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Five Secrets to Showing Your Customers You Really Care


Five Secrets to Showing Your Customers You Really Care
By Ed Sykes

During our recent online poll, we asked the following
question:

What upsets you the most when receiving poor customer
service?

Eighty percent of the poll participants said the “I don’t care
attitude” of the person serving them upsets them the most.

Businesses lose billions of dollars of revenue each year
because customers feel the organizations don’t care about
their business enough to make an effort to keep them. It
takes five times more effort to win over a new customer than
to keep an existing customer.

Then why does this happen? No training or poor training
has a lot to do with it.

Here are five secrets to showing your customers you really
do care about their situations when interacting with them:

1. Listen!

Take the time to listen to the “pain” the customer is trying to
share with you. There is a reason why we have two ears and
one mouth. Listen for the content and not the method of
communication the customer is using. Use active listen skills
such as

* Nodding your head

* Leaning forward to show interest

* Saying “I hear what you saying,” “I see what you mean,”
or “tell me more”

* Stop doing something else and devoted all your attention
to listening.

* Look at the customer

* Be patience and not interrupt the customer before adding
your thoughts

You might be the first person that day that took time to listen
to that person. Make the most of it.

2. Respond

Respond to the customer in the following ways:

* Use inflection in your voice (avoid sounding monotone)

* Don’t use “whatever,” “yeah, right,” “if you say so”

3. Check your body language

Make sure your body language is saying to the customer, “I
want to help you.” Make sure you are doing the following:

* Smile

* Stand erect

* Hands at your side, but never on your hips

* Avoid leaning against the counter or slouching in the chair
(especially while speaking on the telephone as the customer
can hear your disinterest)

* Look and act alive

4. Show Empathy (Understand the Pain)

Show the customers that you understand their “pain.” Make
comments such as

“I can understand why you would feel that way.”

“If I were in your shoes I would feel the same way”

“I would be disappointed, too, if that happened to me.”

Most customers just want to be listened to and understood.
Show them that you understand their “pain” and solution
come much earlier.

5. Commit to Action

Let the customer know that action will be taken; and then
act. One without the other is just a broken promise. Share
with the customer your clear plan of action such as the
following:

“I am personally going to take care of this for you. What we
are going to do is…”

“I need to get additional information before I take care of this
for you. I am going to talk with my manager. Would you
mind waiting?”

These are just some of the tools you can use to keep your
customers happy and increase revenues. Apply them today
to show that you care about your customers.

Ed Sykes is a professional speaker, author, and success
coach in the areas of leadership, motivation, stress
management, customer service, and team building. You can
e-mail him at mailto:esykes@thesykesgrp.com, or call him at
(757) 427-7032. Go to his web site,
http://www.thesykesgrp.com, and signup for the newsletter,
OnPoint, and receive the free ebook, “Secrets, Stories, and
Tips for Marvelous Customer Service.”

For more articles please visit:

http://Mortgage-Training.Mortgage-Leads-Generator.com

Discover how to make over $50,000 a month
working part-time (10–15 hours per week)
in the mortgage business:
www.Mortgage-Leads-Generator.com

This entry was posted on Tuesday, November 8th, 2005 at 2:42 pm and is filed under Customer Service. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site. Permanent Link to Post

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