The Transition ManWhatever business you are in, you will find that there is only one cause of your success.
How your customers experience your business.
While many organizations have mechanisms for assessing how they fare
when delivering goods and services to their customers, these results
are often formulated to achieve scores that will look good, rather than
really achieve the true benefit; an ongoing improvement in the
relationship between the organization and their customer.
The key to creating an excellent customer relationship is the interface
between the customer and their point of contact within the
organization. Too often processes which suit the business are not
customer-friendly, however much they suit the internal needs.
Far too few businesses ask the question, 'Do the processes which we
use, work always to the advantage of our customer first?’ Processes are
a means to level out the average performance within a business; have a
tendency to lower the very best performances and also, often take
priority for employees, instead of the very customers who are their
most valuable asset.
One way to avoid this issue is to ask your employees what gets in the
way of making the very best of relationships with their customers. What
do they need more of (as well as less of) to deliver exemplary customer
service?
Another valuable way to approach this is to ask your people what they
find works well for them when they themselves are customers, as we all
are, elsewhere. What was good about it and what did they think could
have been done better.
Finally, experiencing the customer journey through their experience is
probably one of the most value-creating actions that can be taken.
For employees to watch, listen and even act out the experience of one
of the customers they would normally be serving, is a very enlightening
role they can play.
This can be achieved by taking them out of their usual working role,
for a while, and getting them to watch or listen to what happens when
their customer start the interaction. They then really share the
experience and start to notice how things could be different.
If that can then be brought into a discussion forum where several share
their experiences and propose changes, there are the ingredients for
continuing progress and change.
Most employees want to do a great job. They want the satisfaction of
getting it right and experiencing job satisfaction. They want their
customers to leave satisfied, thrilled even, wanting to do business
again in the future.
Enabling your people to spend time getting all the pieces in place for
their customer, really understanding how to meet their needs fully and
even exceptionally is a way to get them motivated and excited to be
part of your team. It builds team spirit and morale.
Using the capabilities of your own people, to give better service
through sharing their thoughts and ideas, is a valuable exercise - and
one which creates untold value in your business for the future.