101 Ways to Really Satisfy Your Customers.
by
 
Griffiths, Andrew.

ISBN
9781741760576

Title
101 Ways to Really Satisfy Your Customers.

Author
Griffiths, Andrew.

Personal Author
Griffiths, Andrew.

Edition
1st ed.

Physical Description
1 online resource (254 pages)

Contents
Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Getting a handle on customer service -- Section 1: Understanding your customers -- # 1 Always put yourself in your customers' shoes -- # 2 What do your customers expect from you? -- # 3 Hire a mystery shopper to evaluate your business -- # 4 Observe your business objectively -- # 5 Take the time to talk to your customers -- # 6 Encourage your customers to give you their opinions -- # 7 If you ask for opinions, be prepared to listen to them -- # 8 Start a customer satisfaction survey immediately -- Section 2: Your working environment -- # 9 Is it easy for people to visit your business -- # 10 Is the entrance to your business inviting? -- # 11 Does the layout work? -- # 12 Instil confidence in you and your products -- # 13 Are there ways to speed up your customer service? -- # 14 Is the background music too loud? -- # 15 Cleanliness is essential -- # 16 Appearances deteriorate over time -- Section 3: Your staff -- # 17 The meet and greet-first impressions last -- # 18 Treat your customers with respect -- # 19 Appearances count -- # 20 Take care with personal hygiene -- # 21 Communicate confidently with customers -- # 22 Ensure that your staff are knowledgeable about the products they are selling -- # 23 Smile! -- # 24 The basics are no longer basic-start at the beginning -- # 25 Take your staff to your competitors' businesses -- # 26 Take your staff yo a business that you admire -- # 27 Have regular brainstorming sessions -- # 28 Debrief staff after good and bad experiences -- # 29 Encourage your customers to tell you if your staff give outstanding service -- # 30 Reward staff for outstanding customer service -- # 31 Ask a customer to come in and talk to your staff -- # 32 Give your staff experience in other areas of your business -- # 33 Teach your staff how to sell.
 
Section 4: Making it easy for your customers to buy from you -- # 34 Offer the right products -- # 35 Make sure that your pricing is correct -- # 36 Make it easy for customers to pay you -- # 37 Eliminate all obstacles to making a purchase -- # 38 Are your trading hours customer-friendly? -- # 39 If necessary, go to them -- Section 5: The personal touch -- # 40 The sweetest sound is your own name -- # 41 Reward customers for coming back -- # 42 Be one step ahead of your customers -- # 43 Show that you are proud of your business -- # 44 Remember important dates -- # 45 Make a visit to your business memorable -- # 46 Start a VIP club -- # 47 Be patient and courteous with your customers -- Section 6: Face-toface customer service -- # 48 Be welcoming -- #49 Be organised -- # 50 Be prepared to make a recommendation -- # 51 Talk to the customer, not through the customer -- # 52 Do something unexpected -- # 53 Remember to say 'thank you' -- Section 7: Telephone customer service -- # 54 Ensure your automated answering service is user-friendly -- # 55 Answer the phone with a positive attitude -- # 56 Speak clearly, ask questions and give useful answers -- # 57 Change recorded messages frequently -- # 58 Keep background noise to a minimum -- # 59 Ensure that messages are passed on -- # 60 Eliminate the need for callers to have to repeat themselves -- # 61 Keep a pen and paper by every phone -- Section 8: Promotional material -- # 62 Plan your promotional material from the customers' point of view -- # 63 Answer the most commonly asked questions -- # 64 Avoid using technical jargon -- # 65 Make it professional-inspire confidence -- # 66 Make your contact details easy to find and easy to read -- # 67 Keep text to a minimum-stick to the facts -- Section 9: Customer service and the Internet -- # 68 Make your website user-friendly.
 
# 69 Use your website to answer questions -- # 70 Respond to emails quickly -- # 71 Don't 'shout' or use abbreviations -- # 72 Use photos of real people -- # 73 Make automated responses simple and professional -- # 74 Keep text on websites to a minimum -- # 75 Ask your customers to review and rate your website -- # 76 Update your website regularly -- # 77 Beware od spam -- Section 10: Following up on a sale is good customer service -- # 78 Discuss the sale on the spot -- # 79 Make a follow-up call -- # 80 Explain what to do if there are any problems -- # 81 Contact customers that you may have lost -- Section 11: Internal customer service -- # 82 Work closely with other departments -- # 83 Don't let the customer suffer because of internal bickering -- # 84 Follow up on calls from people within your organisation -- # 85 Give your customers a contact number for outside normal hours -- # 86 Don't keep your customers waiting on hold-offer to call them back -- Section 12: Maintaining a personal commitment to customer service -- # 87 Write a mission statement for customer service -- # 88 Be consistent in all you do -- # 89 Read books and magazines to look for ideas -- # 90 Look at other successful businesses for ideas -- # 91 Don't discuss politics -- # 92 Know when to take a break -- Section 13: When things go wrong -- # 93 Have a clear and concise policy, but be flexible -- # 94 Dealing with telephone complaints -- # 95 Dealing with written complaints -- # 96 Dealing with a third party compaint -- # 97 Always have a solution -- # 98 You just can't please some people -- # 99 The importance of following up a complaint -- # 100 Get it right the first time -- # 101 make one person responsible for monitoring customer service -- Bonus section-20 more customer service tips -- # 102 Be aware of cultural differences -- # 103 Always think about your customers.
 
# 104 Visit your customers' businesses -- # 105 Embrace new technologies -- # 106 Invite good customers to special, exclusive events -- # 107 Keep databases accurate -- # 108 Package so as to be remembered -- # 109 The little things make the difference -- # 110 If you go to the customer's home, clean up after yourself -- # 111 Run an outrageous promotion -- # 112 100 per cent satisfaction-guaranteed -- # 113 Avoid being overly familiar with customers -- # 114 Avoid the biggest mistake-not delivering on time -- # 115 Go shopping at the competition -- # 116 Set up a customer hotline -- # 117 Simplify your paperwork -- # 118 Using reply paid mail -- # 119 Start a local campaign encouraging customer service -- # 120 Introduce a free service -- # 121 Don't let customer service stop when you are busy -- Appendix: Blank forms that may come in handy -- Your mission to customer service -- What do your customers expect from you? -- Competitor analysis form -- Customer satisfaction survey -- Customer service and the telephone -- Customer service audit checklist -- Ten common customer service mistakes -- Ten secrets of customer service success -- The little things (what can you do above and beyond the call of duty?) -- Your customer complaint procedures -- A final note from the author -- Recommended reading -- About the author.

Local Note
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2023. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

Subject Term
Customer relations.
 
Customer services.

Format
Electronic Resources

Electronic Access
Click here to view book

Publication Date
2007

Publication Information
Sydney :
 
Allen & Unwin,
 
2007.
 
©2006.


Shelf NumberMaterial TypeCopyShelf LocationStatus
658.8121:E-BOOK11:ON-DEMANDBrowse online or request access to ebook