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PROJECTING PROFESSIONALISM ON THE PHONE (part two)
By Ben Henry
Organizations must see to it that their telephone operators do
their work via service standards written for them. Service standards
define the minimal acceptable performance level in knowledge, skills
and attitudes by service providers in order for them to be competent
in the delivery of quality customer care. Service standards are
important because they serve two purposes. First, they are a
powerful way of shaping the image that your customers have of you.
Second, they are a great management tool for measuring how well each
person in your company meets the levels of service to which you
aspire.
One needs to be very careful not to write vague standards. This is
an example of a vague standard: “Be friendly to customers”. Written
standards must be specific. Standards tell service providers
precisely and exactly what is expected of them. They do not have to
guess about your expectations or make anything up. An example of a
standard that is specific: “When answering the phone, answer by the
third ring and say: “’It’s a pleasure to serve you today. How may I
assist?”
Because the actions in a standard are all specific criteria, they
are observable and objective, which make them easy to quantify. What
you can measure you can manage. Standards should be based on
customer requirements and not just your industry standards.
Fulfilling your customer’s expectations gives you an advantage over
your competitors.
Standards must be fairly enforced. Company-wide standards require
that everybody from the CEO down should conform to them.
Department-specific standards apply to everyone within that
department, including the manager. So if you are the manager in
charge of the telephone operators and standards have been developed
for them, it means that when you relieve a telephone operator and
you are manning those phones, you must conform to the telephone
standards.
One more thing about standards is that the best standards are
created by management and staff together, based on their mutual
understanding of customer needs. You can’t sit in an office, come up
with some standards, then call a meeting of say, your telephone
operators, and let them know that you have come up with some
standards for them. Involving the staff in writing standards
guarantees their buy-in.
Another thing is that everyone who answers the company’s phone or is
likely to answer it must know the standards. If you don’t train
people who relieve the telephone operator in the standards, then you
are going to have them saying what “them feel like saying”.
Standards mean everybody says the same thing.
Below are some minimal customer satisfaction standards for telephone
operators:
1. Smile when the phone rings, pick up the phone by the third ring,
and maintain a smile on your face while talking to the caller.
2. Use courteous words and phrases when appropriate, e.g., “Please”,
“Thank you”, “You’re welcome”, “How may I assist you?”, “You’ve
called the right place”.
3. Use non-verbal communication … smile, sit up straight.
4. Practice active listening by interjecting when appropriate with
statements such as “I see”, “I understand”, “Yes”, and “Uh-uh”.
5. Use the IGO Principle for incoming calls – Identify the company,
Greet the caller, and Offer assistance.
6. Before you put the caller on hold, get the caller’s permission
first; return to caller within 30 seconds; apologize for the
inconvenience; and thank caller for holding. If caller does not want
to be put on hold – apologize, ask caller for name/number, and offer
to return the call or offer to take a message.
7. When taking and forwarding messages, do the following: write down
caller’s name; spell the name back to caller; write down caller’s
number; write down the date and time of call; write the message
down; repeat message back to caller for verification; thank the
caller; inform relevant staff member of the message.
8. Handle customer complaints professionally by using the seven-step
approach to handling customer complaints – Listen, empathize,
apologize, offer a solution, act on the problem, follow through, and
check back. If you are unable to solve the problem, refer to your
supervisor.
9. End calls professionally – thank the caller for calling and wish
him/her a nice day; thank the caller for his/her business, if
appropriate; offer further assistance; wait till caller disconnects
his/her line before you hang up; and place telephone gently in its
cradle.
Now, after you have trained your staff into these standards, you
must observe, monitor and evaluate their adherence to the standards.
People don’t do what you expect … they do what you inspect. If you
train your people and forget to constantly monitor them to ensure
that they do what they are supposed to do, you would have been
better off keeping your money in the bank. People will not do what
you expect them to do until you begin to inspect what they do.
Believe me.
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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