Is Your Front Line Customer Service Team Likeable?

At Shoppers, Inc. we are very passionate about great customer service, measurement, and teamwork.  The article below from Teresa Allen about “Is Your Front Line Customer Service Team Likeable?” relates to our goals and passions.  Hope you enjoy it!

Is Your Front Line Customer Service Team Likeable?

What are the factors that make a front-line employee as likable and does this impact your business success? Here are just a few common-sense factors that I have seen in my 25 years of observing and training customer service team members:​

    1. Smiling and Friendly
    2. Attentive
    3. Knowledgeable about Products & Services
    4. Sincerely Willing to Help
    5. Thankful

Let’s look at each of these and see where we need to enhance our efforts…

​​Smiling and Friendly
​If there was ever any common sense it would be to hire friendly people to serve customers! But what gets in the way of that? Several things come to mind. For one, in a booming economy, the pool of available workers is tight leading us to take ‘whatever we can get’. This is a dangerous strategy as our good times prepare us for the roller coaster that inevitably will arrive. If we have not identified the qualities that are non-negotiable, we may hire people that are a turn-off to customers and cause us to lose business. When speaking for HR groups on customer service I point out that noticing the first seconds of a call or in-person interview with a prospective employee is critical. A few seconds is all that your customer will take to determine if they like the person ‘across the counter’. HR law today is so complex that this is often overlooked in the effort to avoid a lawsuit! The other hiring issue is that many firms eliminate a vast number of employees through algorithms used in the search process. While this is important, it may also eliminate a person who would shine in a REAL encounter with a human being.
Once hired, the training department must have a way to convey the importance of friendliness that starts with a smile. But caution should be used as a smile with an upset customer is as bad as a lack of a smile in a standard interaction. The bottom line is that people do business with people they like. HIRE likable people and train them in the fine points of making the customer feel welcome at all points on the customer journey.

Attentive
We have all been in customer service transactions where the person serving us is either completely inattentive or simply distracted. Whether on the phone, online or in-person, a customer must feel that they are the center of attention. I will never forget the story a friend relayed to me years ago about going to a department store with her young son to buy some linens. It just so happened that the toy department was adjacent to the linen department. As she was handling her purchase, she heard her son speaking loudly. She turned around just in time to see her son holding a stuffed animal, looking it squarely in the face and shouting, “Look at me, LOOK AT ME!” Obviously, the young boy had heard his mother saying that to him on previous occasions. Our customers are silently saying “PAY ATTENTION TO ME… I am paying your salary!” Personalizing attentiveness by asking the customer’s name and then using it is critical to making the customer feel important and valued.

Knowledgeable about Products & Services
It would seem that training employees on product and service attributes would be common sense. Why is it then, that many of us ask questions of an employee only to be told they don’t know. The likelihood of this can be magnified in a strong economy. If we are lucky enough to get a good employee to replace one who has left or to handle our growth, we have the temptation to get them working with customers as soon as their foot hits the front door. We must remember that we are only as strong as our weakest link. It is not only a tight labor market it is a highly competitive consumer market. Customers today not only expect but demand that customer service representatives know what they are talking about. This is why mentors and job shadowing are critical to the training process. While training is critical, experiencing what really is asked on the front lines with a veteran at your side will build confidence and expertise in a new team member. At a minimum new and long-time employees need to have a knowledge of internal resources, both human and documentary to help when they don’t immediately know the answer to a question from a customer. “Let me check on that for you” is a vastly better response than “I don’t know.” Once again… common sense but for some reason a response that is not always given!

