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Do Customers Trust Your Website?
How often do you think about trust in terms of your website? You think about the content you put on it, the look and feel, the quality of the messaging. But if visitors to your website don't trust you, they won't become your customers.
How...
Home Equity Loans Company - 7 Key Questions to Help You Choose One
Choosing the right home equity loan can be tricky; you have to consider interest rates and repayment schedules, among others. Choosing the right lender, however, does not have to be a difficult task. If you ask the right questions, you can pick...
How to Build Great Customer Relationships Via Phone
Business is about creating and maintaining customer relationships. But what is a relationship? It means communication. If you ask people in a work setting, "What would improve work, profits and customer service the most where you work?" the answer...
Improvingcustomer service in large stock registrar cmpany
ROBLEM The organization was always working under a crisis mode, with the managers feeling pressured and "under the gun". There was discord and resentment among the manager team, which reflected in the employees. Re-work and bureaucracy were...
Online Credit Card Application: the Easiest Way to a Customer's Heart
Many credit cards are offered in the market today thus, making
companies more aggressive in advertising and marketing their
card services. These companies (e.g. banks, department stores,
specialty stores, airlines, hotels, etc.) have found a...
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Sit Customer Sit - "How did customers get so trained?"
“I need that shipped overnight!” “I need that delivered today!” “Drop it off to me on your way home?” “I do not want to pay a Restocking charge!”
Do these all sound familiar? I‘d be willing to bet you can come up with a book full of the things your customers expect. But where do they get the audacity to expect, the sometimes unreasonable? Right from you! Your competitors did not raise the customer service bar, you did. Everyday your call center personnel make promises to customers that raise the bar even higher. But isn’t that what you want? Don’t you want your people to respond wonderfully to those, “Moments of Truth?” Your people are merely doing what they have been taught, just like your customers.
How do you respond to an irate customer who received an incorrect shipment? Don’t we ship the product Next Day Air to make up for the error? Or maybe, we drop everything and make a special delivery to them. How do we respond to a customer who has ordered the incorrect item? We often handle it the same way as when it is our mistake. We do not want to upset a customer, especially in today’s market. Therefore we are training the customer to think, whenever there is an error it will be resolved free of charge. The question that must be asked is, “What is the problem with this?” Nothing, if you or your customers don’t make a lot of mistakes.
How is your warehouse these days? I have been told these are hard times? Is that true for your company or your industry? If these are truly difficult times doesn’t that mean every mistake costs you dearly? Doesn’t that also mean each mistake costs your customer even more? You are probably asking yourself, how this article shifted to your warehouse so quickly. Think about it, a shipping error is magnified in economic downturns. Why? Because, if your customer has been thinking of changing suppliers now is the time to do it. Or at least fake like they are going to change so they can get a deeper discount. Again, the customer training process takes place. Shipping is the last non verbal way we communicate to our customers. What are you communicating to your customers? Your Marketing material, your Website, your Catalogue are all tools to get you new business. Your warehouse is the one tool you have to maintain your current level of business. If you don’t believe that ask yourself this question, “How many of your customers do your sales personnel visit on a regular basis?” Think about the “Pareto Principal”, not many! That means your customers perception of your company is formed from the packages that arrive at their receiving dock. What do you think they perceive?
This month’s focus, “Is Customer Loyalty a Thing of the Past”, is an interesting one. Customer loyalty began fading when the, “Mom and Pop” shop, got to big to know the customer. Loyalty is quickly becoming a thing of the past with the evolution of the internet. The customer doesn’t need to know who they are buying from. They just want: what they ordered, when it was promised and for a competitive price. If they decide to buy from you the next time it will be based on whether you did at least two of the things I just mentioned. If not, you have just trained them to buy someplace else. Is that being disloyal, “I do not
think so!” Being a consumer I choose to do business with the company that meets my needs. I will only give my hard earned dollars to the organization that gets me what I want, when I want it and at a competitive price. This means your warehouse is training your customers to be, “Loyal or Lethal”. Many individuals will continue to patronize you place of business even if the price is a little high. But they will only do this if their other two needs are being met. If your competitor does not have an accurate inventory therefore does not deliver on time, you have an advantage when price becomes an issue. However, if your sales personnel train them to expect a lower price for the business, what happens when you cannot beat the competitions price? You don’t have a leg to stand on. Your company does not compete for the business you get, “Your Warehouse Does!” Your company does not lose customers, “Your Warehouse Does!” Your company can no longer afford to look outward for answers to keep your customers loyal; it has to look inward at your warehouse.
Your people will not treat your customers better then they are being treated! If that statement is true, and you believe your warehouse plays a valuable role in maintaining your current customer base, then ask yourself this question. How do you treat your warehouse? Do you have a lot of turnover? If so, then how can we expect our customers to be loyal when we can’t even get our employees to remain loyal? Edward Deming said, “Our prevailing system of management has destroyed our people!” And, Albert Einstein said, “You can’t solve a problem with the same mind that created it!” It is time to adopt a new way of thinking about our organizations. We must view the total experience of the customer and not just total value of their account. If we look at that experience: CC + TIS + AI + TAOF + PNP + OTS + CI + OTOA = PO (Customer Contact + Timely Information and Solution + Available Inventory + Timely and Accurate Order Fill + Proper and Neat Packaging + On Time Shipping + Correct Invoicing + On Time Order Arrival = Perfect Order).
Of the eight steps in this experience your warehouse is responsible for five of them. This means if your customers are not loyal which one of the five areas in their experience did they have a problem with. If they remain loyal it is because your warehouse has trained them to be. We often hear that the difference between a median and a high performing company is the sum of, “Many Little Things!” It is actually one thing, your warehouse, which does many little things. In this age or computers, the internet, buying groups and even war, a customer’s loyalty should not be questioned. What should be questioned is how they became the way they are? And the answer to that question is, “Because We Taught Them To Be!”
About the Author
Rene’ Jones was the founder and President of Total Logistics Solutions, Inc. (www.logisticsociety.com). He is now taking on a new role as President and CEO of AHN Corporation (www.ahninc.com). He is the author of, “This Place Sucks” (What Your Warehouse People Think About Your Company) and “Warehouse 101” (A Complete Guide to Operating Your Warehouse)”. Rene’ can be reached by phone at (818) 353-2962 or by email at rene.jones@ahninc.com
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