Customer service intangibles

10 Examples of Extraordinary Customer Service Intangibles

Have you noticed how important customer service and customer experience have become to your marketing? Particularly with your ability to influence customers to talk about your business? Customer service intangibles are at the heart of these important influencers.
Customer service intangibles
Customer service intangibles.
And the next generation customer service rules will only heighten this transition.
How often, as a customer, do you experience WOW customer service. The type of experiences that you normally can’t imagine?  Average or less customer service seems like the norm in many industries.
Here is an interesting story I’d like to share:

Once upon a time, a very strong woodcutter asked for a job with a timber merchant, and he got it. The pay was really good, and so were the work conditions. For that reason, the woodcutter was determined to do his best. His boss gave him an ax and showed him the area where he was supposed to work.

The first day, the woodcutter brought in 18 trees, and of course, his boss congratulated him. Motivated by his boss’s words, the woodcutter tried harder the next day, but he could only bring in 15 trees. On the third day, he tried even harder, but he could only bring in 10 trees. Day after day he was bringing in fewer and fewer trees.

The woodcutter thought he was losing his strength, and he went to the boss and apologized, saying that he couldn’t understand what was going on. His boss then asked, “When was the last time you sharpened your ax?” Appalled by the question, the woodcutter harshly replied, “Sharpen my ax? I have no time to do that. I’ve been busy cutting trees.”

So I pose this question to you: Are you too busy chopping trees on the front line and not allocating the time needed to sharpen your marketing skills? What is that costing you and your business? Furthermore, how much time would it really take to keep your marketing ax sharp?

In some, it’s so common that when we provide great service, we yield customers who feel like they’ve won the lottery.
Even if it is only for a moment. But it doesn’t have to be that way. Customer service intangibles are not rocket science.
 The ultimate goal of all the points I list below is this: eliminate the fluff from your marketing strategy.  Focus only on the things that work.
Many organizations have big challenges that can be obstacles to providing great customer service. But so do many other companies that find ways to provide the wow attention-getter.
They choose to overcome their challenges and they take care of their customers very well. They pay particular attention to customer service intangibles.
And they make a point to do it consistently.
We often get a questions and comments on customer service intangibles from clients and people commenting on our blog. Many relate to customer service actions that are reminders of what we already know (but we occasionally forget).
These are the bid enablers of customer service. They usually won’t create WOW service on their own, but their absence is noted by customers. Without them makes excellent customer service just good or less.
As we work with companies to help them in improving customer service, some things stand out. These are things a lot of small businesses don’t do consistently.
Yet if they did they’d find the quality of their customer service would improve significantly. Their customer loyalty would also increase.
Here are ten intangibles to pay attention to for improving the customer service you are providing. I know many companies already do some or all of these things. And for those that do, it shows.
They are the organizations people rave about. They are the service superstars.
We all know not every customer request is easy or possible to fulfill. But rather than tell them “no”, try to find other ways to help them get what they want.
Always focus on finding a solution. And, when you do this, customers will come back more often. Why is that? It is because they know you you’ll do everything you can to help them.
  

Attentiveness

When a customer is telling you his issue, give them your complete attention. Customers consistently tell us they hate dealing with employees who don’t listen or pay attention.
When you begin talking with a customer, stop whatever else you are doing and focus on them. Don’t multi-task. Don’t half-listen. Write down what they are telling you and get specifics from them.
Make appropriate eye contact, listen, nod, and show them you are paying attention. Then confirm that you understand.

 tact

Using tact?

Tact

You may not be the owner, but you should care like you’re the owner. Not all owners or executives make great leaders, but the ones that are should be emulated.
Watch how they take pride in how they deal with customers and employees. Watch their tact. Then copy them. Act and care like you are the owner.
When talking with a new customer, give them your full name and get theirs right away. This makes your conversation more personal. It will enable you to better connect with your customer.
It also tells your customer you’re willing to be accountable for helping them. This is because if you don’t, they know who you are.
Don’t forget to say, “Thank you!” It would be remiss of me not to remind you to show appreciation.
 

