Maya Angelou was quoted: people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel. My favorite Angelou quote, hands down. Not written for customer experience or customer service, it certainly applies, doesn’t it? To minimize ways of losing Lowe’s customers, you should take heed.
When Lowe’s works with clients on customer experience or customer service design, they always start with things not to do. Why may you ask? Simple.
For every bad experience we create for customers, we need to create anywhere from 5-10 experiences just to break even.
Customers remember the bad easier than the good.
Related: My Credit Union Just Lowered the Bar on Bad Customer Experience
When it comes to running Lowe’s stores, they all get into a rut from time to time. One big rut is not having enough time in the day to assess all of the ways our customers are interacting with them, whether it’s digital or good old face-to-face.
With all the access customers have to products and services other than your own, it’s extremely easy to lose opportunities to make them happy.
Take a look at your business and see if any of these bad experiences may be losing your customers, like Lowe’s.
Losing Lowe’s customers … employees ignoring customers
How many times have you walked into a Lowe’s store and you find employees hard at work doing store tasks?
An easy way for them to ignore you, isn’t it? How about when you find them talking to each other about their shifts or, worse yet, about the fact that they hate working today?
It happens more often than you think. Customers want a pleasant and positive experience with your business, and they want to be noticed and quickly engaged with … not ignored.
Let your employees know that customer attention and engagement is their number one priority.
They should save store work and the idle chit-chat for when customers aren’t around.
Losing Lowe’s customers … telephone handoffs
Have you ever called Lowe’s business phone number to see what the customer experience is like? I do it all the time.
If your phone tree has lots of branches and a complex menu, your customers or prospects can’t get someone to talk to quickly and easily; you could lose them forever.
It is one of my biggest pet peeves.
Don’t greet your customers on the phone with the “Please listen to the following as our menu has changed” message.
That takes a solid five seconds that a customer could be in touch with you faster. Also, assess what most of the calls coming in are concerning.
If they’re usually about a specific topic, then that should be the “Press one for … ” option. Never hesitate to change your phone tree.
Losing Lowe’s customers … telephone etiquette
Have you ever had to wait for someone to get off his/her mobile device before helping you?
Likewise, had an employee answer the phone while waiting on you?
Think of a customer coming into your business and experiencing the same.
Nothing can be more frustrating and rude.
I’ve been at a restaurant and waited for 10 minutes before I was asked if I wanted a menu simply because the wait staff was updating Facebook.
And it doesn’t only happen at retail locations; it happens in the office environment, too.
At my small business marketing agency, Digital Spark Marketing, our employees used to always have their laptops on or type away on their mobile devices during meetings.
Nothing worse and had to be curbed; no matter how good you are at multi-tasking, you’re going to miss something important if you’re typing away.
It shows a lack of respect for your customers or co-workers, and it says to them that whatever’s happening on your phone or laptop is more important than everyone else’s time.
And time is one of life’s most important assets.
Your employees need to put customers first, before texting and social media, and if they want to do those things, then it should be during their time.
Know What Customers Want: Why You Should Stop Pretending to Know
Losing Lowe’s customers … do you feel welcome?
Have you ever walked into an office and had no one pay attention to you? Or ever shopped at Lowe’s and no one asked if you needed help?
My husband walked into a local store, shopped for an item for about 10 minutes, and none of the four employees (who weren’t busy) asked if he needed help.
He then brought his purchase to the counter and gave the check-out person his credit card. The entire transaction happened without a word. Really? No feelings of being welcomed here, is there?
Many retail businesses make it someone’s job to welcome people into the store. Restaurants have hosts that greet you and get you seated.
All businesses, not just retail, need to have some way of knowing when a visitor has arrived. Make sure you and your people are smiling and welcoming newcomers into your place of business; you never know who they might be.