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Added for You - 15 Principles for Complete Customer Service
A Few Tips to Make a Good Impression on an Interview ce to every customer under all conceivable conditions and circumstances.When was the last time you did not pass a certain interview? Have you tried recalling what you told the interviewer that made him give you thumbs down? For job hunters, do you usually prepare what to answer for the undying questions that these companies ask their applicants?Let me give you an overview of my experience as an Interviewer. In 2002 until 2005, I worked as a Human Resources Assistant for a Networking Company where I handled both the Recruitment and the Be 7. Service to customers is based not just on systems, processes and procedures but also on personal effort and creativity of those who serve. Encourage, support and reward personal initiative in exhibiting creative ways to serve others both inside and outside the organization. 8. Successful organizations serve well those who serve customers – internal customers (employees) are served as well as external (paying) customer Online Local Directories for Small Businesses I’m simply going to list these fifteen principles for complete customer service and let you draw your own conclusions regarding the following questions (these need to be answered in sequence):When a customer wants to find a local business she may use one of the well known world wide search engines.She might type in “Plumbers in Birmingham”. (Or whatever your business type and location is). If you show up in the search results then you are very lucky. Of course you’ve got no chance of showing up in the results if you don’t have a website.The first few search results are probably from the well known large national directories followed by lesser known • Is this principle really important for my organization? • If it is important, are we actually implementing this principle consistently and thoroughly throughout the organization? • If we are implementing it, is it proving to be effective? In other words, is this principle actually working to consistently deliver complete customer service to every customer every time? • If it is not effective, what is the first thing that needs to be done to improve its effectiveness? What resources do we need to get this done? Who needs to be involved in developing and implementing this first step? When you answer these questions in the order listed, you’ll quickly discover where the weak points are in your internal process chain of customer service AND what you can do quickly to strengthen or change them for immediate improvement. Here are the 15 principles for complete customer service: 1. The primary cause of success for any organization is service to its customers. 2. Everyone in the organization provides service for its customers, even if they never see those customers or know their names. 3. Perception is reality in the minds of every customer when it comes to experiencing service satisfaction. 4. Every customer is different in some way from every other customer; discovering and understanding these differences results in a high probability of delivering service in a manner that is perceived to be satisfying to each customer; service to each customer that is tailored to individual needs is the primary objective of any successful organization. 5. Serve every customer as you would serve the person you most love. 6. Every successful organization strives to ensure that its internal systems are designed and implemented to deliver flawless and seamless service to every customer under all conceivable conditions and circumstances. 7. Service to customers is based not just on systems, processes and procedures but also on personal effort and creativity of those who serve. Encourage, support and reward personal initiative in exhibiting creative ways to serve others both inside and outside the organization. 8. Successful organizations serve well those who serve customers – internal customers (employees) are served as well as external (paying) customers How's Your Yellow Page Ad's ROI? sistently deliver complete customer service to every customer every time?Let’s assume that you are one of the millions of family-run businesses that form the very core of the typical local Yellow Page directory. Say you’re the area plumber, auto repair shop, electrician, insurance agent, or restaurant owner. You have a YP ad because it seemed like the right thing to do when you opened up a few years back. Your YP rep helped draw up the ad and it looks pretty good. It has a picture of your shop, which he took with his digital camera. There’s a nic • If it is not effective, what is the first thing that needs to be done to improve its effectiveness? What resources do we need to get this done? Who needs to be involved in developing and implementing this first step? When you answer these questions in the order listed, you’ll quickly discover where the weak points are in your internal process chain of customer service AND what you can do quickly to strengthen or change them for immediate improvement. Here are the 15 principles for complete customer service: 1. The primary cause of success for any organization is service to its customers. 2. Everyone in the organization provides service for its customers, even if they never see those customers or know their names. 3. Perception is reality in the minds of every customer when it comes to experiencing service satisfaction. 4. Every customer is different in some way from every other customer; discovering and understanding these differences results in a high probability of delivering service in a manner that is perceived to be satisfying to each customer; service to each customer that is tailored to individual needs is the primary objective of any successful organization. 5. Serve every customer as you would serve the person you most love. 6. Every successful organization strives to ensure that its internal systems are designed and implemented to deliver flawless and seamless service to every customer under all conceivable conditions and circumstances. 