 

Understanding

Remember this; little details can often create big experiences. Pay attention to and fully understand all the details.
Figure out the details that your customers enjoy and make them a routine part of doing business with you.

 

 

Sensitivity

Use language that demonstrates you think in terms of customer centric. Put customer needs ahead of your own.
Design your processes and policies with your customer in mind. Here is an example often overlooked. Always update phone messages to be customer centric.

 

 

helpfulness
Employee helpfulness.

Customer service intangibles … helpfulness

Think creatively when solving customer issues. See your customer as someone who needs your help.
But to deliver WOW service, remember your customers are there because they want and need YOUR help.
And remember how good it feels to help someone in need! Always go the extra mile.

 

 

Flow

No one knows what your customers want better than your customers. If you ask them with genuine interest, they will tell you.
So ask them and heed their advice. Go with their flow.

 

Customer service intangibles … satisfaction

Focus on what you can do, not what you can’t. Always follow up and follow through to increase customer satisfaction.
One of the biggest complaints people have is they never hear back from sales or service employees. Someone promises to do something and it never happens. A huge NO-NO.
An easy way to thrill your customers is to simply do what you say you will. Whatever you promise, do it promptly, thoroughly and accurately.
Then do a little more. It thrills them every time!

 

 

Knowledge

Use language that demonstrates you think in terms of customer-centric. Put customer needs ahead of your own.

From the beginning, there have always been gamed accounts in the influencer world. But the dramatic new emphasis on celebrity over authority signals a permanent shift in how we must view and measure content creators.

  • With big money forging celebrities instead of authorities, we will probably see fewer experts and more entertainers in this generation.

  • Undoubtedly, the big influencer money will pressure more young people into making poor decisions to fake numbers that will hurt them in the long term.

  • Brands simply must look beyond the audience and engagement numbers. Vetting talent will be much harder. There has to be a focus on advocacy and meaningful engagement.

Design your processes and policies with your customer in mind.

 

 

Attitude

Be sure and set aside time to look at the big picture which controls your attitude. Things are never constant or ever as they seem. Your big picture analysis is essential in helping you adapt to change.
To illustrate how simple things in customer service can happen without much notice, we like to use the following example.
We occasionally visited Kentucky Fried Chicken for lunch until a disappointment with a KFC takeout order of soggy, unappetizing chicken and fries.
We called the restaurant chain’s toll-free number to complain but was told that complaints should be directed to the specific location’s manager.
One call is worth the effort for us, but not two. This is especially if the company shows a lack of interest in the first call. We found it easier, given these two incidents, to find a new place for lunch.
KFC lost a customer without even knowing it had happened. You can bet your customers make “silent” decisions like this on a regular basis.
So make it easy for them to complain. Don’t rely on feedback forms. Ask customers for direct, face-to-face opinions. Do it regularly and have them know whom they can complain to, if anything goes wrong.

The bottom line

What your customer perceives about your company is what determines whether they will stay with you. And their perception is built one contact at a time.
Even one bad experience can taint their perception of you. So make sure every contact they have is a great one.
Create customer evangelists by caring about your customers and showing them everything you do.

latest book

Need some help in building better customer trust from your customer experiences?  Creative ideas to help grow your customer relationships?
                 
All you get is what you bring to the fight. And that fight gets better every day you learn and apply new ideas to make your customer experiences better.
When things are not what you want them to be, what’s most important is your next step.
 
Test. Learn. Improve. Repeat.
Are you devoting enough energy to improving your continuous learning for yourself and your team?
 
Digital Spark Marketing will stretch your thinking and your ability to adapt to change.  We also provide some fun and inspiration along the way. 
  
More reading on customer service and customer experience from our Library:
Customer Orientation … the Worst Customer Experience Mistakes
10 Next-Generation Customer Service Practices
Influence Consumer Behavior Through Personalization Strategies
Mike Schoultz is a digital marketing and customer service expert. With 48 years of business experience, he consults on and writes about topics to help improve the performance of small business. Find him on FacebookTwitterQuoraDigital Spark Marketing, and LinkedIn.