Customer Service Skills
Telephone Customer Service
IT Customer Service
Coaching For Customer Service
Managing Customer Service
Exceptional Customer Service

Customer Service Consulting   
 
 
 
 

Customer Service Tips

Customer Service Training Programs:

Our customer service training workshop teaches by doing with less than 15% lecture and 85% hands on activities. Participants learn by Doing and not by being told. Exercises are practical, realistic, fun and are skill based.

To maximize your customer service teams effectiveness we suggest our custom, private customer service training courses offered in house at the location of your choice, usually in groups of 6 or more.

Contact us for a free consultation on how we can best service your training needs.

Program Objectives:

In our Exceptional Customer Service one-day training workshop participants will:

  • Understand how to handle inquiries and/or complaints in ways that create improved, lasting relationships with your customers or clients.
  • Learn to promote positive "chemistry" between your company and your clients by recognizing and responding to the needs of each individual.
  • Learn how to handle doubt, misunderstandings, and objections.
  • Acquire techniques for seeing issues from clients' perspectives, creating value-adding options for clients, and making sure clients recognize the added value they are getting.
  • Learn how to gain agreement from clients and reinforce mutually satisfying long-term relationships.

Customer Service Training:
Customer Service Skills: What is Customer Service?

What the heck is Customer Service and why is it so hard to define?

When asked to define Customer Service most people get a puzzled, glazed look about them. You can't define it, they'll say. Or when pushed, they'll mutter something about being treated like you want to be treated or it's when you're made to feel at home.

Uh huh. Somehow those are not very satisfying definitions.

Does Customer Service defy definition because it is so warm and fuzzy that it must be experienced rather than quantified? Asked another way, is Customer Service purely subjective and exists only in the eyes of the beholder or is it objective and exist independently of the person?

Whatever it is, most people will say they know it when they see it or experience it. Customer service, whether good or bad, exists whenever there is customer contact or a "moment of truth."

We know it when we go into a department store and get ignored.

We feel it when we go to a restaurant and the staff's priority is with each other and not their customers.

We sense it when we go into a governmental office to ask a question and there is numbness in answers.

But all those are examples of what customer service is NOT, not what it IS.

First, look at the two words: Customer and Service. When the two come together there are two possible outcomes:

  • they can form a collision that will leave the customer frustrated and angry or
  • it can be a comfortable joining together of two friends that leave the customer satisfied and pleased.

The company is either in synch or out of synch with their customer.

Let me offer one definition:

Customer Service is any contact, whether active or passive, between a customer and a company that causes a negative or positive perception by a customer.

The perception will be influenced to be either positive or negative by the customer's expectations of the contact having been met, exceeded or disappointed.

Unfortunately Customer Service is so rare nowadays that it could be a tremendous competitive advantage for any company willing to understand and develop the tools necessary to unleash it. It is amazing that it is utilized so little when the effects are so remarkable.

A second, more service oriented definition of Customer Service is that it must be rampant throughout the organization, starting at the top, rewarded and recognized, admired and emulated and must be sustained by being ingrained into the fabric of the company.

That definition reads like a mission statement. When you think about it, maybe it should.

Source: Dr. John T. Self: link

Article Content: Customer Service Skills

More customer service training tips...


Contact us for a free consultation on how we can best service your training needs.

HOME     CONTACT US     PRIVATE CUSTOMER SERVICE TRAINING
Copyright © 2002-2012 Baker Communications Inc. All rights reserved.
Phone: 1-713-627-7700 • Fax: 1-713-587-2051
Service@CustomerServiceTrainingCenter.com