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Raving Fans  A Satisfied Customer Doesn’t Count.

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Presentation on theme: "Raving Fans  A Satisfied Customer Doesn’t Count."— Presentation transcript:

1 Raving Fans  A Satisfied Customer Doesn’t Count

2 Service is So Awful Customers Expect to be Abused Cold food Dirty washrooms Late deliveries Rejected parts Lost orders Lazy staff

3 Your Customer Service Slogan No Worse than the competition – Customers are a revolt waiting to happen – Only satisfied because of low expectations If you want to OWN a customer, you must have RAVING FANS

4 First Step Decide What You Want – Create a vision of perfection centered on the customer

5 Second Step Discover What the Customer Wants – Discover the customer’s vision of what they really want – Alter your vision if need be – Unless you have your own vision, how can you understand the customers’? – Customer’s vision will likely focus on one or two things, your own will fill in the gaps – You have to know when to ignore what the customer wants and tell them to take their vision elsewhere

6 How Do You Find Out What They Want?  Ask them!  Listen closely  Listening Traps  What they say may not be what they mean  You may get silence – why?  What is worse than silence? FINE  May discover in small nuggets

7 How Do You Measure? Reward your people based on satisfaction of internal and external customers If you don’t look after your people they won’t look after your customers.

8 Third Step Deliver the Vision Plus One Percent Delivery means Consistency – Limit the number of areas where you want to make a difference – Do a bang up job on one thing rather than trying to bring off a whole string Customers become Raving Fans when they know they can count on you time and time again

9 How to Achieve Consistency  Systems  Systems create consistency not robots  Systems give you a floor not a ceiling  You must have a training program to integrate the systems into the soul of the company

10 So is One Percent Worth It? If you keep improving by 1%... – It keeps you from trying too much and failing – It keeps you from being immobilized by a large goal – It allows you the flexibility needed to give good customer service – flexibility to alter course

11 Visions Must Change  Only an up-to-the-minute vision can hope to create Raving Fans  Customers’ needs and wants change all the time  Flexibility relates to WHAT was delivered as part of the customer service product  Consistency has to do with HOW it was delivered

12 How Many Do You Have? Satisfied Customers Unsatisfied Customers Raving Fans How do you know?


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