Tips to Provide Best-in-Class Customer Service
I had to call the customer-service department the other day at my wireless-service company, and listened to a series of prompts and sub-prompts. As I was doing so, I thought to myself that I wouldn't be in a phone maze if if I called my bank, because they always have someone pick up the phone. They have no prompts on their phones. Think about that though. These two companies aren't in the same industry and yet I am comparing the experience I have at one with the other.
Chances are your clients are doing the same thing. They're comparing your service delivery to the service they get from industries you wouldn't even consider to be your competition. When is the last time you walked into a store and compared the employees you met to those you met at Disney? Or compared the website of one company to the website to another in a different industry? Compared banking services between firms who aren't considered competitors? Your service may be adequate if you're only comparing your service delivery to your competition, but what if you were to expand the scope to best-in-class service providers, just as your clients are? How would you measure up then?
If you want to turn your clients into advocates, it is necessary to provide best-in-class service for the touch points that are important to your clients. This is true because even if your customers don't leave, they also may not tell others they should work with you either. Why would they, if the service you provide compared to best-in-class service providers falls short?
* List all of your customer-touch points. Include in your list things such as your phones, website, statements, office, store or restaurant. Detail the experience you currently provide.
* Detail the best-in-class service experience for each touch point listed above. This won't necessarily be the experience provided by your competition, but the best-in-class experience provided by anyone in any industry.
* Compare the experience you provide to the best-in-class service provider. That will identify your true gap.
* Prioritize and close the important gaps based upon what is important to your clients and the cost and difficulty to implement the change. Even if you don't close the gaps immediately, it is important to understand where you stand all the same.
In order to truly be considered best-in-class, expand the scope of who you compare your service experience. Chances are, your clients are already doing so.
4 comments »
Dan - business advice
Customer Service is becoming rare
I can relate to your story about customer service from your wireless phone company. I have had a similar experience with mine. As a business owner, it amazes me the level of poor customer service that is practiced today. Two things in particular are very rare in business today, 1) good customer service 2) dependability.
I can't imaging my company surviving without delivering on both.
Francis Buttle
It's basic benchmarking...
Susan
What you're advocating is the practice of lateral benchmarking, which I heartliy endorse. Benchmarking typically takes one of 3 forms - intra-company (e.g. one bank branch learning from another), intra-industry (e.g. one bank learning from another) or trans-industry, a.k.a. lateral benchmarking (e.g. your bank learning from your telco). Customers often compare service performances between industries, so it makes sense to learn from best practices in other sectors, and, as you say, if that can be done at the level of the unique touch-point then so much the better.
Francis Buttle, PhD
The Customer Champion
www.buttleassociates.com
Guest
How does one get designated Best in Class
I am curious to see how a company becomes designated best in class?
Post new comment
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.
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
|
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.

4 comments | 4867 reads 


