WELCOME TO UNIT 3. WELCOME TO UNIT 2 Review Unit 2 Serving a Diverse Population of Customers Objectives Describe diversity in the workplace relative.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
2.02 Questions and Answers.
Advertisements

STANDARD-3.2 & 3.3 Customer Service. Satisfied –vs- Dissatisfied Customer.
Restaurant and Foodservice Operations Are Labor-Intensive
Working with Citizens: Delivering Great Service to Residents and Customers Prepared and Presented By Alan Vandehaar Iowa State University Extension & Outreach.
MYPF 4.1 Communicating in the Workplace 4.2 Thriving in the Workplace
Chapter 3 Customer Service Skills for User Support Agents
2.02 – FOSTER positive relationships with customers to enhance company image. Marketing 6621.
Customer Service Training
Handling Customer Complaints
C O R P O R A T I O N January 15, 2014 Confidential: © Victiva Corporation.
Chapter 4 Attitude, Angry Customers, and Relationship Building
Customer Service Vikram Dhal.
Learning & Organizational Effectiveness Focus on Service Florida Department of Children & Families Florida Department of Children & Families.
Provided by the LAUSD Food Services Division
Chapter 1: An Overview of Marketing
15-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Human Relations, 3/e © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 19 Customer Service McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
© Telephone Doctor, Inc. | The Service Mentality.
©2002 South-Western Chapter 1 Version 6e1 chapter An Overview of Marketing 1 1 Prepared by Deborah Baker Texas Christian University.
Measuring the Effectiveness of Customer Service – Service Recovery Chapter 9.
Chapter 1 Introduction To Customer-Centric Service
Customer Service as a Marketing Tool AmCham Macedonia February 26, 2015.
CUSTOMER SERVICE Diana Piraquive. CIS
Improving Communication & Participant Complaint Resolution For Connections To Independence.
The World of Customer Service, 2e Odgers 1 Chapter 3 Chapter 3 Customer Behavior, Customer Loyalty, and Exceptional Service Objectives Describe customers’
Customer Perceptions of Quality and Customer Satisfaction
Customer Loyalty and Customer Retention. 2 Outline Definition of Customer Loyalty What Affects Customer Loyalty Relationship programs Customer life cycle.
WELCOME TO UNIT 2 Customer Service MT 221 Marilyn Radu, Instructor.
Dr. Angela Young Management Department College of Business and Economics.
What do all of these have in common?
IFS410 End User Support Chapter 3 Communication and Customer-service Skills.
Customer care 1. Objectives Understand customer and his needs Taking care of customer to his satisfaction Listening to customer Complaint handling
Chapter Four Relationship and Loyalty Marketing. © 2008 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ All Rights Reserved. 2 Marketing Essentials in.
© 2001 Wadsworth, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. 1 Professionalism Professionals develop competence in Career planning and development Knowledge.
CUSTOMER SERVICE The Bridge to Our Customers Training Department.
Employees Attitude BY Syed Imtiaz Hussain.
An Overview of Marketing
Chapter 12 The Manager as Leader.
1 Copyright © 2009 by Nelson Education, Ltd. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 1 An Overview of Marketing Canadian Adaptation prepared by Don Hill, Langara.
4/00/ © 2000 Business & Legal Reports, Inc. BLR’s Human Resources Training Presentations Effective Communication Skills.
Customer Relations Foster positive relationships with customers to enhance company image.
1 Professionalism Professionals develop competence in Career planning and development Knowledge skill organization emotional I.Q. basic.
CUSTOMER SERVICE A Relationship for Success. Customer Service Is:  Complete Worksheet # 1  Where did you receive excellent customer service?  Why was.
Avoid Disputes, Not Complaints Best Practice Customer Complaint Handling Stuart Ayres, Scheme Manager Derek Pullen, Scheme Adjudicator.
Chapter 1 Copyright ©2010 by Cengage Learning Inc. All rights reserved 1 MKTG 1 CHAPTER An Overview of Marketing.
Gaining the Customer Satisfaction Edge. Is 99.9% Good Enough? 5,516,200 cases of flat soft drinks 2 million lost documents 811,000 faulty rolls of film.
Customer Service It can “make” or “break” a business!!
Basic concept of customer service Basic communication skills of dealing with customers.
DO NOT COPY Chapter 11 Service failure and service recovery management.
© 2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 McGraw-Hill part Establish and maintain trust with customers. 2.Explain customer relationship.
The Importance of Feedback. Why get customer feedback Feedback is crucial for company improvement…positive feedback is great but it is usually the negative.
WELCOME TO UNIT 3. Some people define diversity as a person who is different from them. Do you agree with this definition? Yes No.
1 Copyright ©2006 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved Chapter 1 1 An Overview of Marketing.
CUSTOMER SERVICE FOR THE 21 ST CENTURY CACCRAO – Shairon Zingsheim.
C O R P O R A T I O N September 13, 2013 MPS CPE Day.
© BLR ® —Business & Legal Resources 1408 How to Manage Challenging Employees.
Work-Related Stress and Burnout Reality Shock. Objectives Identify 3 causes of stress Recognize the stages of reality shock Identify 3 effective coping.
The World of Customer Service, 2e Odgers 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 2 Serving a Diverse Population of Customers Objectives Describe diversity in the workplace.
WELCOME TO UNIT 3. Read Ducks Quack, Eagles Soar.
New Supervisors’ Guide To Effective Supervision
By Gabriel Benavides And Jeremy Symes. WELCOME! We thank you for attending our program!  Today we will be covering: Values of customer service. Understanding.
Leadership & Teamwork. QUALITIES OF A GOOD TEAM Shared Vision Roles and Responsibilities well defined Good Communication Trust, Confidentiality, and Respect.
Foster positive relationships with customers to enhance company image.
Customer Care “When you have a true passion for excellence, and when you act on it, you will stand straighter. You will look people in the eye. You will.
© BLR ® —Business & Legal Resources 1501 Customer Service Skills How We Can All Improve.
©2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
Dr. Bea Bourne 1. 2 If you have any trouble in seminar, please do call Tech Support at: They can assist if you get “bumped” from the seminar.
BUSN 258Competitive Success/tutorialrank.com
Chapter 5 Resolving Customer Problems and Complaints
Presentation transcript:

