Jeanne Bliss

Answers for Call Centers – How to “Earn the Rave” of Your Customers and Employees (Part 2)

comments 0 comments  |  1174 reads

I recently joined Mitchel Forney, the Marketing Coordinator at Voiance Language Services, on a webinar to discuss the 5 Decisions that will help you fully understand the customer perspective, thus enabling your company to deliver excellent customer service, increase customer advocacy and loyalty, and improve profitability.

Here are the questions from webinar listeners and my answers:

Mitchel: Here’s the next one: my company wants to use social media, but we are concerned with the possibility of random people writing unkind things. We could always delete poster comments like that, but could we still have a spirit of “belief” if we did that?

Jeanne: Wow, that is an important question. Glad you asked. You should consider the negative comments a gift. It does two things: 1. Shows your customers you are not afraid to say your feet are made of clay, that you make mistakes. It shows you are transparent. 2. The thing that works in social media and word of mouth – it needs to be a conversation – if it feels or smacks in any way like ‘these are a bunch of great comments we filtered through and put up on our website so you can see how great we are’ – customers will call you-know-what on that immediately. By putting up the negative ones, it gives you the opportunity to address those things and use them to fix operations. You should be regularly looking through comments and feedbacks as an engine to drive improvement in your operations.

Those negative comments are a gift. Doing that is even as important for employees as it is internally. You need those cultural boost action items.

Mitchel: Here’s an interesting one: sometimes it seems more profitable for my position and my company to give less to the customer in order to create shareholder value. Any deviation from that is frowned upon, partially because money is really tight. Any advice?

Jeanne: What drives shareholder value? Customers buying things and staying, becoming more profitable, not having to get new customers. Employees staying, not having to get new employees. What we lose sight of is that shareholder value is directly tied to growing the asset of customer base. We need to know our customers base and invest in them to grow the profitability, the loyalty and prosperity of the customer base. Companies need to work a little more with shareholders and the financial community to help connect the dots between the two. Instead of a series of financial line items, talk about the experience and show the connection between decisions and the creation of a deeper and robust customer relationship.

Mitchel: How can I express some of these ideas to upper management? I think this would really help my company.

Jeanne: Well of course, selfishly, have them read my book. First of all, in the best scenarios, upper management gets it already. If you can’t get them immediately engaged, there are probably some leaders, maybe regional managers, that are zealots about it. Get them involved. And start doing the customer math. Retention rates give us a false positive. 78% seems OK, but it means you lost “x” number of customers. So do the math: number of customers brought in during the month, volume and value, and how many you lost, volume and value. By creating power and passion behind those real numbers, you can create pain about the money going out the door. And that can start the conversation. It never fails. Try it.

Mitchel: I think my company would have to say “I’m sorry” a LOT to follow your advice. Could that really be helpful?

Jeanne: So here’s the thing. If you say I’m sorry without the engine for solving the problem, it’s not a good thing. Go out and identify the things you need to improve on, solve those problems to reduce the number of apologies, rather than getting better at apologizing. There’s a difference between saying sorry for not fixing things you know about and saying sorry when unexpected things happen. If you’re saying sorry a lot for things you’re not fixing, then that’s just not caring about your business as much as you should, if I may speak bluntly.

Mitchel: We already have pretty high customer satisfaction, but we don’t seem to have the same kind of effects in the market like some of your examples. How can we get a culture change if we’re already “pretty good”?

Jeanne: What does satisfaction mean to you? Is it translating into the growth of the customer base? Do the customer math. There’s not always a direct correlation between customer satisfaction and customer loyalty and growth. One thing that you can do which is very powerful is to call 100 lost customers, and have them tell you what the issues are. It should start to tell you the story about why you’re not earning people’s raves.

Click here to listen to the webinar: 5 Decisions That Will Help You Become
a Beloved and Prosperous Company
.

 

Share with Delicious Share with Digg Share with Facebook Share with LinkedIn Share with MySpace Share with reddit Share with StumbleUpon Share with Twitter


Republished with author's permission from original post by Jeanne Bliss.

Jeanne Bliss

Jeanne Bliss, author of Chief Customer Officer: Getting Past Lip Service to Passionate Action, has spent 25 years reporting to CEOs and leading the customer experience for Lands' End, Coldwell Banker, Allstate, Mazda and Microsoft. Go to her company, CustomerBLISS, to get a Reality Check Audit.
4
Average: 4 (1 vote)
 

0 comments »

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

MarketPlace

Global Customer Experience Management (CEM) Certification Program

[May 30-31, Frankfurt; July 25-26, Hong Kong] An internationally recognized program with proven track record of success - being run for 34 times in 13 cities with attendees from 50 countries, the program is developed based on the U.S. patent-pending Branded CEM Method which aims to drive customer loyalty and brand differentiation with quantifiable business results. Limited offer: USD300 early bird discount.

Register today for Confirmit’s Mobile Research Roadshow!

Join us on May 29th in New York City. Stuart Ryder, SVP, Mobile Research Lead for Ipsos IOTX & Roxana Strohmenger, a leading Forrester analyst, will be in attendance to share best practices and new trends in mobile market research.

Register today for Confirmit’s San Francisco VoC Roadshow!

[June 12, Sir Francis Drake Hotel] Gregson Siu, Vice President, Ariba Business Operations, Ariba and Bob Thompson, CustomerThink, will be in attendance to share best practices, new trends and latest research to help you develop your customer experience program.

Social Networking and sCRM International Congress in Colombia

[June 25-26, Bogota] Thirteen international thought leaders will present, from different perspectives, the trends, the uses, and the magic - as well as the reality - of Social Networking and how it impacts the way customers are doing/will do business.

Driving ROI With VoC

Walker has identified multiple ways to measure ROI – there is not a one-size-fits-all solution. This paper will address each and conclude with some recommendations to help B-to-B practitioners evaluate which ROI approach will work best for their particular business need.

Featured Links

Salesforce CRM

The leader in customer relationship management and cloud computing.

Strategic Roadmap for Digital Marketing

Free e-book (no reg required). 15 articles by digital marketing thought leaders.

Get your event or resource listed in the MarketPlace, reaching 200,000 business leaders monthly.
For more information, contact CustomerThink advertising sales.