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WINNING CUSTOMERS THROUGH SERVICE EXCELLENCE
By Ben Henry
What do organizations like Sandals and Beaches Resorts, the
Ritz Carlton, Jamaica International Insurance Company, Stew
Leonard’s Grocery Store, Southwest Airlines have in common? They are
world-class service organizations benchmarked by other organizations
around the world. What separates these organizations from the rest?
What do they do in the area of service excellence to make them so
successful? Let’s look at some of the reasons.
They are completely customer-driven. Everything they do is with the
customer in mind. They believe that what is best for the customer is
best for the business. Their CEOs visibly live, as well as verbally
support, the organization’s mission, vision and values. They
constantly benchmark and measure their effectiveness relative to
competitors and other “best in class” companies, irrespective of
industry. They have “kaizen” cultures, a passion for continuous
improvement.
Managers perform as leaders, encouraging, advising and supporting
teams. Long-term relationships with customers are emphasized.
Customer complaints are regarded as windows of opportunity to do
better. Proactive approaches to customer contact are embedded in the
culture. Customer contact takes place at all management levels. The
entire organization is immersed in the marketplace, with all
customer needs, problems, expectations and complaints fully
inventoried and understood. Employee training is mandatory. An
effective orientation is a given.
Why does it make sense for all companies to embrace service
excellence? Well, the research is there to support this. According
to Harvard Business School’s Jones and Sasser, service excellence
turns customers into apostles who become unpaid salespersons for the
organization. Ken Blanchard calls these customers raving fans.
According to an American Management Association study, loyalist
customers account for 65 percent of the typical organization’s
revenues. Other studies prove that service is actually more
effective at enhancing volume and profit than marketing, promotion,
or advertising.
These days, the quality of service has become more significant to a
company’s success than quality of product. Product quality alone
cannot enhance customer value. Service must be part of the equation.
And increasingly, there is a level playing field when it comes to
the product. It is the service that brings the customer back to
repurchase. Because service excellence is an effective selling tool,
it is also a long-term competitive advantage.
According to one writer, customer service exerts a multiplier effect
– it multiplies results achieved by advertising, market and sales.
Service excellence leads to word-of-mouth recommendation, which
often is more effective than product advertising in influencing
purchase decisions. Studies reveal that 84 percent of all sales in
America (a 13 trillion dollar economy) originate from the
recommendation of satisfied customers.
Research conducted by Technical Assistance Research Programme (TARP)
concludes that the return on investment (ROI) from service
excellence training for makers of consumer durables such as washing
machines is 100 percent; for banks it is 170 percent; while in the
extremely competitive field of retailing it is as high as 200
percent.
Most Jamaican companies tend to regard employee training as an
expenditure rather than an investment. They need to change that
mindset if they still want to be around in the next 10-20 years or
be swept away into oblivion by enlightened companies.
Ben
Henry is Managing Director of Customer Service Academy of Jamaica
Limited, Jamaica’s and the Caribbean’s foremost customer service
consultancy. He is the author of two best sellers – “Quality
Customer Care for the Caribbean”, and “How to Become a World-Class
Individual – 33 Strategies for Success”. He may be contacted at
bntthenry@yahoo.com
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