WELCOME TO UNIT 3

WELCOME TO UNIT 2 Review

Unit 2 Serving a Diverse Population of Customers Objectives Describe diversity in the workplace relative to the needs of a business enterprise Identify the four personalities of customers and distinguish among them Contrast customer service activities among the four generational groups Learn how to communicate effectively with disabled persons Describe customers’ buying behavior relative to their basic needs. Distinguish between customer satisfaction and customer loyalty. State the relationship between customer expectations and customer perceptions. Describe methods companies use to measure customer satisfaction.

Some people define diversity as a person who is different from them. Do you agree with this definition? Yes No

Ethnic and Cultural Diversity The collaboration of cultures, ideas, and different perspectives is now considered an organizational asset. Assimilation – “Melting Pot” approach. Inclusion – Leveraging differences for the benefit of the organization.

After receiving bad service from a company, have you ever defected to its competitor? Yes No

Diversity in the Workplace Diversity can include –Race, age, gender, sexual orientation, ethnicity, physical ability, religion, education, appearance, or any other characteristic Not only the workforce, but the nation’s customer base, too, is becoming diverse.

Cultural Values and Workplace Communication Culture – A system of shared values, beliefs, and rituals that are learned and passed on and that affect a person’s perception of the world. Cultural differences are seen in –Nonverbal behaviors –Concept of time –Concept of space

Four Generations Matures – Born prior to 1946; patriotic, loyal, fiscally conservative Baby Boomer Generation – Born between 1946 and 1967; idealistic, competitive, questions authority Generation X – Born between 1965 and 1981; resourceful, self-reliant, highly adaptive Millennial Generation – Born after 1981; confident, ambitious, tech-savvy

The Disabled Customer Disability –A condition caused by an accident, trauma, genetics or disease, –which may limit a person’s mobility, hearing, vision, speech, or mental function The Americans with Disabilities Act Understanding Disabilities –Serving people with disabilities is based primarily on respect and courtesy without being condescending. –CSRs communicate with people who are –physically disabled, visually impaired, hearing impaired, mobility impaired, speech impaired, and learning disabled

Understanding Customer Behavior Basic Customer Behavior involves: –Why they buy –How they buy –What causes them to return Four Customer Needs: 1.Need to be understood 2.Need to feel welcome 3.Need to feel important 4.Need for comfort

Earning Customer Loyalty Tips to Earn Repeat Business from Customers –Ask questions –Be honest –Fix problems –Learn from the competition –Back up your company’s promises –Offer one-stop service –Build on emotion-friendly service culture

Customer Turnoffs Value turnoffs –Include inadequate guarantees, a failure to meet quality expectations, and high prices relative to value received System turnoffs –Include irritations relative to the way a company delivers its products or services People turnoffs –Include showing lack of courtesy or attention, showing an unprofessional behavior, projecting an indifferent attitude

Of the three customer turnoffs, which one is the most troublesome with reference to providing great customer service? 1.Value turnoffs 2.System turnoffs 3.People turnoffs 4.None of these choices.

