5 Steps
to Creating a Great Customer Experience
To be successful over the long-term, your business needs to have profitable
customers who come back again and again and again. For that to happen,
your customers must have a great experience every time they do business
with you.
As I reported in the last issue ofCustomer Excellence, this does not
appear to be happening. Results from studies around the Western world
show that large numbers of customers are very unhappy with how they are
being treated. What is staggering is not what upsets customers but the
number who are upset. For example, 90% of British consumers who made a
complaint last year were unhappy with the way the complaint was handled.
Another study showed that 82% of people who used a call centre said they
had to wait too long. In that same study, 77% complained about having
to repeat their story to different people, and after all that, 70% said
they did not get their problem solved.
In the same issue of Customer Excellence , Paul Linnell reported that
his New Zealand banking survey found that approximately half of all bank
customers had a problem with their bank last year. Only about half of
these people thought it was worth complaining to their bank and of those
who did complain, only 42% were satisfied with the way their complaint
was handled. Indeed, at the time of the survey, 44% still had not had
their problem resolved. Linnell argues this poor performance not only
reduces customer loyalty puts up to18%of a bank's profits at risk.
Since then, I've seen a global study showing that customer satisfaction
with airlines is at a 15 year low and another British study where only
one out of eight companies gave service their customers rated as excellent.
Call centre customers are not that generous. In a recent study, not one
customer surveyed said they had had an excellent call centre experience.
Fifty percent described the service they experienced as poor or very poor.
Companies appear to perform just as poorly when responding to emailed
sales leads. Fourteen percent of such emails are never answered, and the
companies that do respond take on average four days to send a standard
automated response.
We should not think that New Zealand businesses perform any better.
The business section of the October 9th, 2005 issue of the Sunday Star
Times, contained a summary of a New Zealand study by Rainger and Brunton,
showing that 42% of New Zealanders changed suppliers last year because
of poor customer service. More alarmingly, a significant percentage of
customers said customer service is deteriorating in New Zealand. One customer
was even reported as saying that the level of service is so bad that, “you
can understand how people become violent!”
Why are customers so unhappy? Is what they expect unreasonable? Are
their demands so great it would be impossible to satisfy them?
Just exactly what do we have to do to provide a great experience for
our customers? Here are five steps guaranteed to create an experience
your customers would have no hesitation in describing as 'great.'
Step 1: Understand what your customers want.
Ironically, it is not that difficult to create a great customer experience
because customers do not want much. AnAmerican study by IBM found that
customers simply want fast and friendly service by someone who is knowledgeable.
They would also like the service to be personalised because, not surprisingly,
people do not like being treated like one of a mass.
Pat Waite, chief executive at Public Trust, says their research shows
customers want to deal with companies that are honest, that they can trust
and that make them feel safe. They want to be treated with respect and
have their transactions treated confidentially. Customers also want to
feel the person they are dealing with will do what they say they are going
to do and cares about looking after the customer's interests not those
of the company.
If you did these few simple things, you would be well on your way to
creating a good customer experience. But studies like these give you only
broad indicators of how customers want to be treated. If you want to create
a great experience for your customers, you must get to know your customers
better so you can tailor the experience they receive to match their particular
expectations.
When you do get a more in-depth understanding of your customers' preferences,
you will quickly find that one size does not fit all and this will help
you understand why so many customers say that service is poor. On the
other hand, you will not find that every single customer has totally different
expectations. What you will discover is that you can segment your customers
according to how they would like to be treated, and this will make it
possible for you to 'customise' the experience each segment has when doing
business with you. This will lead to a better match between what an individual
customer would like to experience and what they actually experience when
they do business with you.
For your top customers, you might even be able to customise the experience
for each individual.Your customers would certainly notice that if you
did. I think treating each high value customer the way they would like
to be treated would result in them believing they had received a great
experience.
Step 2: Get the basics right.
