Tuesday, August 11, 2009

The expectations of customers


To be able to offer superior customer service, we have to be able to define the monster. Once we understand what customer service is, we are in a far better position to spoil, pamper, delight and satisfy our customers here at Rivoni skills.
Customer service is all about expectations. When you and your customer get face to face, or phone to phone, or impact in any other way, the customer has expectations about the encounter. How you measure up, relative to those expectations, will determine whether your service is perceived as good or bad.
Note that I said “perceived”. It is not what you think that counts here, but rather what the customer thinks. I often hear people say that they really did their best with a particular customer, yet the customer is still unhappy. It’s not your best that determines customer satisfaction, but rather what the customer thinks they got, against what they expected to get.

The expectations

If customer service is all about expectations, what do customers really want?
*Now that’s a Question for you reading this. Try defining what you expect when you are at particular business encounters*

•My expectation: I expect a product or service to measure up to my demands. If I buy a kettle, I expect it to boil water. I don’t expect it to play music, but I certainly will expect it to boil water.
•Some customers expect to be treated like persons of value...every time. A customer is not a number. A customer is not a line on a computer printout. A customer is a real live person with real feelings, pride, and dignity, and deserves to be treated as a person of value.

It really happened to me

I was standing at the service counter of a large discounter store, when a woman brought in a toaster she had bought brand new the day before. Now the first problem we have here at South Africa is total lack of customer sensitivity regarding electrical appliances. Think about it for a minute. The vast majority of electrical products are sold in a usable condition_ until recently. They had no plug fitted, “but that’s no big deal”, you may say. To some people it is. Some people do not have the technical expertise to fit the plug, which means that they have to get someone else to do it for them. (But that’s not the point of the story)
The woman gave her cash slip to the assistant, and explained that the toaster just did not work. ‘What did you do to bugger it up?’ was the challenge that she was presented with. In a nice quiet submissive way she tried to explain that all she had done was to put on the plug. “Then you did it was wrong and messed up the appliance, “was the response.
(Are you feeling angry reading this? I was watching it)

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Reasonable service is not outstanding service

Let’s say a company meets its customers expectations, we have we have delivered good service, right? Wrong! At this point we have just delivered reasonable service. Reasonable service is about meeting our customers’ expectations. Outstanding service is about exceeding our customers’ expectations. On a scale of ‘poor’, ‘mediocre’, and great’, meeting the expectations can only be classed at mediocre. Great professionals exceed their customers’ expectations.

This happened a little while ago, to me
I bought a camera for my brother in a store at a very famous mall. The sales person spent about twenty minutes with me, and was totally professional in the help and advice that she gave me. Then I started to negotiate. Obviously I wanted to get the best price, and haggled as best as I could. I managed to trim the price down nicely, and felt very pleased with the whole deal
I gave her card, which she processed. Then she put the camera into a bag for me. Just as I was turning round to leave, she stopped me, leaned behind her, picked up a small box of film, and said to me: “please, would you accept this as a small token of our appreciation for buying your camera here”. Now remember, this was done after the sale was completed and paid for. What a lovely surprise! What a sweet taste that put into my mouth! And you can bet that I’ve been back to that store many times since, even though I live a bit far from this very same mall

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

We need to keep the pressure up as consumers.

Poor services around our service providers’ minds

There is never enough said on poor service in SA. Poor service extends right across the board. We need to keep the pressure up as consumers.
Walked into Woolworths last week to buy lose potatoes, leeks and chicken livers - ordinary everyday items. Not truffles, pate. Plain, ordinary, potatoes. No, they didn't have potatoes, no, no leeks, no that food store doesn't stock chicken livers.Fine.What is Woolworths pay off line? "GET MORE, BE MORE."Well I suggest they GET MORE stock and BE MORE efficient.Nothing quite like the sight of 7 Woolworth’s staff members clustered around the computer and ONE harassed and harried lady serving a queue of 10.
We need to keep the pressure up as consumers.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Quality services

we have gotten so used to bad service that we have come to expect it every time we go shopping or making business with another person or company. i once walked into a shop and was treated like crap, but the moment the sales people at the shop noticed that i have a lot of money to spend at their shop, they started treating me like their only costomer. at the end i only shop for a little less than a 100 dollers because of the disgust i felt when i realised how they treat people there