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Silly
Service Has Its Serious Side: Test your Customer Service Knowledge!
KEY
1. D. Customers are often wrong but they
never stop being the customer. Right or wrong they are to be accorded
respect and cared for. Focus on the insights their complaint offers.
2. D. Complaining customers alert you to
systemic problems before they drive off more customers. Their complaints
represent many more customers who may not spend the time to tell you about
problems, instead just leaving you for your competitors.
3. C. Your staff deserves and thrive on
recognition and appreciation. Take the time to celebrate them collectively
and individually. Whether through cards, gifts, surprises, outings and
acknowledgements at company functions, let them know how important, valued
and appreciated they are to you and the company.
4. E. CRM refers to systems designed to track
and cater to each customer's whims and preferences over a lifetime. CRM is
about managing customer relationships over the long haul by attending to
their individual needs.
5. B. Complaining customers have several
needs. Implicit in their actual complaint is also a need to be heard and
their unhappiness acknowledged. Fixing the problem is important. So is
letting them know you understand their displeasure and feel for them. One
without the other is an incomplete remedy for customer complaints. Don't
forget the emotional component in complaints.
6. B and C. When
you solve a problem for a customer you actually build confidence and
allegiance. You've proven you stand behind your products or service,
giving customers a warm and fuzzy feeling of safety and protection. As
well, you tap the pulse of the customers. Their complaints and feedback
give valuable insight into how well your products are assembled,
documented, sold and hold up. Listening to customers tells you a great
deal about your company's products and services (and your competitors'
too) from real life customers. That's invaluable!
7. D. A Customer Service orientation must
transcend the service department. All departments must understand and
model good customer service for the company to be considered strong in
service. Many problems can be avoided outright by attending to customer
service. Why should the customer service department carry the weight of
service for the entire company. Don't operate under the adage "never
enough time to do it right but always enough time to do it over." Get it
right at the source, in all departments.
8. D. Make your call center is a shining
example of your company's commitment to its customers. Your center is a
visible symbol of your company's commitment to customer success.
9. D. Customer Care is a philosophy wherein
customers are cared for by a company - the entire time they're customers.
Care isn't just to be administered as a salve for problems. Demonstrate
care from the start and your customers will flock to your products and
services.
10. D. Customer Service Culture is the
infusion of service ideals into every department, from sales, shipping and
receiving to legal, human resources and beyond. |