I commonly hear senior managers exhort their staff to “delight” their
customers by exceeding their expectations when the reality is the business
falls a long way short of even meeting their customers' expectations because
they cannot get the basics right.
Customers want results - not excuses, justifications, explanations
or even apologies. They simply want the right product in the right place
at the right time in the promised condition. They want the bill to be
correct, and when they have paid, they would like their account to be
credited with the right amount. When customers telephone, they would like
to get through to a staff member without spending a long time listening
to recorded music, the local radio station or messages promoting the company's
other products. If they do have to leave a message, they would like their
call returned. When they send an email, they would like a reply preferably
within a period where they can still remember why they emailed you. They
would like you to use their correct name when you talk to them and they
would like you to know about their previous transactions with the company.
Customers want their suppliers to be reliable and trustworthy. That means
you need to do all these things consistently, not just occasionally.
If you want to get the basics right, you have to succeed in two areas.You
must have: 1. Robust processes and systems. 2. The right people doing
the right things. Robust processes are both effective (they produce what
the customer wants) and they are efficient (there is minimum waste). The
route to developing efficient and effective processes is through quality
assurance. Remember TQM, ISO 9002, Kaizen and the other tools of quality
management? They are not flavour of the month any more but that does not
mean they are any less relevant or effective today. If you are not currently
practising the principles of quality management, dust off some of your
old books and re-visit their content.
Every business has processes. You may understand your processes or
you may not. They may be documented or in people's heads. They may be
under control or highly variable. But you will have processes. They are
the way work gets done.
Aprocess is a series of activities that has a start point and an end
point. A process has inputs and outputs. For a process to operate well,
the activities must occur in a certain order and be performed to a certain
standard. Robust processes are owned by one person, documented and in
control. The team operating robust processes understands how the process
operates (not just their particular job), measures its performance through
KPIs, and is constantly working to improve the performance of their process.
You neglect this area at your peril. Processes are the engines that
drive your business and no business can outperform faulty processes. Customers
expect you to do what you say you are going to do and in this competitive
market I bet that to get their business you have been telling them you
can do some pretty amazing things. If you do not deliver on these promises,
they will not believe doing business with you was a great experience.
Customer-driven organisations know that customers are their business
and that processes are the engines that drive their companies. They also
understand, as Ray Kroc, the founder of McDonald's used to say, people
make it happen. If you want the right things happening in your company,
you need the right people doing the right things.
Getting the right people doing the right things starts by understanding
the experience your customers want to have when they do business with
you (see Step 1). Then you need to identify the skills, knowledge, attitudes
and behaviours that will produce that experience. Next you must identify
the attributes all employees need to have, from the chief executive to
the most junior part-timer, if your customers are going to get that experience.
Finally, hire those people.
When recruiting new staff, do not under-estimate the power of attitude.
Herb Kelleher, the founder of Southwest Airlines, the only airline in
the world that has made a profit every year since it began, used to say, “Hire
for attitude and train for skill.” He is right. It is relatively easy
to teach people skills. It is much harder to change their attitude.
Once you have the right people, you need them to do the right things.
Make sure they understand how your customers wish to be treated and also
their expectations and preferences. Then recognise effort, reward success
and celebrate achievement. Do not wait for perfect performance from your
staff before you praise them. You will be waiting a long time and while
you are waiting, your customers will have gone somewhere else. It is also
important to recognise people when they try to get it right and help them
to learn from theirmistakes. If you build robust processes and have the
right people doing the right things, you will get the basics right.At
this point, your customerswill start to enjoy doing business with you.
The next step is to make dealingwith you an absolute pleasure.
Step 3: Make it a pleasure for them to do business with you.
Having a customer is a privilege.Without them, your company would have
no revenue and your staff no pay cheques. Yet human nature being what
it is, we tend to focus on the tasks we have to complete and see customers
as being a distraction or even a nuisance because they take our time and
our energy. Even people who have nothing to do but look after customers
can fall into the trap of seeing a customer with a special need or difficult
problem as someone who is stopping them from serving other customers.
