Have you found that you have just too many customers? Are you looking
for a way to get rid of some of those pesky customers who seem to keep
coming back and taking up all of your time? Would you like to have time
to do more important things, like spend your time trying to get new
customers, rather than spend so much time taking care of existing
customers? Have no fear, we have gathered some of the top ten tips for
weeding out the heard and getting rid of customers.
- Play games with their finances, avoid paying rebates or ignore discounts
- Lie to your customers or intentionally mislead them
- Forget previous promises and refuse to live up to your commitments
- Make false claims or advertising about your products or services, practice "puffery"
-
Make it virtually impossible to get in touch with a human being, add
more menu options to answering services do not return messages
- Disrespect your customer, pretend they are not there, ignore them, be rude or condescending
- Blame problems on company policy or coworkers, take whatever tact is necessary to avoid personal responsibility
- Remind your customer that you are the only option
- Assign numbers to your customers and avoid using their names, make them look for their number
- Tell them to quit whining because there are other customers who have the same problem or have it much worse
Have you tried any of these tactics with your customers already?
If
you are not trying to give away your customers to your competition,
what are you proactively doing to insure that the opposite approach is
being taken? It is not just a matter of trying to avoid these top ten
tips for thinning the customer herd, it is about proactively doing the
opposite. The odds are that several people in your organization are
already practicing one or more of these top ten tips. What can you do to
instill a culture that embraces a well defined alternative approach?
The
odds are even greater that many members of your competition are
practicing several of these top ten tips for getting rid of customers.
As your competition becomes more prolific at practicing the art of
losing customers, what can you do to create an environment that rewards
associates for embracing and evangelizing customers?
There is a
very simple barometer for measuring which side of the customer-centric
fence your organization inhabits. Just ask this one simple question,
"What gives you a greater sense of satisfaction, getting rid of an
annoying customer or keeping one?"
- Act responsibly to protect the finances, assets and investments of your customer, they are investing in you
- Be honest and trustworthy, especially when it seems uncomfortable to do so
- Only make promises that you can keep and then keep them
- Exercise Truth in Advertising
- Design automation for customer ease and convenience, not for avoidance
- Treat customers with courtesy and respect, they are your shareholders
- Take ownership and command to find solutions and then coordinate internally if other resources are necessary
- To keep the competition away you need to 'win' your customer with every contact
- Numbers and Accounts are for identification, but authentic relationships are for people
- Listen
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Words of Wisdom
"Sow good services; sweet remembrances will grow them."
- Madame de Stael
"Always render more and better service than is expected of you, no matter what your task may be."
- Og Mandino
"Quality
in a product or service is not what the supplier puts in. It is what
the customer gets out and is willing to pay for. A product is not
quality because it is hard to make and costs a lot of money, as
manufacturers typically believe. This is incompetence. Customers pay
only for what is of use to them and gives them value. Nothing else
constitutes quality."
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