Sincerely Willing to Help
There is a vast difference in the first impression received by a customer when they perceive that an employee is helping because they want to versus have to. If a customer service representative demonstrates an eager desire to serve, the customer will forgive a myriad of other transgressions. Many of the traits discussed previously in this article combine to project this eagerness. A smile combined with attentiveness and a mastery of product knowledge gives the customer the impression that the service representative is ready and willing and eager to be of assistance.
What can get in the way of this sincerity of service? Obvious scripting! Notice I said OBVIOUS scripting, not all scripting. Scripting is an important part of training, particularly in the call center environment. But training with scripts has to allow the flexibility of personalization, or it can sound robotic and insincere. The worst thing we could do to a customer is have their first point of contact be a robotic chatbot followed by a living breathing human who sounds like a robot! If you have hired a friendly employee as is recommended in step one, don’t make them into a zombie with canned responses!

Thankful
Even in a strong economy, it is critical to let the customer know we appreciate them and their business. Once again, this is common sense but I challenge you to think of the last time you were in a customer encounter… did you thank the service rep before they thanked you?! I often catch myself doing this and then thinking, “Why did I just thank them for taking my money???” This is not to say that we as consumers should not be thankful for great support from caring representatives. But it does say that our representatives must look for opportunities to thank the customer even before the end of an encounter. Once again, this should be spontaneous and not sound scripted! “Mrs. Jones, thank you for explaining your situation… that will truly help me to assist you better.
A great way to thank the customer at the end of a call, a chat, or a live close encounter is to pave the way to the next encounter or transaction. “It was such a pleasure helping you today. We look forward to helping you soon with your next purchase!

Smiling, friendly, attentive, knowledgeable, willing to help, thankful … wishing you a customer service team embodying all of these important qualities in your customer service success story of 2022!

Teresa Allen

http://www.allenspeaks.com/

Teresa Allen is a nationally recognized customer service speaker and customer service author. Teresa is owner of Common Sense Solutions, a national training and consulting firm focused on bringing common sense customer service strategies to business. Teresa is author of Common Sense Service: Close Encounters on the Front Lines and is co-author of The Service Path: Your Roadmap for Building Strong Customer Loyalty.  Teresa can be reached via her website: www.AllenSpeaks.com or by phone at 800-797-1580 or email: tallen@AllenSpeaks.com

 

Share your thoughts on our blog here or Facebook page.


Why good isn’t good enough. Leading Empowered Teams stresses building trust and empowering team members to anticipate and take action to solve customer problems. Managers learn how to provide team support to create pockets of service excellence within their own control.

 

 

Want to know more? Start by defining your customer service philosophy.  Click Here to take the Free Quiz

 

Learn how to make your company a leader in customer service – contact Shoppers, Inc. for more information on Service Quality Institute programs.

For more information contact Amy at Amy@InsightYouCanUse.com or 800-259-8551 x220

Don’t forget to follow us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Linked In

×
Free reporting tools!

Free with all shopper and survey programs! Learn more

Shoppers, Inc., Secret Shopper, Broken Arrow, OK
Customer Service in OklahomaMystery Shopping Provider AssociationQUIRK's Featured Company

About Shoppers, Inc.

With more than 30 years of experience in the mystery shopping and customer service training business, Shoppers, Inc. has the tools to assess your current customer experience and take it to the next level.

Newsletter

Do you want your company to keep up with the latest trends in customer service? Sign up for our FREE newsletter:

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Fill out the form below to receive our free quiz.
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
×
Help improve our customer service seminars.

 

×
Fill out the form below to receive our apartment pricing.
×
Fill out the form below to receive the Return on Service Calculator.
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
×
Fill out the form to Inquire about Your Event.
×
Fill out the form below to receive our customer service assessment tool.
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
×
Fill out the form below to receive the Common Customer Complaints.
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
×
Fill out the form below to receive a copy of a Completed Net Promoter Score survey.
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
×
Fill out the form below to receive our Newsletter.

Oops! We could not locate your form.

×
Fill out the form below to subscribe to our blog.
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
×
Fill out the form below to receive our free quiz.
×
Fill out the form below to receive our free shopper report.
×
Please send your request by completing this form:

Mystery Shop Request

ROI
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
×

Cart