220 likes | 337 Views
Maintaining Good Customer Service and Meeting Compliance Retreat/Training Support Staff April 16, 2010. Discussion Topics:. Who are our clients? Roles and responsibilities – faculty and staff Obligations and challenges – faculty and staff How we all contribute Good customer service model
E N D
Maintaining Good Customer Service and Meeting Compliance Retreat/Training Support Staff April 16, 2010
Discussion Topics: • Who are our clients? • Roles and responsibilities – faculty and staff • Obligations and challenges – faculty and staff • How we all contribute • Good customer service model • How to serve better • Compliance • Difficult clients and circumstances • Unusual requests
Identifying people we serve Who are our clients? • Faculty • Administrators • Students
Roles and Responsibilities Faculty • Teach • Advise and Mentor • Research / Publish • Service • Academic (committees, governance, professional organizations, advisory councils) • Community (local schools, local groups and organizations)
Support staff • Assist department heads/directors with management responsibilities • Assist faculty with research or teaching needs • Ensure compliance is met to maintain a “risk” safe environment • Monitor and balance budgets • Alert department heads of potential problems • Purchase materials • Pay for goods and services • HR functions (payroll, hiring and other issues) • Meetings and training to stay up to date with changes • Other duties as assigned…..
Faculty Advising/ mentoring teaching research meetings publishing Collaborating with peers
Problem solving Support staff managing budgets and grants communicating & coordinating Helping others safeguarding meetings
Faculty contributions • Institution’s academic and research prestige • External funding (grants, F&A, scholarships and endowments) • Through research faculty generate greater administrative support (more jobs)
Supporting staff contributions • Problem solving support • Manage day to day operation – keep things moving forward • Support faculty teaching activities • Support managing grants. Good support allows faculty to seek multiple sponsored research grants.
Good customer service model A good model makes the customer feel: • welcomed • we listen to their needs • they are respected and appreciated • their problems will be taken care of
How can we serve best? • Resourceful – knowing where to go, who to call – builds trust • Knowledgeable (policies and procedures) – builds trust • Attentive and understanding to their needs – builds trust • Committed to helping others achieve their goals – builds trust • Keeping internal processes effective but simple • Enjoying solving problems – empowers, sense of fulfillment • Exercising good judgment when making decisions or advising – builds trust • Building a relationship with faculty; get to know them and their projects – builds trust • Listening attentively and asking questions – builds trust • Visible and responsive – builds trust • Reasonable and flexible – builds trust • Providing solutions, not adding to the problem – builds trust
Why compliance? Compliance policies help organizations: • Adhere to laws, rules and regulations to prevent unacceptable or illegal practices, which in turn • Prevent or punish transgressions, which in turn • Ensure a safe risk environment Laws, regulations and guidelines are: • very clear or common sense - embezzling funds, buying flowers from state funds, cost sharing from a federal grant to another federal grant • interpretation/good judgment – supplies used in promoting recruitment from state funds Bottom Line: Ethics and compliance -> less risk -> good reputation -> profitable
Myths and misconceptions: • Being a good person is good enough. • If my boss says something is ok, then it is ok • I am going to approve this purchase because most likely it will not be caught in an audit. • Training is not necessary. I can always find the regs or guidelines on the web. • We have invested time training faculty and staff. It should last a few years.
Balancing compliance responsibilities and faculty needs and demands A true balancing act ! • Committed to help faculty achieve their goals without jeopardizing compliance • Avoid thinking that faculty are trying to get away with something • Avoid holding initiatives and programs from moving forward because we are over analyzing Understand what the person is asking for and the purpose • Ask questions! • Identify a true need versus a “would be nice to have” • Examplesof true need: Essential for classroom instruction delivery Benefits students learning Essential for data collection (may or may not be included in the proposal)
Know your rules and regs • Make a decision within a reasonable amount of time Document everything • Keep back-up documentation and justifications with invoices for future audit trails When in doubt, contact BMCS • Financials – Lili and Scott • Human Resources – Natalie • Contracts and Grants – Stephanie and Josh When having to say “It cannot be done” • Provide a good explanation, preferably with support documentation • Be firm but kind and understanding
Resources: • Rules and regs, policies and procedures, guidelines on the web • Contacts: • Contracts and Grants • Controller’s Office • Budget Office • BMCS Transgressions: • Get the facts correct. Do not assume. • Report to Assistant Dean for Finance immediately.
Dealing with unlike circumstances or unusual requests • Get the facts – understand what is needed and why • Do not assume anything – ask until satisfied • Research the matter – what do the spending guidelines say? • Do not ignore the matter – seek help • If grant related, is it in the proposal’s budget? • Consult with BMCS • When something cannot be done, explain why and do so in a kind way. • If it cannot be done, do not yield to pressure even if the pressure comes from your supervisor. Seek help !
Dealing with difficult clients or circumstances • Listen attentively and respectfully • Acknowledge the situation or problem • No matter what, do not lose your “cool” • Do not take it personally • Provide a solution as soon as possible • Follow up as soon as possible to ensure problem has been resolved • Learn from the experience and implement changes if necessary to avoid repeating
You are not alone! BMCS will help. Josh Agner LiliCollazo Jeff Croteau Stephanie Jackson Natalie Worth Anne Reese