Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Building Blocks For "Perfect Service"

To satisfy your customer, you can't just hope it will happen...you have to do something differently! I love the title of the best-selling sales book "Hope Is Not A Strategy." The same holds true for customer service. Companies often say customers are important, and then try to incent employees to make it happen. Motivation is just part of the equation. The key point here is that a company must be designed to deliver superior service and not just to lean on employees to perform extraordinarily.

"Perfect Service" has three main building blocks:

1. Perfect Knowledge--It is critical to know how your customers are feeling about each contact or transaction performed on their behalf. By collecting information on the actionable details, you receive early warning signals when things are not going right. This data becomes the lifeblood of your organization, driving most decisions and evaluations within the company.

2. Perfect Improvement--The data is received and reviewed by several teams: client teams, operations teams, and "key success teams." The company's success is driven by improvement in these metrics, so when a poor review is received, action is swift by fixing the client situations (short-term) while you are solving systemic problems (long-term). Accountability for improvement is clear. Prioritization for service improvement is based on a "return on satisfaction" metric.

3. Perfect Guarantee--The ultimate statement of commitment is the 100% Unconditional Guarantee. What can you say to a guarantee that states: If you are unhappy with our services for any reason, you pay what you think the services are worth. To invoke the guarantee, simply call the president of the company. It doesn't get any clearer than that.

These building blocks are powerful tools designed to change how a company does business. An organization that uses these tools cannot help but pay attention to things that matter to the client.

Next posts will drive into details for each building block.

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