Customer Experience Tip #1579
After thoughtfully onboarding a new employee, ask them to share with you how that felt for them. Make it clear that you are equally committed to having every customer feel completely taken care of as well.
Engineering the Customer Experience
Customer Experience Tip #1579
After thoughtfully onboarding a new employee, ask them to share with you how that felt for them. Make it clear that you are equally committed to having every customer feel completely taken care of as well.
Customer Experience Tip #1578
If you can handle your most challenging customers with patience and kindness, everyone else should be a breeze to work with. Have the most difficult conversations first.
Customer Experience Tip #1577
While first impressions are critical, if your demeanor declines after a customer has chosen you and your company, you’re going to leave that customer feeling very unsettled and unsure about continuing with you. #ConsistencyBreedsLoyalty
Customer Experience Tip #1576
Saying to a customer (in response to their negative experience), “This has never happened before!” might make you feel better for saying it, but it does nothing for the customer. In fact, it has the potential to make them feel even worse to know that they are all alone.
Customer Experience Tip #1575
Ask your team, “What’s the #1 reason our best customers and clients remain loyal to us?” Follow-up question: “How can we be even MORE like that?” #CXawareness
Customer Experience Tip #1574
“So, who had a great experience (as a customer) over the weekend; what made it great?” might be a great conversation-starter for your team today. #CXawareness
Customer Experience Tip #1573
“The more people you can make feel like they cannot live without your brand, the closer you are to making price irrelevant.” –John DiJulius
Customer Experience Tip #1572
If you’re the reactive type but you’re able to cool off fairly quickly, then be sure to (whenever possible) build in this type of buffer between stimulus and response when a customer has pushed your buttons: “I’m going to ask that you hold that thought for a brief moment and I’ll be right back.”
Customer Experience Tip #1571
“They are patient with me, but I can almost feel an eye-roll coming on.”
“They help me because they have to; it’s their job.”
“They always give me the time and attention I need because they care.”
“They tolerate me, but I can tell they don’t really like me.”
What might your more needy clients say about you?
Customer Experience Tip #1570
Every change is an inconvenience until it becomes a habit. What new customer experience habit will you (and your team) begin to create today?
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