Caring about your customers — and showing it through service — gives you a high return on the time, effort and money you invest. Loyal customers are well worth nurturing. They buy more, more regularly. And the cost of selling to them is almost nil, whereas finding new customers is an expensive business.
Beginners Guide to TikTok for Search - Rachel Pearson - We are Tilt __ Bright...
Customer care
1. Start-Up Briefing
Customer
care
Caring about your customers — and • Return your emails and calls. If you say you
showing it through service — gives you a will send a quote by Friday, keep to that
high return on the time, effort and money deadline.
you invest. Loyal customers are well worth
nurturing. They buy more, more regularly. You are legally required to provide customers
And the cost of selling to them is almost with certain information, including details of
nil, whereas finding new customers is an their cancellation rights and financial details of
expensive business. any credit agreement they sign up to.
Satisfied customers will recommend you to Additionally, businesses who do not sell
others. Dissatisfied customers will complain to customers face-to-face must provide
to an average of ten other customers and customers with certain details about pricing,
potential customers, multiplying the damage to payment and cancellation arrangements and
your reputation. This briefing explains: details about the identity and location of the
business under distance-selling rules.
• How to communicate with customers.
• How to deliver consistent service. 1.2 Concentrate your efforts on the needs of
• How to handle complaints. the customer — not on what it would suit
• How to involve your whole team in you to sell.
customer care.
1.3 Use your person-to-person skills,
especially when meeting face to face.
1 Customer contact
• Greet your customers as if you are pleased
Every communication with the customer is a to see them. Learn their names, and use
chance to impress or to disappoint. them.
• Be polite, friendly and positive.
As a start-up business, you will need to make Smile, make eye contact and look and
the most of these opportunities. sound enthusiastic. Speak clearly.
• Use physical contact. Shake hands when
1.1 Respond to emails promptly and appropriate.
answer the phone swiftly. Make sure your • Show a personal interest. There is almost
out-of-office email and phone messages always time to discuss non-business
are up to date, provide alternative contact matters. Be a good listener.
details or make it clear when you will • Make sure your appearance — and the
respond. look of your premises — will convey the
right image.
• Provide information immediately, or let
customers know when they can expect it. Keeping your promises is most important of all.
• Stick to what you have promised. Promise only what you know you can achieve.
England Reviewed 01/06/11
2. Start-Up Briefing 2
2 Care where it shows 3 Good care needs systems
Be flexible. Make it obvious to your customers Do all you can behind the scenes to save your
that your operation is run to suit them, and not customers time, money and aggravation.
to suit your own convenience.
3.1 Choose reliable suppliers who will not hold
2.1 Provide the most convenient service. up your own production and deliveries.
• Organise delivery schedules that take 3.2 Make use of technology.
account of the customer’s needs.
• Offer the longest and most convenient • Direct telephone numbers and individual
hours of opening you can afford. email accounts will allow customers to
make direct contact with the person they
2.2 Set low minimum order levels, especially need.
for regular customers. • A good database system can help you
record, organise and plan your contact with
2.3 Minimise the amount of paperwork your customers.
customers have to do. • Contact management software may
be useful if you have a large number of
2.4 If things go wrong, inform customers accounts.
as soon as possible, in order to keep • Stock control records can help you
disruption to a minimum. maintain adequate stock levels meaning
that customers will not be left disappointed
• If a delivery is likely to be delayed, give as by out-of-stock messages.
much notice as possible. • Use your website to provide customers
with information on products and services.
2.5 Sell your customers only the products that You can also use it to allow customers
suit their needs, not the products that will to place and track orders. Make sure
make you the most profit in the short term. information from your website can be
tranferred to your main database.
• Give unbiased, realistic advice even if it
means no immediate sale for you. Nothing 3.3 Check your production procedures.
builds trust more effectively.
• Remove any bottlenecks that could cause
unnecessary delays.
3.4 Set up a production process that ensures
Systematic quotes no defects, rather than relying on
inspection of the finished product.
