3.
Focus
too heavily on price. Being
the low-cost provider is a definite competitive advantage. Good luck
maintaining that advantage.
Somewhere,
someone is planning to steal your customers through lower prices. Your goal is to
provide the best value. Value is an advantage you can maintain through a
combination of price, schedule, service, and relationships. If your marketing
focuses mostly on price you'll train customers to constantly look for a lower
price, both from you and your competition. Spend at least as much time finding
ways to increase value as you do finding ways to lower costs and prices.
4.
Push too hard to grow same-customer revenue. Trying to sell more to
existing customers is smart, but don't do so blindly. First know what each
customer needs and only then try to meet those needs. Never suggest a product
or service a customer doesn't need. And never ask, “Is there anything else we
could do for you?” unless you already know the answer and are ready to provide
a great solution. Otherwise you're just pushing, and customers hate being
pushed.
5.
Accept
high employee turnover. While
high turnover is a fact of life in a few industries, in most cases employees
leave because they aren't treated well. So do customers. Unless systems truly
drive your business, you can’t expect to have long-term customers unless you
first have long-term employees. If turnover is high, find ways to fix it.
Otherwise customer turnover will always be high, too.
6.
Forget
what keeps the lights on. Every
business has principal products or services that form the foundation of the
business. Every business also has key customers that form a foundation. Over
time key products and services-;and key customers-;can get taken for granted
while newer, sexier, higher profile initiatives get all the focus. Make a list
of the customers you can't afford to lose. Then list what those customers buy.
That list is the foundation of your business. Never forget what keeps your
lights on.
7.
Reward
the wrong employee behaviors. This
happens most often in sales, like when commission rates are much higher for new
customers than existing customers. If that's the case and I'm a salesman, why
should I work to maintain existing accounts when I get paid a lot more to find
new ones? That approach only works if your systems ensure someone else takes
over the responsibility for forging great relationships with existing
customers. Think about the incentives you provide and goals you set for your
employees, and make sure they encourage the outcomes you really want.
8.
Make
problem resolution painful. Policies
and guidelines are great for ensuring that employees comply, but a customer
with a problem doesn't care about your policies. She just wants her problem
fixed. Let employees use complaint-resolution policies as guidelines rather
than rules. Give employees the freedom to make judgement calls. Resolving a customer problem or complaint can help your business establish an even stronger
customer relationship when you give employees the freedom to make that happen.
Wish
you good luck in your business!!!
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