Sticky Customer Service: Stop Churning Customers and Start Growing Your Business: Sticky Series
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About this ebook
Do you lose customers about as fast as you gain them?
It doesn't have to be that way.
Customer service isn't a once-and-done effort. It takes ongoing work to truly meet your customers' expectations. In Sticky Customer Service, unearth practical, action-oriented insights to help you turn customer service from an embarrassing weakness into a business strength.
With over three decades of business and entrepreneurial experience, Peter Lyle DeHaan, PhD, offers his prescriptions to serve customers better and stop driving them away.
You'll discover:
- The three key areas where customer service occurs and why they must work together.
- How to avoid common errors that too many businesses make.
- Why delighting customers is not the best approach and sets up future failure.
Based on a lifetime of real-world examples, Sticky Customer Service reveals customer service gone wrong and customer service done well.
Customer service is not a set-it-and-forget-it initiative. Never lose sight of this. Sticky Customer Service will keep you moving forward and on track.
Uncover helpful customer service tips through this compelling read, encouraging you to do better and celebrating what you do best. Learn how to meet your customers' expectations every chance you get.
Get Sticky Customer Service and turn customer retention into a strength.
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Sticky Customer Service - Peter Lyle DeHaan
Sticky Customer Service
Stop Churning Customers and Start Growing Your Business
Peter Lyle DeHaan
Sticky Customer Service: Stop Churning Customers and Start Growing Your Business © 2021 by Peter Lyle DeHaan.
Book 1 in the Sticky series.
All rights reserved: No part of this book may be reproduced, disseminated, or transmitted in any form, by any means, or for any purpose without the express written consent of the author or his legal representatives. The only exception is short excerpts and the cover image for reviews or academic research.
ISBN
978-1-948082-58-7 e-book
978-1-948082-59-4 paperback
978-1-948082-60-0 hardcover
Published by Rock Rooster Books
Credits:
Developmental editor: Kathryn Wilmotte
Copy editor/proofreader: Robyn Mulder
Cover design: Taryn Nergaard
Author photo: Jordan Leigh Photography
To all who serve others.
Contents
Customer Service Matters
In-Person Customer Service
Is It Business or Personal?
Customer Service Is Not a Slogan
Customer Service Is a Strategy
Get Mad to Get Results
An Eye for Customer Service
Customer Rip-Offs
Penny Wise and Dollar Foolish
Consistency Matters Most
Telephone Customer Service
The Trials and Triumphs of Telephone Support
Call Center 101
The Truth About Interactive Voice Response
Does Anyone Like Speech Recognition?
The Perfect Answer
One Moment While I Disconnect Your Call
Your Staff on Autopilot
Guilty Until Proven Innocent
How to Handle Cancellations
A Well-Timed Call Can Make All the Difference
Online and Multichannel Customer Service
Available and Accurate Support
Provider-Inflicted Pain
Customer Survey Failure
Service Sold It
Beware Corporate Partners
The Name Game
The Myth of Self-Service
Good Customer Service Keeps Its Promises
Put It All Together
Frontline Customer Service Staff
How to Deal with Difficult Customers
Move Forward
Books by Peter Lyle DeHaan
About Peter Lyle DeHaan
Customer Service Matters
We hear much today about delighting our customers. This is an admirable goal, and every business should strive to do so. We must acknowledge, however, that this is not sustainable. We may delight customers upon occasion, but to expect we’ll succeed in every interaction will leave us falling short of their increasingly higher standards.
Each time we do something that excites our customers, we set the bar higher for next time. What delights them today and gets them to tell their friends about us will soon fade into the recesses of normalcy. Then, when we can’t meet their newly heightened expectations, we have much further to fall and their disappointment will be all that much greater.
Instead, we should set a more realistic goal. Though it’s not exciting or compelling, we should aim simply to meet customer expectations. Though this sounds boring, don’t dismiss the idea too fast. Many customer service interactions fall short—sometimes far short—of meeting customers’ expectations.
Meeting expectations is sustainable and is good business.
Do you know someone who left one company because of service issues and then left the new company for the same reason? Once they have used and dismissed each company, their new goal is to pick the least objectionable one.
They no longer pursue the best option. Instead, they seek the one that is least bad, returning to a former unsatisfactory provider. This produces a revolving door of customer churn, whereas a better goal is to keep existing customers.
Does any company provide quality service anymore? The good news is yes, and I celebrate this whenever possible. Yet for each positive example, it’s usually not the company but one person who made the difference. They cared about me and had a genuine interest in the outcome. I was their priority, and they did what the situation required.
Every company claims they offer quality service, but is it real or fantasy? Is a personal connection provided to customers? Can you say, believe, and prove that your company delivers quality service? If you can’t, what changes do you need to make?
Throughout my career, from the jobs I’ve held, businesses I’ve managed, and companies I’ve owned, a consistent thread has been customer service in one form or another. Yet I’m not writing about my experiences in providing customer service, for we are our own worst judges of success. And I’ll admit to having fallen short too many times.
Though sharing a lifetime of experience in providing customer service would offer useful input, it would only draw from the businesses I’ve owned and managed. Instead, this book covers something I have much more experience with. Not in providing, but in receiving customer service—and in not receiving it.
We can glean a far better perspective by looking at a lifetime of receiving customer service. This provides a greater array of consideration, offering a more comprehensive approach that most customer service books miss.
I am a consumer. As someone who purchases products and services, I often need support after the sale. I need customer service. In this book, I’ll share the times that left me appalled or produced discouragement. Yet I’ll also share those times—albeit not as common—when I experienced customer satisfaction.
Customer service opportunities occur in three arenas. These are in person, over the telephone, and online. None functions in isolation. Each type of customer-focused communication informs our expectations in the other formats. Regardless of the communication channel, whether we’re speaking face to face, talking on the phone, or interacting over the internet, we deal with the same issues and desire the same outcomes.
It’s my hope that this book will provide you with helpful customer service insights that will encourage you to do better and celebrate what you do best. Let us meet our consumers’ expectations every chance we get.
In-Person Customer Service
We’ll start our exploration with in-person interactions. These normally occur in retail, service, and hospitality settings.
Insights that we gain from these in-person customer service opportunities, however, can inform our perspectives regardless of how and where the customer connection takes place.
Is It Business or Personal?
Build Relationships to Forge Ongoing Business
When I did a lot of printing, I used what was essentially the same printer for my business forms. I used them for years. Our time together bridged many changes. For me, it transcended two places of employment. For them, it spanned three ownerships, a time of expansion and contraction, three name changes, and a merger. We stayed together through it all—until they messed things up.
It Starts with Friendliness
This printer was near my office, had competitive prices, and was easy to work with. Convenience, price, and service were all significant reasons to use them. So begins my story.
What impressed me the most, however, was their collective friendliness. It didn’t matter who I talked with. Whether on the phone or in person, they were always friendly. After friendliness is acquaintance, which leads to relationship. I knew the staff and the owner—who never felt it beneath him to wait on me. We had a relationship. With relationship comes understanding, tolerance, and forgiveness.
Although they exemplified the adage to under promise and over deliver,
at times things didn’t go as expected. Sometimes