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A
FEATURED ARTICLE FROM
JULY 2002 |
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Customer
Indifference: Positively Regardless of your position or job title, in any organization your number one task will always be to attract and satisfy customers. In other words, customer service is job one! And everyone has customers. GOOD NEWS AND BAD NEWS With regard to customer service, there is good news and bad news. First the bad news: The average American company will lose between 10 percent and 30 percent of its customers this year - mainly because of poor customer service. When customers have a choice, they will go to your competitor almost one third of the time. Customer service is like an election being held every day and the customers voting with their feet. If dissatisfied, they walk (sometimes run) to your competitor. Now the good news: Organizations that initiate effective customer service
programs have seen profits jump 25 percent to 100 percent. They also THE FRONTLINE DIFFERENCE The customer-service game is ultimately won or lost on the
frontlines where customers come in contact with your employees. In your
customer's eyes, these employees are the company. Employees who come into
regular contact with your customers must see themselves as the heroes
that they really are. ZONE OF INDIFFERENCE Why do customers make the decisions they make? Customers
are rational people. If their buying experience is positive, they will
probably come back; if negative, they will try to avoid returning. Satisfied and not satisfied, therefore, do not represent
the entire spectrum of customer experience, merely the two extremes. In
between these two extremes is what most customers experience - indifference.
This zone of indifference can be home to as much as 80 percent of your
customer base. CUSTOMER EXPECTATIONS The frustrating thing about customer expectations is that they are all
perceptual. They exist solely in the mind of the individual customer.
Sometimes they're accurate and rational, sometimes they aren't. The challenge, then, is to create positively motivated customers by exceeding their expectations. OVER-PROMISE VS. UNDER-DELIVER Some companies seem to have fallen into the trap of promising the customer the best possible product or service (over-promising), and then delivering only an adequate experience (under-delivering). This will almost never result in customer satisfaction simply because, based on the over-promise, the customer's perceived expectations are too high. The trick is to make realistic, positive promises about your service or product. This helps to set your customer's perceived expectations at a rational and attainable level. When you exceed those rational and attainable expectations, you achieve what most companies talk about endlessly yet rarely, if ever, succeed at on a regular basis - customer satisfaction. Scott Holmes is a partner in Connecticut Car Care, a Milford, CT-based firm whose operations include car washes, detail centers, and fast lube facilities. Scott was program chairman in 1999 for the Fast Lube Division of the ICA Convention. Kit Sullivan has worked with large and small independent fast-lube operators developing strategies for business growth while implementing continuous training programs to sustain their future success. Scott and Kit work together as consultants specializing in the car wash and fast-lube arena. They can be reached at (203) 232-1258.
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