Posts Tagged ‘customer service’

Decent customer service … is that too much to ask for?!

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

This is the Blog opportunity I always wanted. To write about those customer service training courses that teach telephone techniques that irritate me every time I am on the receiving end of them. I want to berate those companies that insist that great customer service training includes teaching a lengthy telephone answering script. The script is usually delivered to a sing-song tune and sounds as though it is said, in exactly the same way and to exactly the same tune 10,000 or more times a year:

’Thank you for calling Go Faster Motors, Mandy speaking, how can I help you?’

I would like the customer service trainers, their customers and the course delegates to think about this:

If I call a company do I want to be confronted with a sing-song answer that makes me feel as though I am just another boring caller? No.

Do I really want to know the name of the receptionist when I want to speak to someone else? No.

Do I really want to wait while someone says 14 words? No.

Is a ‘Good Morning’ followed by the company name, said in a welcoming and positive way, all I need at that point? Yes!

While I have the bit between my teeth can I ask why does the customer service training teach the receptionist to ask for my name? The reason I ask is that when I am transferred to the service department they have no clue of who I am and ask me again, five seconds after I have repeated it twice and spelt it out to the receptionist? Pointless.

I would like the training to extend from the receptionist to the service desk so that they work together to pass on my name and reason for calling. Then the service desk could answer with my name ‘Good Morning Mr Windham, how can I help you?’ Wow! That is the sort of stuff that a good telephone techniques and customer service programme should deliver.

By Mike Cooney | Righttrack’s Commercial and Financial Director

Yes sir, no sir, free bags full sir

Monday, June 21st, 2010

I am sure we have all experienced when a customer service representative has promised us the world, thinking this is good customer service because they are saying exactly what we want them too. Yet this couldn’t be further from the truth, which is clearly highlighted in any decent customer service training.

Whilst we would love to get what we want all the time, we know that in some instances, for whatever reason, this is just not possible and the best solution, well the one that generates the least amount of frustration, is where the truth is told.

Dealing with front line staff should be a joy for customers, which makes it vital to an organisation’s success that they invest in their customer service offering; equipping employees with the right skills, product / service knowledge and confidence to deal with all types of queries in a manner that accurately reflects the company’s brand and ethos. Failure to do so will cause massive problems in the long run.

By Gemma Middleton | Righttrack’s Marketing Manager

Apple Does IT Again

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Many companies claim to provide the ultimate customer experience, however in my view very few actually achieve it in reality, which could be easily addressed via customer service training.

For many companies the ‘experience’ element is a figment of their marketing department’s imagination and does not involve the customer experiencing anything different. This is not to say that many companies do not provide excellent levels of customer service, which is different from an ‘experience’.

Apple know how to provide the real thing, a truly positive shopping experience. The day after launching their iPad and despite what can only be described as a frenzy of interest in the new product, the Solihull store was 100% geared up and ready to provide an experience.

Greeters, who knew how the product worked, were on hand at the shop entrance to provide answers to every conservable question, and for those eager to understand the smallest of detail, demonstrators were available to help customers understand what they were buying. When it came to purchasing this was quick and easy – no queuing and the customer was provided with next steps and avenues of help.

Thank you Apple – we love you and your new products, as well as your clear commitment to customer service!

By Kasmin Cooney | Righttrack’s Managing Director