Fostering Customer-Focused Innovation
Is your business customer focused? Customers buy from businesses with
which they enjoy interacting. Successful businesses continually look
for ways to stay in touch with their customers and to improve their
customer relations. There are many ways to do this. Business owners
and managers must talk regularly with employees who are in contact with
customers on a daily basis. Customer service representatives have first-hand
knowledge of the customer service issues pertaining to your business.
They also know how and what your customers are thinking. Be sure to
listen to your employees when it comes to making customer service improvements
in your organization.
Does your business make it easy for customers to complain? The days
of putting a complaint box by the door are long gone; research shows
that more than 90 percent of customers who stop buying from a business
will never tell the business why they stopped. Customer-focused businesses
are pro-active and seek answers from their customers. Successful businesses
gather information directly from their customers by using periodic surveys,
focus groups and informal conversations with customers. Company web
sites can be an excellent tool for gathering customer information. It
is critical that businesses use this captured information to look for
trends. Does this information indicate a change in customer needs? If
so, act quickly to find ways to meet your customer's needs. Research
also shows that 95 percent of dissatisfied customers will become loyal
customers if their complaints are resolved and handled quickly. Customer-focused
businesses apply creative strategies to customer problems and deal with
them promptly and decisively.
Customer-focused businesses develop strategies to "WOW" the
customer. Wowing is nothing more than exceeding your customer's expectations.
Wowing the customer can sometimes be as easy as following up with a
phone call or email to make sure that a customer service issue has been
resolved to your customer's satisfaction. However, "wowing"
your customer in some instances may be much more involved. In this instance,
someone from the organization will take a personal interest in the customer
service issue to ensure that the problem is understood and the appropriate
solution has been developed to prevent the problem from re-occurring.
In this case, this demonstrates to the customer that the problem was
an anomaly and not the business's standard mode of operation.
Losing customers as a result of a customer service issue is expensive.
A basic customer service rule is that it is five times more expensive
to attract a new customer than it is to keep an existing customer. Customer-focused
organizations recognize and reward their employees for ideas resulting
in improved customer retention. Can your business improve its bottom
line by becoming more customer-focused?
Send this article to a friend
Authored by: Virgil Woolridge, Business and Industry
Specialist, University of Missouri Extension
Source: Creating Quality Newsletter, Volume
13, Number 4, April 2004
go
back
Newsletter archives: 2004
| 2003
| 2002
| 2001