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Setting the scene. Do libraries and information providers have customers'?What is customer service'?Do you know what the service expectations of your customers are?How can you measure how satisfied your customers are with the service you provided?. Do library and information providers have
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1. Are you satisfying the service needs and expectations of your customers? A customer service workshop by Neil Paterson
2. Setting the scene Do libraries and information providers have customers?
What is customer service?
Do you know what the service expectations of your customers are?
How can you measure how satisfied your customers are with the service you provided?
3. Do library and information providers have customers? Users?
Clients?
Students?
Readers?
Visitors?
Guests?
Customers?
4. Banish the words user or borrower. If you want to be serious about customer care, talk customers.
(McArthur and Nicholson, 2005, p. 2)
Librarians often prefer the terms patron or user, perhaps to avoid the implications of a [service] exchange occurring between the library and the people using the service.
(Hernon and Altman, 1998, p. 3)
Do library and information providers have customers?
5.
We are all in a service industry
We engage in service encounters with our customers
But what is a service encounter? So, down to the basics
.
6. A service encounter An interaction you have with your customers
face to face / in person
by e-mail
over the telephone
anything that involves an exchange of information, advice, ideas, physical resources, etc
7. The customer decides
.. During a service encounter the customer will form a judgement on the service provided based on their personal:
expectations
perceptions
desires
feelings
needs
wants
values
8.
satisfaction guaranteed? A definition of quality customer service from the college sector:
giving customers what they want in a manner that suits them and ensuring what you give them is what they want.
(Tom MacMaster, Lauder College)
Service is basic to the customers satisfaction or delight with the library (Hernon and Altman, 1998, p. 15)
9. Getting it wrong, getting it right? There are three general levels of customer service:
Poor: failure to meet customers expectations
Acceptable: customers expectations are met but not exceeded
Excellent: customers expectations exceeded
10. The link between expectations and satisfaction This activity is based on the Channel 4 TV quiz, Countdown
11. Customer Countdown - results
How did you do?
Lets examine the expectations first
12.
And now lets look at how satisfied you are
How do you feel right now?
Customer Countdown - outcomes
13. So where can you go from here?
So how can you measure your customer service?
And what exactly can you measure?
14. How can you measure customer service?
15. The ten attributes of customer service quality
Conceptual model proposed by Parasuraman, Zeithaml and Berry in 1985
10 attributes of service quality
There are other models that can be utilised
16. Customer service:the 10 attributes The 4 management attributes
Security:
safety of the environment and the customers
Tangibles:
products, resources
Access:
ease of access to service, opening hours
Reliability:
does equipment work properly, robust operational procedures
17. Customer service:the 10 attributes The 6 soft attributes
Courtesy:
politeness and respect for others
Communication:
staff have appropriate interpersonal skills
Competence:
staff have been trained to an appropriate level
18. Customer service:the 10 attributes Responsiveness:
willingness to help, go the extra mile
Credibility:
customer-centric: customer first, will you keep your promises?
Understanding the customer:
talk and listen to your customers, are you giving them the service they require?
20. The Elmwood way forward 2007/08 Courtesy
more please and thank you
Access
rovering/roving during first few weeks of term
Responsiveness
returning to customers a few minutes later after they had asked a question and asking how did you get on with that?
21. What happens next
?
Discuss in groups what you will take from this workshop
What will you now do differently?
And remember, a complaint is a gift
.
22. References & Bibliography Berry, L. L. and Parasuraman, A. (1991) Marketing services : competing through quality. New York: Free Press.
Guptas, D. K. and Jambhekar, A. (2002) Which way do we want to serve our customers? Information Outlook, July. pp. 26-32.
Hernon, P. and Altman, E. (1998) Assessing service quality: satisfying the expectations of library customers. Chicago: American Library Association.
MacArthur, M. and Nicholson, K. (2005) The customer care challenge. Public Library Journal. Summer. pp. 2-4.
MacMaster, T. (2006) Interviewed by Neil Paterson.
Parasuraman, A., Zeithaml, V. A. and Berry, L. L. (1985) A conceptual model of service quality and its implications for future research. Journal of Marketing, Autumn. pp. 41-50.