7. Service to customers is based not just on systems, processes and procedures but also on personal effort and creativity of those who serve. Encourage, support and reward personal initiative in exhibiting creative ways to serve others both inside and outside the organization. 8. Successful organizations serve well those who serve customers – internal customers (employees) are served as well as external (paying) customer Are We Having Fun Yet? ge them for immediate improvement.Have you ever asked yourself this question at work? If you have, it’s more than likely you were being sarcastic – stuck in the office late because a superior tossed a short-deadline project on your desk, or while you’re bemoaning a lack of job satisfaction.You need to ask yourself this question...FOR REAL.Life is short – you SHOULD be having fun.What brings passion into your life? What would you do even if you weren’t being paid? If your career path d Here are the 15 principles for complete customer service: 1. The primary cause of success for any organization is service to its customers. 2. Everyone in the organization provides service for its customers, even if they never see those customers or know their names. 3. Perception is reality in the minds of every customer when it comes to experiencing service satisfaction. 4. Every customer is different in some way from every other customer; discovering and understanding these differences results in a high probability of delivering service in a manner that is perceived to be satisfying to each customer; service to each customer that is tailored to individual needs is the primary objective of any successful organization. 5. Serve every customer as you would serve the person you most love. 6. Every successful organization strives to ensure that its internal systems are designed and implemented to deliver flawless and seamless service to every customer under all conceivable conditions and circumstances. 7. Service to customers is based not just on systems, processes and procedures but also on personal effort and creativity of those who serve. Encourage, support and reward personal initiative in exhibiting creative ways to serve others both inside and outside the organization. 8. Successful organizations serve well those who serve customers – internal customers (employees) are served as well as external (paying) customer What Not To Do In Your Cover Letter discovering and understanding these differences results in a high probability of delivering service in a manner that is perceived to be satisfying to each customer; service to each customer that is tailored to individual needs is the primary objective of any successful organization.When you are looking for a new Accountancy job, along with your CV you must also enclose a cover letter to the company you are applying to. This is what the employer reads before the CV, so it is even more important that this stands out. The following pointers describe the things that should be avoided at all costs.Do not have a weak opening, for example, ‘please consider me for this role’. You need to grab the readers’ attention and highlight your most important skil 5. Serve every customer as you would serve the person you most love. 6. Every successful organization strives to ensure that its internal systems are designed and implemented to deliver flawless and seamless service to every customer under all conceivable conditions and circumstances. 7. Service to customers is based not just on systems, processes and procedures but also on personal effort and creativity of those who serve. Encourage, support and reward personal initiative in exhibiting creative ways to serve others both inside and outside the organization. 8. Successful organizations serve well those who serve customers – internal customers (employees) are served as well as external (paying) customer 5 Tips to Choosing a Tractor Trailer Driving School ce to every customer under all conceivable conditions and circumstances.Every kid loves semi-trucks; the sight of one of these tractor trailers is enough to put a big smile on any child's face. Add in a simple wave from the driver and a honk of the loud air horn and you have a kid that is laughing and clapping with joy. For some, that fascination with big trucks never wanes, these are the truck drivers of America. If you have thought about learning to drive a tractor trailer, you might have questions about where to start and what to look for in 7. Service to customers is based not just on systems, processes and procedures but also on personal effort and creativity of those who serve. Encourage, support and reward personal initiative in exhibiting creative ways to serve others both inside and outside the organization. 8. Successful organizations serve well those who serve customers – internal customers (employees) are served as well as external (paying) customers; creatively taking care of those who take care of customers is a priority. 9. Solicit feedback from customers at all times and then listen, especially when it hurts. 10. Seek always to do it right the first time; if this is not done, then do it very right the second time. Service recovery after initial service failure is paramount to grasping victory from the jaws of defeat. 11. Continuously measure how well customer service is translating into customer satisfaction. Statistics tell stories – are these stories what you want told to your customers? 12. Policies trump processes and procedures. All processes and procedures should be designed and implemented in the service of the organization’s stated reason for existence – its mission to serve its customers. 13. Use the Kaizen philosophy: set goals to improve everyday in every way. 14. Employ Lagniappe: delight customers by providing more than they expect. 15. Always be willing to start from scratch in thinking about how to better serve customers. Effective customer service policies, processes and systems can be viewed as wealth-producing assets. Not every asset, however, can be efficiently used to turn a profit. Using the right assets in the right way produces wealth.
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