A builder who is asked to quote on several
pieces of work needs to decide how to 3.5 Establish systems and cross-checks
prioritise the process of producing quotes. to ensure that every order is correctly
executed (the right amount of product to
• Quotes to existing customers are top the right address on the right date).
priority — they are most likely to buy.
• All households should receive a quote 3.6 Set up a simple returns procedure for any
within a week of the builder’s visit — rejected goods.
whereas competitors often reply two
weeks later.
• The big contracts need specially 4 Follow up the sale
prepared proposals in bound documents
— to show the builder is serious about What you do after making a sale can help you
winning the business. turn a new customer into a loyal repeat buyer.
• Mrs Atkinson, who owns several Don’t take your eye off the ball at this stage.
properties in the area, will get a longer
letter, sooner — she might need more 4.1 Offering excellent after-sales service is
work done in future. often an inexpensive way of setting your
• Mr Owens — who thinks about an business apart from the competition.
extension every year, and always wants
an immediate quote — gets the last • Explain what level of service is provided —
quote of all. and any cost — at the time of the sale.
• Following the sale, send a courtesy email or
3. Start-Up Briefing 3
call to check that everything is all right. • Use advertising as part of the process of
• Ask customers to complete a customer keeping the contact going.
satisfaction survey on your website. Keep it It can help reassure customers about your
short and specific. business and its products.
• Encourage customers to contact you if they • Give customers the names and contact
have any concerns. details for their account manager and other
You can address any issues before they key contacts. Key customers can be given
escalate into a full blown complaint. out-of-hours contact numbers in case of
• Send customers information on related emergencies, where appropriate.
items that might help them prolong or • Contact customers that have lapsed.
get more value out of items they have
purchased.
5 Value those complaints
4.2 Consider how you will stay in touch.
Unless you listen out for complaints and
• Make full use of your customer database. grumbles, you may be genuinely unaware of
For example, send regular email updates or what you need to improve.
newsletters about new products or special
offers that might be of interest. Only one in ten of all dissatisfied customers
• Visit or call your customers — or invite ever bothers to complain directly.
them to your premises — to discuss their
changing needs and new ways in which 5.1 Encourage complaints and deal with them
you can help them. effectively. Ask customers to complete a
It may be helpful for your customers’ short questionnaire after making an online
technical or accounts staff to meet their purchase or have a dedicated feedback
opposite numbers in your business. mechanism on your site.
• Show sympathy — apologise for the fact
What the customer wants that the customer is upset (‘I’m sorry to
hear that you are disappointed’).
A classic customer care success story • Listen to what the customer has to say.
from the 1980s was the turnaround of the • Establish the facts.
Swedish airline, SAS. • Agree what you will do.
• Give your name, so customers know who
Following a disastrous year when SAS made is taking responsibility for the problem.
a loss of $8 million, the company promoted • Keep the customer informed and deal with
a young marketing executive, Jan Carlzon, the problem promptly and politely.
to the position of president. Just 18 months
later, the airline achieved a gross profit of Most complainers just want to make a point.
$71 million.
5.2 If you just listen, and sympathise, you are
While competitors had concentrated on well on the way to turning the complainer
cutting costs in an effort to reduce their into a committed customer.
losses, Carlzon had focused on customer
care. • If you do not listen — or are defensive —
the complaint will escalate. The customer
He started by identifying the airline’s most will not buy from you again and may also
important customers — business flyers. try to put other people off.
He then asked them what would make
them want to fly with SAS, rather than a 5.3 Give your frontline employees the authority
competitor. The answer was loud and clear. to deal quickly with complaints themselves.
They wanted punctual flights.
• Well-handled complaints are a great way of
Carlzon put a monitor on his desk, showing creating loyal customers.
the take-off and landing of every SAS flight,
around the world. He personally phoned
pilots to find the reasons for any delays. 6 Check what’s going on
Suddenly, SAS flights became extremely
punctual and new customers started Choose the customer-care strategies that are
queuing up. appropriate to your situation. Then establish
systems to make it happen, and monitor your
actual performance.