And customers with a complaint are seen by most of us as a threat, someone
to be got rid of quickly.
But if you work out the lifetime value of your customers, you will
count yourself lucky to have them and as a result, you will build an organisation
that works for your customers, not one that makes your customers work
for your organisation.You will do things quickly and you will make it
easy for your customers to do business with you. You will create policies
and processes that ensure your customers are looked after and not ones
that protect the company against your customers. You will put your customers
in the centre of your world (probably on a pedestal) and learn as much
about them as you possibly can. You will then use this information to
change the way you run your business so it works better for your customer
tomorrow than it did yesterday.
If your staff understand that it is the customers who are paying their
wages, they will be glad to see them. They will treat them with respect
and they will be focused on their customers and not on what they will
be having for lunch. Through their facial expression, body language, tone
of voice and general behaviour, they will show their customers they are
delighted to have the opportunity to help them and your customers will
feel valued as a result. The attitude of your staff will be 'can do will
do' and they will be keen to do whatever it takes to satisfy your customers,
happily going the extra mile if that is what is needed.
Encourage your staff to think like your customers not about them. I
have listened to a lot of customers in my lifetime and I know that what
separates a great experience from an ordinary one is whether staff show
compassion, patience and empathy. If your staff can put themselves in
their customers shoes before they make a decision, take an action or even
open their mouths, they are likely to make doing business with your company
a pleasure.
People want to do business with companies they like. Does your company
have a likable personality in the eyes of your customers? How do they
want you to look? Does your image match that? What do they want you to
support? Does your sponsorship programme reflect that? How do they want
you to act? Is your behaviour consistent with that?
If your customers find themselves dealing with a company with whom
it is easy to do business, with staff who are delighted to see them and
care about their interests, and with an organisation whose personality
they like, then they will find doing business with you to be a pleasure.
Getting them to come back to buy again will be easy, and pricewill not
be the issue.
Step 4: 'Wow' them.
When you have got the basics right and created an organisation that
people like and enjoy doing business with, then you can aim to delight
or 'Wow' your customers.
The secret to delighting your customers is to look for problems they
would love you to solve, but cannot reasonably expect that you would,
and then when you do, you will knock their socks off. For example, I once
got into a taxi at the Toronto airport in Canada. It was the first taxi
off the rank, not a special order. I found myself in a Ford LTD, which
is a large luxury car, with a driver wearing a jacket and tie.As we left
the airport and got on the highway, he told me that if I wanted to catch
up on the news, there were three daily newspapers in the seat pocket in
front of me. Then he askedmewhat kind of music I liked.
“Why do you ask?” I answered.
“Because I'll put it on the radio for you,” he said. “Would you like
classical music, jazz, pop, rock, country and western, blues, talk-back
radio, or shall I leave it off?”
I said jazz would be good. “Would you like something to drink,” he
asked a few minutes later. “A cup of tea or coffee?”
I said coffee would be nice, thank you. “Do you prefer regular or decaffeinated
coffee?”
“Regular, please.”
“Would you like milk or cream?”
“Milk, please.”
“Sugar?”
“No thank you.”
I did have to pour my own cup of coffee. He has not yet figured out
how to drive at 150 kph down a 16 lane highway and pour the coffee but
it was no trouble for me to fill the Styrofoam cup from the pump thermos
and pour in a little container of milk.
Now, that is what I call delighting the customer. You do not climb
into a taxi and say: “I'd like the daily paper, jazz on the radio and
a cup of coffeewith milk, please.” But when you get it, you think, 'Wow!
That was magic!'
How do you find these problems? Ask your customers. They will tell
you everything you need to know to succeed.Ask them what they are trying
to do and which problems are hampering them from doing that. Make sure
you do not talk about your products and services. Talk about their business.
