It’s not that they can’t find the solution, they can’t find the problem. And Chesterton knows. Does your business focus on handling customer complaints and the problems behind them? Handling customer complaints correctly is an incredibly important part of the overall service experience you deliver.
Here is an excellent short video on how to respond to complaints.
If done with mistakes, well, it just compounds the negative customer experience.
Oftentimes, a negative experience that a customer has with your business can be salvaged and turned into an opportunity to win them over for life. But handled poorly, and you could lose customers for life.
But being able to handle negative feedback in a positive way takes plenty of practice. Your business can get a head start by avoiding some common mistakes in interacting with customers in these less-than-ideal situations.
Below we’ll dive into some strategies on how to avoid these mistakes, but first, we need to look at why handling these complaints incorrectly could be hurting your bottom line.
Related post: Deadly Mistakes that Destroy Employee Engagement
The Importance of Customer Complaints
Poorly handled customer complaints are one of the quickest ways you can destroy an otherwise stellar service reputation.
Consider the following statistics from the Jim Moran Institute and Lee Resources:
Resolve a complaint in the customer’s favor and they will do business with you again 70% of the time.
Up to 95% of customers will give you a second chance if you handle their complaint successfully and in a timely manner.
So while you won’t be able to satisfy every unhappy person who contacts you, the returns that your business may see from turning an initially bad customer service experience into a “win” are significant indeed.
So let’s discuss the mistakes to avoid:
Handling customer complaints … don’t complete your complaint understanding
There is a fine line between simply following up after handling a complaint and inadvertently inviting customers to complain even more.
Let’s look at the following two responses:
“Is there anything else wrong?”
“How else can I help you today?”
Asking a customer who just complained a leading, negative question such as #1 will lead to compounding the complaint and a mistake to avoid.
Conversely, inquiring about how you may be able to further assist a customer lets them know that you are willing to stick it out if they have any other issues to address.
Handling customer complaints … slow response time
We often discuss some pretty strong cases for spending more time with your customers, but you saw the data above … complaints are a slightly different beast that greatly degrades when slowly responded to.
Work to close issues as quickly as possible. Benefits increase from complaints being resolved quickly.
A customer leaving a feature request won’t sweat the fact that it took you a day to get back to them. However, unhappy customers want resolution yesterday, so you need to make responding to them a priority.
In almost every other instance I would encourage you to slow down your service, but in this case, you need to make moves to right the wrong as soon as possible!
handling customer complaints examples … forgetting that complaints contain insight
In a recent article on Inc.com, Evernote CEO Phil Libin spoke about why he loves his angriest customers.
In particular, Libin addressed the need for balance between internal innovation and customer feedback, saying:
Customer feedback is great for telling you what you did wrong. It’s terrible at telling you what you should do next.
Don’t give action or
Please hold while we transfer you. Your call is very important to us.
Don’t you hate this response? While you’ll experience less of this problem when handling support via email, it’s still important to get people to the right employee quickly.
Never miss an opportunity to briefly explain to a customer why this transfer will be to their benefit. It’s hard to get any customer happy or excited about being transferred, but consider the two choices you have:
You are getting transferred. “Well, this stinks!”
You will be transferred to our ____ specialist who can better answer your question. “Well … okay, then!”
Without this relevant insertion, customers won’t know that you are actually trying to do the right thing.
Being too formal
Customers want to be treated with respect, but if you stop treating customers like regular people and start talking like a corporate stiff then they won’t interpret the interaction as genuine.
Research suggests that personalization is powerful when interacting with anyone, but especially with your customers.
Remember that you’re not speaking to the Queen of England, so refer to your “chat” with a customer rather than your “correspondence” with them. Remember to speak as if you were talking with an acquaintance. A little familiarity can go a long way toward getting customers on your side.
Don’t validate what you learn
Have you ever tried to contact customer service through an online form, and after you hit submit there wasn’t a single follow-up notification on whether or not action had taken place?
There is nothing worse, is there, because you don’t have a clue where your issue—and any hope of resolving it—stands.
The same thinking applies to resolve customer conflicts via email or phone. You want to be absolutely sure that the customer is clear on the resolution that occurred and that it met their needs. So if you’re not ending your responses with an inviting question to do more, then start now.