Thursday, July 30, 2009

Alpha to Omega Customer Service

"Thanks very much. I filled out a survey but it didn't [give] me the best opportunity to describe in it how great the customer service has been, so please know that I really appreciate how quickly and easily the return has been handled and how that gives me a very favorable opinion of your company, which I had never heard of before, so now I will definitely visit your site when I am next looking for furniture." -R.U., Hoboken NJ

Thanks for the kind words, R. We consider it a privilege to be of service to you and your verbal "pat on the back" is greatly appreciated. We strive very hard to be the standard of customer service by which other companies are compared and your comments are a great encouragement for our continued success. We are delighted to hear your experience with us from purchase to conclusion met and even exceeded your expectations. Thank you again for your consideration (past, present and future!) of Smart Furniture. If there is anything else we may be able to do for you, please let us know.

Kindest Regards,
The Smart Furniture Team

Friday, July 24, 2009

ABC's of Customer Service

If you want your staff to remember the essentials of customer care, there’s no better way to teach them than with the ABC of Customer Service..

A is for Attention to Detail. Because when customers know you care passionately about the little things, they’ll know you care a great deal more about the big things.
B is for Benefits which is all your customer wants you to tell them.
C is for Complaints, your free marketing service.
D is for Dedicated staff, because when the team is fully engaged, customer loyalty goes up by two-thirds.
E is for Empowerment which means trusting and training your staff to do whatever it takes to thrill the customer.
F is for Feelings. As the Scottish Life advert says: “Make each customer feel like you’ve held the door open whilst laying your jacket across a puddle and then rescued their kitten from a tree.”
G is for Going Out Of Your Way, just like the engineer who took a 50-mile detour on his way home from work just to deliver a phone to a customer who had been waiting all day for it.
H is for Hi-Tech, Hi-Touch, because when things get complicated, that’s when people want the personal touch.
I is for Ichiban, the Japanese word for “wanting to be the best”.
J is for the customer Journey, which you must know every inch of.
K is for Kaizen, another Japanese word which means “continuous improvement”.
L is for Loyalty, which you buy by engaging their minds and piercing their hearts.
M is for Moments of Truth, those hundreds of opportunities every day to turn their heads.
N is for Now For Something Extra, that ends every customer interaction on a high.
O
is for Observing your customers’ needs before they know them themselves.
P is for the Pride that staff feel when they know they’re in a valued profession.
Q
is for Quality: of product, of service, of manners, of courteousness.
R is for the golden Rule: the customer is always right, even when they’re wrong.
S
is for Sincere Smiles, that aren’t false but melt the coldest hearts.
T is for Tact, the one thing your customers will notice but you must pretend not to.
U
is for Under promise and Over deliver, the simplest way to make someone’s day.
V
is for adding Value because there’s nothing so precious as your time, your care and your attention.
W
is for the Wow Factor, when you stop them in their tracks.
X is for eXtraordinary service that is out of this world.
Y is for Your Mum Was Right, because it’s all about respect.
Z is for a good night’s Zzzzz’s after a great day’s work.

Practice these attitudes and skills, and you’ll love your job and your customers will love you.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

How to Have Fun During the Work Day

1. Leave the copy machine set to 99 copies, reduce 200%, extra dark, 17 inch paper.
2. Specify that your drive-thru order is "to go".
3. Reply to everything someone says with "That's what YOU think."
4. Practice making fax and modem noises.
5. Highlight irrelevant information in scientific papers and copy them to your boss.
6. Finish all your sentences with the words "in accordance with prophecy."
7. Disassemble your pen and "accidentally" flip the ink cartridge across the room.
8. Staple papers in the middle of the page.
9. Try playing the William Tell Overture by tapping the bottom of your chin. When nearly done, announce, "No, wait, I messed it up," and repeat.
10. While making presentations, occasionally bob your head like a parakeet.
11. Ask your co-workers mysterious questions and then scribble their answers in a notebook and mutter something about "psychological profiles."

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Happy Customers from Beginning to End

"May I say that from placing my original order to arranging for the return, it has been a pleasure working with Smart Furniture. I will definitely recommend your company to my friends."

-J.H., NY, NY