You could also invite your customers to talk to your staff about these
things so your staff can hear it straight from the horse's mouth. Your
staff might be able to think of things you could do to help your customers
that you have missed. For the same reason, send your staff out to visit
your customers in their workplace so they can see first hand what difficulties
your customers encounter trying to satisfy their customers. Or even go
one step further and talk to your customers' customers. Try to learn what
opportunities your customers have to add value to their customers that
they are not seeing and help them to develop those opportunities.
If you delight your customers on a regular basis, they will certainly
find doing business with you a pleasure. But a word of caution, do not
try to delight your customers until you can get the basics right. You
will only end up making them angry.
Step 5: Make your customers successful.
The ultimate great experience is when your customer does not just enjoy
doing business with you, or is even amazed by what you can do for them
on one or two occasions, but when they see that what you can do for them
is critical to their own success. When this happens, you will not have
loyal customers, you will have business partners.
We aim too low. I believe that one of the reasons customers get a bad
experience is because we try to give them good customer service. We sit
inside our businesses and dream up things we think our customers would
like us to do and then spend time, effort and money doing them. The trouble
is, often what we do is not what our customers want us to do. For example,
I regularly stay at four and five star hotels all over the world. I have
noticed that all of them, even in countries like Brazil, fold the first
sheet on the roll of toilet paper into a point. Now I do not know about
you, but I rarely have the need for such accuracy! I often wonder how
much it costs each year in a country like New Zealand to do that.And every
time I have to wait in line to check in or out because there are too few
people serving at the desk, I think to myself,“We are waiting because
most of the staff are up in the rooms folding the toilet paper!”
When we think about giving our customers good service, we sit in our
world and look out. What we should be doing, of course, is standing in
our customers' shoes and looking back in to our business. We must use
our scarce resources wisely and that means providing products and services
that our customers value, not ones we think are a good idea.
It is better to focus on customer satisfaction than customer service.
Satisfaction is the feeling we get when our needs are met, so if you aim
to satisfy your customers, you will have to get out of your world and
into theirs and find out what their needs are. More importantly, you will
have to measure your performance, not by looking at what you have done,
but by finding out how your customers about what you have done. That is
a big difference. What do you measure to see whether you have had a good
day, week or month? I bet nearly all of them relate to activities, things
that you do. feel
How often do you go to your customers to learn whether they are satisfied
with what you do? This is important, because whether your customers are
prepared to pay the prices you need to charge to be profitable, and whether
they will return to buy again, is dependent on how they feel, not on what
you did.
It is not what you do that matters. It is how your customers feel about
what you have done.
But even satisfying your customers is not enough because even satisfied
customers defect. In fact, research shows that up to 86% of customers
who switched suppliers were happy at the time they defected!
Why would a happy customer take their business somewhere else? Because
when you satisfy a customer, you give them what they expect, and when
you give someone what they expect to receive, they do not notice it. When
you last ate at a restaurant, for example, were you impressed with the
fact they provided tables and chairs for you to sit at? Or served the
food on plates? Or gave you knives and forks to use? Of course not. Did
it cost the restaurant owner time, effort and money to provide these things
for you? Certainly. Would you have been upset if they had not had these
amenities? You bet! By providing these products and services, the business
incurred a cost and gained a customer who did not even notice what they
had done for them. The customer was satisfied but unimpressed.
There are two types of customers: Those who are in business and those
who are consumers. Business people are trying to increase their profits
and consumers are trying to maintain or enhance a certain lifestyle for
themselves and their families. You can make your customers successful
if you focus on helping your customers to achieve the lifestyle they want
and/or to improve the profitability of their businesses.
Business is tough but it is not complicated. Successful companies have
profitable customers who stay with them for a long time. For that to happen,
their customers must have a great experience every time they do business
with the company.
Focus on the five steps I have outlined in this article and your customers
will get a different experience from what they received in the past from
either you or your competitors. When they realise that, you will experience
a difference in their willingness to pay your prices and in their desire
to do even more business with you.
And that has got to be good for your business.
|