Positive customer experiences bring customer satisfaction
Companies need to find the customer point of view through words and phrases. Sales and service personnel want to sound positive, helpful, appreciative, respectful, inviting, and informed. We don’t want to get too technical, but we do want to improve the customer experience and say what customers want to hear.
A customer experience isn’t necessarily customer satisfaction, but our word choice can make profound impacts. Instead of “We’re out of that product now,” the innovative and positive response would be, “I can order that product for you today.” Instead of asking a teenager who walks into a hardware store, ” What do you need kid,” a respectful sales representative should ask a customer regardless of a nose ring or a purple streak in his hair, ” How can I help you?”
In the case of an angry customer who a perceptive customer service representative recognizes, a calming phrase such as, ” I do understand the inconvenience you have faced, and I am pleased to assist you. I want to help.” goes a long way to open up the lines of communication. At this time, you will want to listen closely, agree there is a problem, and work on a resolution most beneficial to the customer. A calm demeanor and the respectful responses can diffuse a volatile exchange and the loss of a customer. I have even noticed when I am working on the phone with customer service representatives that the ones who say, ” Do you mind holding two or three minutes while I access your records so I can serve you better?” maintain my interest and patience since they are essentially asking for my permission to place me on hold instead of the “please hold” operator who has taken it to be her right to be rude.
And as far as “words” and “phrases” that reflect a company’s culture, who can dispute the particular lingo necessary to order a drink at Starbucks? If you know the terms, it decreases waiting time for you and others behind you. It’s almost a language all to itself, but the smiling employees, their productivity, and their enthusiasm has built a connection, loyalty and sense of belonging. Even their drinking cup size names are unique to Starbucks; short, tall, grande, and venti. The combinations are almost endless what you can order from a hot brewed coffee to espresso shots, and to even steamed at lower temperatures. It’s about the words; it’s about the culture, and it’s about people relating to people in the best possible ways to keep us loyal.
photo credit: Stuart Conner
Possibly Related Posts:
- Exceptional Customer Service Starts at the Top – Are You Setting a Positive Standard? We’ve all heard the saying “it starts at the top.”...
- Bring customer service call centers back to the US If you have ever called customer service for almost any...
- How to show customers you appreciate their business The company owner sets the rules, and employees need to...
- Customer satisfaction surveys I used to dabble in some online survey groups to...
- Publix on top of American Customer Satisfaction Index In the lead since 1994, Publix scores the highest marks...
0 comments »
Post new comment
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
|
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.

0 comments | 1181 reads 




