Kevin Stirtz

Customer service tip: Don’t insult your customers

comments 1 comments  |  2224 reads

I know this sounds pretty obvious. Why would any of us insult our customers on purpose? But it happens more than we realize.

Here’s a recent example.

I’m ordering a sandwich at my favorite sub shop. As I’m chatting with the sub-maker, the co-owner walks over. She notices that I’ve had the roast beef in my sandwich cooked so it’s brown, not pink (just how I like it). Her face gets a pained look and she says:

“Oh, that hurts”.

Then she went on to explain how she prefers her roast beef rare.

I ignored her. (Hunger is good for that.) But I found myself wondering if she realized she just insulted me.

Probably not.

She was totally focused on what she thought. And, apparently, she thought I would be interested in knowing how my sandwich offended her good taste.

What she forgot is that I was not there to hear how she liked her roast beef cooked. I was there to get a sandwich the way I want it. Her opinion shouldn’t even have entered the conversation unless I asked her what she thinks.

Even then she shouldn’t tell a customer what they just did “pains her”. Might as well tell your customers they have bad taste. Or they’re just plain stupid.

If you disagree with what a customer is doing, keep it to yourself (unless you’re giving them professional or technical advice). Remember, you’re not there to talk about your likes and dislikes. And you’re certainly not there to insult your customer.

Your job is to help your customers accomplish what they want.

Other articles you might like:


Kevin Stirtz

Kevin Stirtz is a web marketing consultant. He uses SEO, social media and local search strategies and tools to help businesses attract and keep more customers. He is a Certified Inbound Marketing Professional and has written two books about marketing and customer loyalty. Kevin lives in the Twin Cities metro area of Minneapolis and St. Paul, MN.
Categories:
4
Average: 4 (1 vote)
 

1 comments »

Daniel Rodriguez

Daniel Rodriguez

Happens a lot

I totally agree with you, unfortunately that happens really often. Probably, the don´t do it on purpose, but we got to understand that every customer is different.

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA

No spam permitted! Moderator reviews ALL content before publication to ensure compliance with the CustomerThink terms of use.

To block automated spam submissions, please answer this question.

Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.

MarketPlace

Drive customer loyalty, empower support teams, and reduce costs. Get social.

[Feb 22] Guest speakers from Forrester Research, Allscripts, and CustomerThink will discuss market trends and research on social customer service strategies, as well as proven tactics from the trenches. Join the live webcast on Feb 22 at 10am Pacific (1pm EST).

Global Customer Experience Management (CEM) Certification Program

[March 13-14, Paris] An internationally recognized program with proven track record of success - being run for 33 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.

10 Steps to a Single Customer View

Linking customer data across department databases and business units improves business intelligence, customer profiling, and customer management. This paper outlines 10 steps to improve the quality of customer contact data, including physical mail, email, and telephone information.

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.

CEM Training and Certification

Patent-pending methodologies combine the art and science of Customer Experience Management.

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