accomplishedmonkey.com accomplishedmonkey.com
Search:    Site Home :> About Us :> Privacy :> Terms of Service :> Add Your Link :> Submit Article   
Get Multiple Links
 

Shopping & Auction

News & Events

Art & Culture

Sports

Policies & Law

Healthcare & Treatment

Children

People & Communities

Research & Science

Business & Companies

Health & Therapy

Drink & Food

Employment & Careers

Property & Estate

Home Family & Garden

Computers & Software

Online & Board Games

Automotive

Academics & Education

Travel & Accommodation

Banking & Finance

Recreation

Fashion & Lifestyle

Self Enhancement

 

  Site Home » Business & Companies » Customer Care
   
 

Don't Promise Too Much

   

I've recently bought a computer system, taken my family to a theme park and flown on an airline that were all rated tops in their fields for service. They had won awards and were widely cited as leading examples of service quality in action.

I ended up being disappointed. Not that the service was bad - compared with others in their industries, they were clearly better. But I had expected much more.

For example, the computer sales representative had touted his company's No. 1 service ranking in a highly recognized survey. That was the key reason I bought the system. Yet my calls for installation, trouble-shooting and integration with other hardware and software weren't the hassle-free encounters I had expected.

The service people turned out to be fallible human beings who had some trouble answering the phone. They were better than most of the others I'd dealt with in the computer industry. But in an industry that pays scant attention to customer support, that's not saying much.

This is important to understanding what causes poor customer service. It is not always a question of performance; it can be about expectations, as well.

To attract new customers, many organizations promise great service, display their service or quality awards, or show survey data that put them at the top of their industry. But those higher expectations raise the bar. It becomes difficult to meet them, let alone exceed them.

Here are some ways to keep customer expectations within reach:

Be very careful with promises you make or imply in your advertising, brochures, marketing and public relations activities.

Make sure your salespeople, dispatchers, receptionists, order desk staff, designers, or anyone in your organization who has contact with customers are promising less than your organization can deliver.

Continually research and test your customers' expectations and the factors that most influence them.

Make it a personal and, ultimately, an organizational habit to promise a little and deliver a lot.

Train your sales force to go after only those market niches where expectations match your delivery capabilities. It should become corporate strategy that all sales dollars are not equal. Some customers come with expectations that you can't meet or that will prove very expensive.

Don't try to negotiate your customers' expectations downward. You will lose this opportunity to improve yourself; you also risk losing the customer to someone who can meet its expectations.

Low service-performing organizations set themselves up for failure by raising expectations to attract new customers. They over-promise and under-deliver. High-performing organizations know that one secret of success is to under-promise and overdeliver. That is how they build reputations for service and keep customers coming back.

Author: Jim Clemmer
 
Author Bio:

Jim Clemmer

Jim Clemmer is a bestselling author and internationally acclaimed keynote speaker, workshop/retreat leader, and management team developer on leadership, change, customer focus, culture, teams, and personal growth. During the last 25 years he has delivered over two thousand customized keynote presentations, workshops, and retreats. Jim holds the prestigious Certified Speaking Professional (CSP) designation, the highest earned designation in Professional Speaking. Jim's five international bestselling books include The VIP Strategy: Leadership Skills for Exceptional Performance, Firing on All Cylinders: The Service/Quality System for High-Powered Corporate Performance, Pathways to Performance: A Guide to Transforming Yourself, Your Team and Your Organization, Growing the Distance: Timeless Principles for Personal, Career, and Family Success, and The Leader's Digest: Timeless Principles for Team and Organization Success. Jim co-founded Canada's largest consulting and training firm, The Achieve Group, which was sold to Zenger Miller and is now part of AchieveGlobal. He and is listed in half a dozen Canadian, American, and international Who's Who directories.

This article can be searched using: customer service tips, good customer service, customer self service, customer support systems
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Build Your Marketing Muscles
 
Training for Triathlons and Prospecting is the Same
 
Offshore IT - Enabled Services from Pakistan
 
3 Reasons to Join a Group
 
Egypt Marches as Next Offshore Outsourcing Hot-Spot
 
Microsoft Smites the PowerPoint Princess
 
Medical Billing Workflow Management
 
Barking Up the Wrong Tree Can Eliminate Large Sales
 
Getting Your Prospects' Attention: Create A Character!
 
Get the Most Out of Your Current Customer
 
 
 
 
 

How Can We Make People Productive?

Every person on your crew has a desire that is the key to getting him to performa at peak levels, ac ... - Dr. Gary S. Goodman
 

The Fastest Growing Company in the World Part 2 What is the S-WORD?

The Fastest Growing Company in the World Part 2 What is the S-WORD? In our last article we noted tha ... - Daryl Des Marais
 

Labor Unions Upset With Outsourcing; Anger Management Time?

There is much economic debate about the corporations in the United States outsourcing and there are ... - Lance Winslow
 
 

Thinking About Working Online? Here's What To Expect...

If you are thinking about working online, in whatever area you decide to go, whether it be affiliate ... - Perdita Reyes
 

Bounced Checks in Your Business Location Outlets

Are bounced checks driving you nuts? Ever wonder why? - Lance Winslow
 
 
   Site Home :> Privacy :> Terms of Service
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.accomplishedmonkey.com - All Rights Reserved.