340 likes | 479 Views
C O R P O R A T I O N. Customer Service and the Financial Professional. MPS CPE Day. September 13, 2013. Ice Breaker Opener. The Value of a Penny. The Financial Impact of Customer Service.
E N D
C O R P O R A T I O N Customer Service and the Financial Professional MPS CPE Day September 13, 2013
Ice Breaker Opener The Value of a Penny
The Financial Impact of Customer Service • Nearly six in ten (58%) consumers will spend more with companies they believe provide excellent service. – American Express Global Service Barometer • Price is not the main reason for customer churn, it is actually due to the overall poor quality of customer service. – Accenture Global Customer Satisfaction Report • Poor service increases operating costs due to additional contacts the customer has with the organization. These include additional labor time (time is more expensive with each move up the ladder) and sometimes compensating the customer.
Important Facts About Customer Service • Percentage of unhappy customers that don’t complain – 1st Financial Training Services • Percentage of those unhappy customers who will leave and never come back – 1st Financial Training Services • Percentage of the buying experience based on how the customer feels they are being treated – McKinsey • Percentage of customers who would pay extra to guarantee better service – Defaqto Research Source: Return on Behavior Magazine – Home for marketing and customer service professionals
What is good customer service? • Anticipate and Exceed Customer Needs • Make Every Impression Count • Communication and Teamwork
Anticipate and Exceed Customer Needs Know your customers and their needs • Know your customers • When we remember them, they’ll remember us • Know their needs • Talk with customers • Question them about their needs • Listen to what they say
Anticipate and Exceed Customer Needs What are your customers’ needs? (could be internal or external customers)
Anticipate and Exceed Customer Needs • VIP = _______ ________ ________
Anticipate and Exceed Customer Needs Meet versus exceed their needs • Meeting customer basic needs • Customers have a choice • What does “exceed” mean? • How can you do it better?
Anticipate and Exceed Customer Needs How can you exceed your customers’ needs?
Anticipate and Exceed Customer Needs Customers have a choice-are they choosing you? • Personal touch – know customer / VIP • Consistent quality – meet and exceed expectations
Harvard Business ReviewSeptember 2013The Truth About Customer Experience Make Every Impression Count How Many Touch Points Does It Take To Hook Up New Customer Utility?
Make Every Impression Count The touch point is any contact or interaction with the customer: in person, via phone, email, service call, sales call, survey, feedback mechanism, product or service delivery, complaint, resolution, etc.
Make Every Impression Count • Customers form their own opinions and customers’ perception is everything • You have the power to influence customers • Make the most of every opportunity because every customer encounter leaves an impression
Make Every Impression Count Be Courteous and Friendly What does courtesy look like? • Smile • Make them feel welcome • Answer their questions • Pleasant voice • Giving them your attention
Make Every Impression Count Have a positive “can-do” attitude • Willing to help customer • Develop alternatives • Be realistic
Make Every Impression Count Be Approachable – aware of body language • Perceived Communication • Verbal (words) • Vocal (voice tone) • Visual (body language) What kind of message are you sending?
Make Every Impression Count People return because of people (not just a product) • Be courteous • Be friendly • Have a “can-do” attitude • Be approachable
Communication and Teamwork To the customer, everyone is the company • Working together • Communicating well • Delivering best image for organization
Communication and Teamwork What does Team mean? • T = • E = • A = • M =
Communication and Teamwork Characteristics of good teamwork
Communication and Teamwork Good team communication • Improves efficiency • Increases productivity • Prevents miscommunication
Communication With Team Players To the customer, everyone is the company • Work as a TEAM • Understand each job • Good communication delivers results
Good Customer Service • Anticipate and Exceed Customer Needs • Make Every Impression Count • Communication and Teamwork What are the consequences of not providing good customer service?
Why Companies Lose Customers Return on Behavior Magazine – Home for marketing and customer service professional
Why Companies Lose Customers • A dissatisfied customer will tell between 9-15 people about their experience. Around 13% of dissatisfied customers tell more than 20 people. – White House Office of Consumer Affairs • It takes 12 positive experiences to make up for one unresolved negative experience. – “Understanding Customers” by Ruby Newell-Legner • Happy customers who get their issue resolved tell about 4-6 people about their experience. – White House Office of Consumer Affairs • If you fix it fast, 96% will stick with you. – Becky Saunders, former Nordstrom Exec and author of Fabled Service Return on Behavior Magazine Home for marketing and customer service professional
Ways to Handle Problems How do you handle customer complaints?
Ways to Handle Problems • Develop and outline the “Official Policy” on how various types of problems are handled. • Publish these policies in a way that it is quick and easy for everyone to access these policies. • Develop and implement training that outlines the process for following these policies. • Reward people for following the policies, write up when they don’t. Make sure the policies show people how to fix it, fix it fast, fix it right, and follow up.
Ways to Handle Problems Companies lose customers when employees don’t care • Unhappy customers tell others • Always be professional and customer focused • Fix problems quickly • Set up policies to guide the team
Culture of Outstanding Service • Hire people with service focus • Train so every team member knows what good service is, how to deliver it, and their authority to deliver it • Allow room for people to make mistakes • Eliminate barriers to complaints and comments • Measure and track complaints “If you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it.”
Culture of Outstanding Service Everyone is responsible for service: accounting, finance, warehouse, sales, delivery, customer service, marketing, receptionist, CEO