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Trinkets for the Kiddies – Guest Blogger Edward Ca

作者 未知 于 2011-02-27 18:37:15 修改

Today’s guest blogger is Edward Caulfield, a service management professional with over 20 years experience in customer service management for high tech companies. Edward has been based in Munich for the last 15 years and speaks fluent German.

Not too long ago I was at a conference for Service Management. After signing in at the registration desk, I was given a small lapel pin with multi-colored blinking LEDs. As the father of two children, the first thought that ran through my mind was that my children, both of them old enough to no longer hurt themselves with a lapel pin and still young enough to go gaga over colorful blinking lights, would get a kick out of one of these. As anyone who has more than one child knows, it is dangerous to bring home only one of anything, so I asked if I could have a second pin and explained why. As rules would have it, only one pin was allowed per registered participant, even if the pins only cost fifty cents and the event cost me well over a thousand dollars.

I knew full well – as did the lady at the registration desk – that by end of the conference, she would have a hand full of extras that she would either throw away or stuff in a drawer to gather dust forever. Not a big deal, however. I was sure to find some other trophy to bring home. I was in Kansas and cowboy boots crossed my mind, with the challenge being translating my children’s European shoe sizes to US sizes. Within a few minutes of finding a seat in my first session and starting a chat with the fellow next to me, someone tapped me on the shoulder and before I knew it, I had two additional lapel pins handed to me. That was nice, I thought. Then I thought some more and saw that it was more than nice, it was “Service Recovery.”

What relevance does this have to Service Management? There are several takeaways from this experience.

1) We all make mistakes every now and then, but it is never too late to go back to a customer who suffered under our error and make things right. Both you and the customer feel better for it. Because this happens so seldom, your customer may even remember you for life. As well, apologizing for your mistake mentally reinforces that you not repeat that mistake.

2) You don’t have to wait for an angry customer to do the right thing. When I didn’t get the lapel pin, I wasn’t upset. I didn’t express anger or even disappointment. Just because a customer doesn’t verbalize their disappointment doesn’t mean they aren’t disappointed.

3) Sometimes breaking rules is the right thing to do. Strictly speaking, I should not have received the additional lapel pins. In the end, the person at the reception desk realized that a happier customer is more important than sticking to a rule that, in the end, had precious little legitimate basis.

To learn more about Edward Caulfield, visit http://seriousaboutservice.eu//

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版权所有 © 转载时必须以链接形式注明作者和原始出处!

上一篇:If I Could Do It Over, I Would . . .
下一篇:Guest Blogger Grace Boyle Offers Heavy Hitting Reasons to Sp

Today’s guest blogger is Edward Caulfield, a service management professional with over 20 years experience in customer service management for high tech companies. Edward has been based in Munich for the last 15 years and speaks fluent German.

Not too long ago I was at a conference for Service Management. After signing in at the registration desk, I was given a small lapel pin with multi-colored blinking LEDs. As the father of two children, the first thought that ran through my mind was that my children, both of them old enough to no longer hurt themselves with a lapel pin and still young enough to go gaga over colorful blinking lights, would get a kick out of one of these. As anyone who has more than one child knows, it is dangerous to bring home only one of anything, so I asked if I could have a second pin and explained why. As rules would have it, only one pin was allowed per registered participant, even if the pins only cost fifty cents and the event cost me well over a thousand dollars.

I knew full well – as did the lady at the registration desk – that by end of the conference, she would have a hand full of extras that she would either throw away or stuff in a drawer to gather dust forever. Not a big deal, however. I was sure to find some other trophy to bring home. I was in Kansas and cowboy boots crossed my mind, with the challenge being translating my children’s European shoe sizes to US sizes. Within a few minutes of finding a seat in my first session and starting a chat with the fellow next to me, someone tapped me on the shoulder and before I knew it, I had two additional lapel pins handed to me. That was nice, I thought. Then I thought some more and saw that it was more than nice, it was “Service Recovery.”

What relevance does this have to Service Management? There are several takeaways from this experience.

1) We all make mistakes every now and then, but it is never too late to go back to a customer who suffered under our error and make things right. Both you and the customer feel better for it. Because this happens so seldom, your customer may even remember you for life. As well, apologizing for your mistake mentally reinforces that you not repeat that mistake.

2) You don’t have to wait for an angry customer to do the right thing. When I didn’t get the lapel pin, I wasn’t upset. I didn’t express anger or even disappointment. Just because a customer doesn’t verbalize their disappointment doesn’t mean they aren’t disappointed.

3) Sometimes breaking rules is the right thing to do. Strictly speaking, I should not have received the additional lapel pins. In the end, the person at the reception desk realized that a happier customer is more important than sticking to a rule that, in the end, had precious little legitimate basis.

To learn more about Edward Caulfield, visit http://seriousaboutservice.eu//

本文地址:https://www.ibangkf.com/articeltemp/150.html
版权所有 © 转载时必须以链接形式注明作者和原始出处!

上一篇:If I Could Do It Over, I Would . . .
下一篇:Guest Blogger Grace Boyle Offers Heavy Hitting Reasons to Sp