Download funny dance video from YouTube


Loading Java applet...


To download videos, please click 'Run' when prompted.
Tick the box 'Always trust content from this publisher' to download seamlessly in the future.
It appears you do not have Java installed or it is disabled on your system.
You can get Java here.

How to Keep Customers

Who was it that said - "The customer is always right"? Well for those of you who can't get through the day without knowing, it was H Gordon Selfridge, the founder of Selfridges's department store in London.

The question I want answered is; did he ever work with customers on day-to-day basis and if so, was he some kind of saint?

Let's face it; customers can be a real pain in the neck. You move heaven and earth for them, you respond to their every whim, you give them time to pay and they still try to screw your prices down.

Just when you've done all that, they leave you and start buying from one of your competitors.

Wouldn't running a business be a whole lot better if we didn't have customers? Well, as we know only too well, we do need customers and lots of them. We want them to stay with us and we want them to say nice things about us to other people.

We also want them to pay us on time and accept the fact that we might be a bit more expensive than others.

So how do we perform this miracle? It's dead easy really; you only have to consider two factors: be reliable and be likeable. First off, let's consider what we mean by being reliable.

Reliability is about your product or service doing what you say it will do. It comes in two parts, the first part being: doing it right first time and doing it on time. If you can't get this bit right then you're going to have big problems. Customers will accept the occasional mistake, but too many and you've had it, so let's look a bit closer at reliability.

We've come a long way in recent years in terms of product and core service reliability. Nowadays when people buy a product or service they expect it to work. You don't buy a computer, a washing machine or an automobile and worry that it might not work. You know that it will. You also know that if it didn't, it would be replaced without quibble. The only thing is, that if you deliver this type of reliability in your business then don't expect any brownie points from your customers, they merely take it for granted. Where you are more likely to slip up in the reliability stakes (and this is the second part) is in what some people still regard as minor issues:

*Failing to phone back when we said we would;

*Failing to deliver when we said we would;

*Failing to send information when we said we would;

*Failing to include something extra when we said we would.

The ironic thing is that some customers often regard these failures as quite normal. However, these people won't stay with you, they don't say nice things about you to other people and they'll complain about your prices.

If you say you'll phone a customer back by 5pm then phone before 4pm not the following day. If you say someone will call between 9am and 12noon, then do everything you can to ensure that someone calls closer to nine than 12. Don't think for a minute that calling at 11.55 impresses the customer because it doesn't. So let's just repeat it so there's no misunderstanding later on: firstly your product or service has got to be reliable, secondly, everything you say to the customer has to be reliable.

However, I believe that more than anything you, your product or service and your people have to be likeable.

Too many organisations forget that their customers are humans and the thing about humans is that they don't always make decisions logically. You may have a reliable product or service, reliable delivery time and competitive prices. But it's not enough.

Customers are driven by their emotions and it helps a heck of a lot if they like you and feel good about your business and your people.

"Our customers do like us," I hear you say, "except maybe the difficult ones, the awkward people, the ones who are never happy, the miserable devils - need I go on? Have you ever heard the saying "you only get the customers you deserve"?

Run your eye down the following list and see how many you can tick off.

*We always have a genuine smile for every customer.

*We are warm and friendly to all customers.

*We listen carefully and make it obvious that we are listening.

*We use the customers name and our name appropriately.

*We give the impression that we care.

*We empathise with problems or complaints and respond quickly.

*We occasionally do something to pleasantly surprise the customer.

*We always keep our promises.

*We give the impression that we are fun to deal with.

*We treat the customer the way they want to be treated, not the way we want to be treated.

How well did you do? If you've got a lot of ticks then you probably have lots of customers who like you. Just a word to the managers and employers amongst you. Run your eyes down that list again and replace the word "customer" with the words "employee" or "staff colleague." How many ticks did you get this time? Lots of ticks mean your staff like you and it probably follows that your customers do as well.

Have you noticed how being likeable costs so little? A lot less than advertising or other promotional activity required to replace lost customers.

Maybe the customer isn't always right, but if you want to keep them, make sure they like you.

Discover how you can generate more business without having to cold call! Alan Fairweather is the author of "How to get More Sales without Selling" This book is packed with practical things that you can do to ? get customers to come to you . Click here now http://www.howtogetmoresales.com/Witho ut%20Selling.htm




Automating Your Customer Support

My regular readers will know that one of the things... Read More

The Importance of Good Customer Service

Do you have good customer service? Even for your free... Read More

Turning Customer Mistakes Into Raving Fans

When you make a mistake with a customer, should you... Read More

Attitude of Service

When conducting a training session about customer service, I always... Read More

Why Passenger Surveys are a Transport Operators Best Friend

Public transport operators who already use passenger surveys may not... Read More

Customer Service Has Moved Toward Customer Care

As I waited for an answer to my VCR inquiry... Read More

Customers - Hold Onto the Ones Youve Got

You probably spend a great deal of your time looking... Read More

Customer Loyalty

Loyal customers are the foundation of almost every business. Going... Read More

How to Walk the Floor and Talk to Customers

This may seem a strange topic to introduce. Yet, it... Read More

What?s in a Name?

Different people call their Customers by different names. If they... Read More

Customer Service Tips for Mail Order Businesses

Can we be too good to our customers?... Read More

Managing Your Business When One Client Takes Alot of Your Time

How often has your schedule been thrown out of whack... Read More

Have You Hugged a Customer Today?

It all started a couple of weeks ago when a... Read More

Cheap To Keep

You've heard it all before when it comes to stats... Read More

Sorry, No Customer Service After 4:00 P.M.

A few months ago, I wrote about ingenious styles of... Read More

Retail Store U-Scan Machines: Self-Serve or Voluntary Part Time Job?

Do many of us realize that we are working an... Read More

Customer Satisfaction Is Your Business

Regardless of what business you are in - you are... Read More

Dont Work with Jerks: How to Recognize a Difficult Client Early

Five minutes into the call I knew this client was... Read More

Write a Business Thank-You Note

Have you seen that thing on TV where the gal... Read More

Reducing Customer Resistance to Your Product or Service

Resistance has to do with putting up blocks that prevent... Read More

Writing The Book On Great Customer Service

Q: One of the big chain bookstores recently opened up... Read More

Are You Putting Technology Before Your Customers?

Which is more important the technology or the customer?The one... Read More

Restaurant Owners ? How Important are People Skills?

You are serving great food. Your establishment is new, spotless... Read More

RETAIL GREETERS: Sales Builders or Customer Turnoff?

Do you need greeters or should you avoid them? That... Read More

Customer Service - A Lost Art?

Is customer service a lost art? Before you answer that... Read More