May 17, 2012

Five Factors That Make A Successful Customer Service Training Program

Five Factors That Make A Successful Customer Service Training Program

By Damien Clarke
Companies that focus on customer service see a much larger return on their investment than companies that do not make it a priority. To provide exceptional service, employees need to be trained; there is no way around it. In order to provide the most benefit to employees, a customer service training program needs to be provided by a reputable training firm and selected with an organization's specific needs in mind.

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Great Traits of Outstanding Customer Service

Great Traits of Outstanding Customer Service
By Grace du Prie

WHAT STAFF NEED TO GIVE QUALITY CARE

After an extensive search of available literature and analysis of staff jobs with customer contact elements, 9 service skills and 17 competencies were identified as being essential ingredients for care positions.
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How To Train a Call Center Agent for Better Customer Support!

How To Train a Call Center Agent for Better Customer Support!
By Ella Greens
Call center agents are the straight contacts of the potential customers to your organization. It is therefore, essential that your customer calling agents are responsible for serving the customers with utmost help and take the company's position to the top. The agents are the pillars of a call center and play an outstanding role in defining the organization's CRM strategy.

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Build Empathy to Show Customers and Employees You “Get It”

 

Build Empathy to Show Customers and Employees You "Get It"

By Holly Green

Many people don't associate the word "empathy" with effective leadership.

In fact, ask people to identify the top 10 leadership traits and you won't get many who put "the ability to understand and share the feelings of others" on that list.

I believe it should go on the list.

Today's workers don't blindly follow leaders as they might have in the past. Leadership requires building trust and rapport with others. If employees don't believe you can understand or see things the way they do, you will not earn their trust.

Empathy is also essential for building long-term relationships with customers. Like employees, customers want to be respected and heard. They want to know that we care about their issues and concerns. And they appreciate it when we take the time to understand their world.

To build empathy with employees:

Expose your thinking.

When you introduce a new idea, plan or initiative, you've had plenty of time to discuss it with your management team, work out all the possible scenarios, and thoroughly debate the pros and cons. By the time you announce the plan, you're convinced it's the right thing to do.

Employees, however, are usually hearing it for the first time. In addition to the "what" and "how," they also want to know the "why" and "how we got to this point." Explaining the assumptions and thought processes that led to your decision helps people understand the "why," which makes them more open to the new course of action. People also appreciate you taking the time to expose your thinking, which contributes to building trust as well.

Get inside your employees' world.

To further build trust, have employees expose their thinking. After laying out your plan, ask for their input. For example, "I understand this is new to all of you, and I'd really like to know what you think about it." As they give their feedback, don't defend or argue your position. Instead, delve deeper into their thinking by asking, "What leads you to conclude that? Can you help me understand your thinking here? Where did those assumptions come from?"

One of the most powerful and empowering things you can do for employees is to actively solicit their ideas and input and then listen carefully. Today's employees have a strong need to be respected and heard. Few things do more to fulfill that need than asking them to explain their point of view and how they arrived at it. When people feel respected and heard, trust grows in the relationship.

Asking employees to expose their thinking takes time. It may feel like you're moving through quicksand when you need to be running fast on solid ground. But getting people's buy-in, trust, and commitment in this manner always saves time and energy in the long run.

To build empathy with customers:

Put aside your assumptions.

One huge obstacle to developing empathy with customers is what you think you already know about what they want and need. Customer needs change frequently. What you knew to be true a year or even six months ago may already have changed. The next time you talk with a customer, consciously tell yourself, "For the moment, I'm going to forget everything I think I know about this customer and just listen."

Ask questions.

The best salespeople listen at least 70 percent of the time during a sales call. Put this principle to good use by casting aside your assumptions and asking a lot of questions.

  • What are we not doing well that you would like us to improve on?

  • What else can we offer that would make your job even easier/your company even more successful?

  • Suppose you ran my company. What would you do differently to serve a business like yours?

  • What are we doing well that we should keep doing?

  • When we are a trusted business advisor, what core things are we doing for you?

Get inside their world.

Understanding your customer's world requires more than just a current assessment of the relationship. It also involves taking a peek at the future. Ask questions like:

  • What has changed in your business/market/industry since the last time we talked?

  • What worries you about where your market or industry is headed?

  • Where are the biggest opportunities for your business in the next year or two?

  • What is the biggest threat to your business? How can we help?

  • What could we be doing now to help you adjust to new market realities?

Spend time to look for data on industry trends and shifts that are happening in your customers' world, including with their competitors. Share information with them.

Ask your customer to expose their thinking.

As customers respond to your questions, they will likely give you "what" and "how" answers. To gain a deeper understanding of their world, ask them to explain the "why" as well. Ask them to identify the assumptions that lead them to see the world the way they do. This will provide greater insight into your customers' needs while also strengthening the relationship.

Change your perspective to meet their needs.