Offering Exceptional Customer Service Exceptional customer service occurs when the customer gets more than they expected Customer expectations –What a customer wants before a transaction Customer perceptions –What a customer identifies as quality of service during and after the transaction

Measuring Customer Satisfaction Customer satisfaction is in the eye of the beholder (the customer) The best way to measure customer service is to Ask Your Customers

WELCOME TO UNIT 3

Customer service gets more positive results from a teamwork approach rather than from an individual effort by an employee. True False

Within the last year, have you used self-talk as a way to improve your attitude toward school, your job, your family, or a personal relationship? Yes No

When handling an angry customer’s service problem, the best approach is to: 1.ignore him or her. 2.turn the situation over to your manager. 3.use first-call resolution. 4.think about quitting your job.

Unit 3 Attitude, Angry Customers, and Relationship Building & Resolving Customer Problems and Complaints Objectives Describe a customer-oriented attitude Recognize situational examples that elicit rage reactions in customers Identify actions CSRs can take to ensure delivery of comprehensive customer services Describe the customer service benefits of the teamwork approach in organizations Describe the activities involved in proactive problem solving List reasons that customers complain and describe the process for handling those complaints Discuss approaches to use when handling angry customers

First-Call Resolution (FRC) FCRs are calls that CSRs resolve on that first call by the customer. FCRs positively affect a company’s bottom line because nearly 80% of the time and cost of providing customer service is spent on service resolution.

The Power of a Positive Attitude Positive self-talk can help each of us build a positive, winning customer service attitude. Tips to help keep your attitude up: –Engage in positive self-talk –Focus on successes rather than negatives –Use your break time effectively –Keep in mind your overall goals –Be kind to yourself –Take your sense of humor to work

Customer Rage Findings of Report by Customer Care Alliance and ASU School of Business, released in November 2005: –70% of 1,012 survey respondents experienced customer rage, relating that their most serious recent consumer problem made them “extremely” or “very” upset. –Customers don’t become dissatisfied because of problems, but with the way they are handled.

Building a Teamwork Approach to Customer Service Internal customer service refers to service directed toward others within the organization. –For example, level of responsiveness, quality, communication, teamwork, and morale Good teamwork shows customers that the company is organized and everyone is moving toward satisfying the customer.

Teamwork Communication Critical in serving customers To promote teamwork, CSRs need to –Focus any negative feedback on a specific task, not on a co-worker’s personality. –Compliment a teammate when he or she is observed doing something well. Teamwork Strategies Support your teammates with information Discuss new policies Identify areas for improvement Show pride in yourself and your coworkers

Solving Customer Problems Use Proactive Problem Solving and Customer Self-Service (CSS) to exceed customers’ expectations by anticipating and solving problems before they occur. –Example: At the time of sale, educate and inform buyers about extra costs and possible delays. –CSS empowers customers to go to a company’s website and readily find information, view a bill, analyze service usage, compare rate plans, order new products and services. When writing service-related to customers, remember to –Restate the customer’s question in the opening paragraph of the –Use headings to organize the –Make the brief by linking to detailed information online –Use consistent formatting to indicate procedures or instructions –Write for easy reading and comprehension

Resolving Customer Complaints The overriding reason customers complain is because their expectations for the product or service have not been met. Why customers complain: –Poor service or product quality –Lower prices elsewhere –CSRs lack of knowledge –Company policies that create bureaucracy –CSRs inability to solve problems –Inflexible service –Slow responses

Steps in the Complaint–Handling Process 1. Screen and log in information 2. Listen 3. Empathize 4. Solicit feedback 5. Apologize 6. Deliver bad news positively 7. Take ownership and formulate a solution 8. Communicate a solution 9. Follow up

Problem-Solving Process (Five Steps) 1.Identify the problem 2.Analyze the problem 3.Identify decision criteria 4.Develop multiple solutions 5.Choose the optimal solution

Customer Emotions and Service Recovery When customers are dissatisfied, they become difficult, frustrated, and quick to anger. A genuine apology is an excellent first step to diffuse customer anger. Know the difference between trigger phrases and calming phrases when dealing with customer emotions. Service recovery examples: cash refunds, credits, discounts, and apologies.