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What Makes Customer Service Interactions Good or Bad in the Eyes of the Customer?
By: Teresa Allen
An April 2013 Customer Service Study by Dimensional Research pinpointed what makes customers of mid-sized companies happy and what leaves them in dismay. This is the first in a series of blog posts about the important results of this study.
What made their customer service experience good:
1. Problem was resolved quickly
2. The contact person was nice
3. Problem was resolved without being passed around to multiple people
4. The outcome was what I had hoped for
2. The contact person was nice
3. Problem was resolved without being passed around to multiple people
4. The outcome was what I had hoped for
What made their customer service experience bad:
1. I had to explain my problem to multiple people
2. Person was unpleasant
3. Took too long to resolve
4. Problem not resolved
2. Person was unpleasant
3. Took too long to resolve
4. Problem not resolved
What must we do based on these findings? I would suggest a few immediate actions:
- Get customer service staff to act on problems quickly. The sundowner rule we learned for marriage applies equally to business. Fix it and fix it fast! Have a clearly defined time goal in minutes/hours on service problem resolution.
- Hire nice people. How? Pay attention to the first 30 seconds of the interview. Do you immediately LIKE this person? If not, your customers probably won’t either!
- Know how many steps a customer has to take to resolve a problem and minimize them. The less steps and people involved, the happier the customer.
- Don’t just suggest a solution, ASK the customer what they consider to be a fair resolution. Their solution may cost you less and may be easier than what you would have offered otherwise. If you can’t do what they want, at least you know what direction to head for satisfaction.
- Finally and possibly most important: ASK the customer if they are indeed satisfied. Assuming satisfaction is never a safe road.
Published: May 3, 2013
6195 Views
6195 Views