Customer
Management Service Training:
More Tips for Internal Customer Service
Every
business is concerned about expanding markets and attracting
new customers, because these are sources of new income. If
they were only as zealous and focused on retaining the
customers they already had, then they might be talking about
really serious profit potential. Remember, for every
customer you win, there are dozens of competitors who are
trying to take customers from you, too. If you aren’t
committed to providing outstanding customer service, don’t
expect to keep your new customers very long. Our dynamic
Customer Management Service Training classes will guide you
step-by-step through a process that will produce excellence
in customer service. Your customers will notice, and so will
your bottom line.
Satisfied employees mean satisfied customers, so here are 3
more ways to keep your employees happy.
Customer service is
a major focus of many successful companies. And many of
those companies have determined that making employees happy
leads to legendary customer service. In apparent defiance of
accepted wisdom, some customer-focused companies even place
employees in the top spot on their organizational charts.
Leaders in those companies share the philosophy of former
UPS CEO Kent Nelson, who said, "Employee satisfaction equals
customer satisfaction at UPS."
So how
do you achieve employee satisfaction? Just as customer
service leads to customer satisfaction, internal customer
service leads to employee satisfaction. Internal customer
service is the service we provide fellow employees and other
departments within our own organizations, as well as our
suppliers and anyone else with whom we work to get our jobs
done. It is what we do when a colleague asks us to provide
him with information he needs to analyze a product or
service; it is what we say when someone from marketing asks
us to represent the company at an event; it is how we greet
the vice president of sales when she walks into our office
with an "I need something from you" expression on her face.
KMA
Inc. recently had the pleasure of moderating a Breakfast
Roundtable on internal customer service at the Metro Atlanta
Chamber of Commerce with co-facilitators Patricia Wheeler of
The Levin Group and Jeff Frakes, Ph.D., of Performance
Innovations Inc. Roundtable participants--businesspeople
from throughout the metro area--used force field analysis to
determine the top three "driving forces" that work to
facilitate internal customer service, and the top three
"restraining forces" that work against internal customer
service.
We
draw our tips this month from the number-one restraining
force determined by the roundtable participants: building
territorial walls within your company. As you strive to
weaken the forces that work against internal customer
service--in this case the building of territorial walls--you
will enable internal customer service, and employee
satisfaction, to grow.
Here
are three tips for achieving legendary internal customer
service by weakening the tendency to build territorial
walls:
1. Create forums to share information. Do this as much as
your position in your organization permits. The more
employees know about the goals of the company as a whole,
and how each department contributes to accomplishing those
goals, the less likely they are to feel a need to "protect"
themselves and their jobs by building walls around their
"turf." One way a football quarterback enables his team to
execute successful plays is by making sure every player
understands what his teammates are doing in the play.
Members of a football team do not advance the ball by
keeping their plans secret from one another. Colleagues in a
company do not advance their plans by withholding
information or assistance from one another. You might think
that marketing and accounts receivable can execute flawless
plays independent of one another, but they can't. Accounts
receivable depends on marketing to help create a market for
the company's product or service, and marketing depends on
accounts receivable to collect the money that will pay
marketing and fund their budget.
Forums for sharing information can be as grand as a
company-wide assembly or as modest as a chat in the hall. A
shared lunch between two departments would qualify, as would
e-mails and memos outlining what a particular department is
doing and why.
2.
Practice proactive information-sharing. Don't wait for
colleagues to ask for information they need to do their
jobs. Offer it to them. Offer it before they need it. In
fact, offer it before they know they need it. Think of ways
that your information/statistics/data can help others in
your organization, and tell them. If part of your job
description already involves preparing information for
others, do it as though you are delivering a product to a
customer. Most will appreciate your interest and openness,
recognize your keen insight, and eventually repay you by
knocking down their own walls.
3.
Create, or contribute to, an environment in which status is
accorded to those who share freely and don't build walls.
Most people who build territorial walls do it to protect
their turf from encroachment by others in the company. They
fear that if others have what they have--including
information--those others will make them obsolete. Make that
fear groundless by rewarding employees and colleagues who do
not protect their turf, but instead work to fulfill the
goals of the company. Reward behaviors--via compliments,
pats on the back, commendations at meetings, lunch, bonuses,
letters of congratulation, etc.--that lead to open
information-sharing. Make it clear that territorial behavior
sabotages the efforts of the company, while treating
colleagues like valued customers contributes to the
company's success.
By
Scott Miller
Austin

Customer
Service Skills - Provide Legendary Customer Service
Customer Management Service Training Quote
The basic building block of good communications is the
feeling that every human being is unique and of value.
Unknown author
Suggested Reading
Customer
Service Over the Phone: Techniques and Technology for
Handling Customers Over the Phone
by Stephen Coscia
The Big
Book of Customer Service Training Games
by Peggy Carlaw, Vasudha K. Deming
Customer
Service for Dummies
by Karen Leland
Complete
Idiot's Guide to Great Customer Service (Complete Idiot's
Guide to)
by Ron Karr
180 Ways
To Walk The Customer Service Talk
by Eric Harvey
BE OUR
GUEST : Perfecting the art of customer service
by Disney Institute
Managing
Customer Value : Creating Quality and Service That Customers
Can See
by Bradley Gale
Phlebotomy: A Customer-Service Approach, 2e
by Bonnie Karen Davis
Hug Your
Customers : The Proven Way to Personalize Sales and Achieve
Astounding Results
by Jack Mitchell
Secret
Service: Hidden Systems That Deliver Unforgettable Customer
Service
by John R. DiJulius III