Depending on what customers say, you may have to do a lot more than temporarily set aside your assumptions. You may have to discard them completely. Don't allow yourself to get caught in the trap of thinking, "Well, that was interesting but we've been doing this a long time so we know what's best for our customers." Or, "We hear what our customers are saying, but it doesn't apply to the way we do business."

Instead, look closely at how you define the value of your product or service and whether it truly aligns with your customer's perception of value. The wider the gap between the two, the more you need to shift your thinking. Ask, "If we shifted our perspective to match that of our customers, how would that change the way we serve our market? What would we need to do differently in order to deliver maximum value?" Once you've adjusted your perspective, keep your new definition of value visible at all times so that it guides organizational behaviors.

We all want to feel respected and heard, including customers. Building empathy meets that most basic human need while developing the relationships your organization needs to achieve its goals.

Consultant, Author, Speaker
Holly Green is the CEO of THE HUMAN FACTOR, Inc. ( www.thehumanfactor.biz ) She has over 20 years of executive level and operations experience in FORTUNE 100, entrepreneurial, and management consulting organizations.

Green's background stretches across strategic planning, organization design and development, and leadership assessment and development. She has been responsible for successfully designing and building critical infrastructures in several organizations and has worked as both an internal and external resource for multinational corporations including: AT&T, Dell Computer, Bass Hotels & Resorts, Expedia, RealNetworks, Microsoft and Google. She was previously president of The Ken Blanchard Companies, a global consulting and training organization, and the biotech firm LumMed.

Her commitment to educating executives on how to be effective leaders and managers in today's changing world is evident with a proven track record of value-added delivery. As a sought-after speaker and consultant, she has received national recognition and in 2007 was honored as a dynamic business leader and role model receiving the Women Who Mean Business Award.

Holly conducts more than 50 workshops annually for Vistage, the world's largest CEO membership organization. She is also a frequent keynote speaker for numerous corporate and professional associations. Her book, More Than A Minute: How To Be An Effective Leader & Manager In Today's Changing World ( www.MoreThanaMinute.com ) lends voice to her corporate experience and goes beyond the theory of leading and managing by providing practical action oriented information..

Holly has a BA in behavioral sciences and Master of Science degree in organizational development from American University in Washington, D.C. She is currently on staff at Webster University where she teaches courses in the graduate program. Holly also teaches for the University of California San Diego, Rady School of Management in the executive education program.


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/6328182

 

Government Agencies Ordered to Improve Customer Service

Government Agencies Ordered to Improve Customer Service
Angela Huffmon
President Obama ordered government agencies to develop a plan to improve customer service within 180 days. This means that by October 24, 2011 all public sector agencies should have a plan to use technology to improve their efficiency and customer service. This is good news for all Americans who must use their services every day.

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Effectively Solve Customer Disputes By Empowering Your Employees

Effectively Solve Customer Disputes By Empowering Your Employees
By Robbie Negron
Customer disputes will always arise even among the best performing companies. You may have an iron clad, well thought out processes to help you exceed customer's expectations and yet you will still have a certain percentage of customers that will have disputes with your service. So how can you quickly and effectively handle a customer dispute and leave the consumer happy and willing to stay with your company and even refer you after you made a mistake?
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Why Audience Size Should Not Affect Training Methods

Why Audience Size Should Not Affect Training Methods

By Deborah Laurel

There is a misconception that lecture is the only practical training method for training a large audience, particularly when the audience is seated in an auditorium or lecture hall. In fact, size has very little to do with the choice of a training method. The only impact that audience size should have is on the manner in which the selected training method is facilitated.
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How To Train Generation Y in Customer Service

How-To-Train-Generation-Y-in-Customer-Service
By Damien Clarke
There has been a definite change in the level of customer service over the years, both in what people expect from employees and what employees expect from customers. Technology has done much to shape the way that we interact with others and no where is this more apparent than in Generation Y.
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The Bigger Responsibility of Customer Service Support Representatives

The Bigger Responsibility of Customer Service Support Representatives
By Deborah C Campbell
The public's perception about the role of customer service representatives has changed through time. In the past, they are just often viewed as the last resort when an inquiry or complaint is needed. Today however, the responsibility that these live operators have is bigger and multi-dimensional.

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Outsourced Customer Service Could Be Better For Your Company

Outsourced Customer Service Could Be Better For Your Company
By Dean Novosat
Have you ever called customer service to a company, and you were transferred to another country? Well, if you have, then you have seen outsourced customer service in action.
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Call Center Etiquette Training

Call Center Etiquette Training
By Preston Mane 
A call center is like any other business in the sense that it measures its efficiency the way traditional businesses measure theirs. Generally, efficiency measures involve comparison of cost against revenues.

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Dealing With Irate Callers

Dealing With Irate Callers
By Hazel Rabor
So how exactly do you keep your cool when handling an angry caller and successfully pull strings to make him or her feel the reverse of what he or she was initially feeling?
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