Building Great Customer Experiences - Or Beware Consultants With No Clothes! | Customer Service Tools


It must be one my personal business nightmares, if you can imagine having just flown to New York to meet a new client and the airline has lost all your clothes! So what can one learn from such events about delivering great customer service experiences?

The best laid plans of mice and men often go awry

To give you the background, Id just been to California and had arranged to meet the COO of a potential great new client in New York on my way back home to England. Id visited them a few weeks before and Id felt as though Id wandered onto the set of The Devil Wears Prada (or should that be Ugly Betty?). So not wanting to be left too far behind the New York Chic look of my hosts, Id gone out and purchased the very best of shirts & ties that London has to offer (OK anyone from Milan is allowed a note of scepticism at this point) combined with my new Italian suit & cuff links, I knew Id look the part ;-)

My plane was several hours late into New York due to unexpected delays I was little nervous as Id arranged to go out to dinner that evening. Still with my Platinum Frequent Flyer card my suitcase had qualified for a special Priority Handling label so I was looking forward to getting my suitcase quickly and rushing off ahead of the pack to the taxi rank. Sadly, after all of the luggage had disappeared off the carousel there was no sign of my case, so I made my way to the airlines baggage handling office. I was joined by another passenger who had experienced a similar fate. The Airline staff assured me that my suitcase had landed and recommended I went back to check the carousel again. This experience was repeated another 3 times. From my interactions with the airline staff, I managed to get the impression that losing ones baggage was not a completely unusual experience. My heart sank as I looked at the back wall of the hall which was filled floor to ceiling with damaged suitcases in glass cases awaiting collection from their owners.

After an hour and a half of going back & forth from the luggage carousel to the airline desk, the airline staff finally conceded that perhaps my bag was lost after all and I was given a claim form to fill in. I was given an 0800 number to contact and a tracking reference number and that was it. I had a sense of disappointment and unfinished business but I had to move on and let other passengers register their lost baggage too.

Theres no such thing as a free breakfast

I headed off to my hotel (minus any luggage) and checked in. The receptionist noted down my comment that my luggage had been lost and hopefully it might arrive in the next 24 hours. The receptionist realised I was a Gold member of their hotel loyalty system, so she kindly gave me vouchers for free breakfasts for my stay in Manhattan. Sadly, by this time it was too late for the dinner out Id planned, so I went off to bed to dream the night away with visions of lost clothes, deodorants and shavers! I guess I wasnt too worried that I could replace my lost items in the morning, after all America is the land of retail plenty. And as I was staying just off 5th Avenue, which is lined with clothes stores, it wasnt going to be too difficult to get replacements in the morning.

In the morning, fortified by my free breakfast, though looking a little rough, unshaven (or should I say with designer stubble) and with crumpled clothes, I headed off to the shops and quickly purchased everything I needed. I guess as they were happy to process my credit card without phone verification I cant have looked too bad. So at this point, it was an opportunity for me to think through the series of events as an interesting example of managing the customer experience. My airline goes to the trouble of writing hand written thank you notes each time I fly with them, and yet when it looses all my belongings all they give me is a piece of paper and thats it.

Its great that its free but is it useful?

The hotel gave me a nice free breakfast but I would have preferred a shaver & some deodorant! If I think about a number of the budget hotel chains in the UK where they are happy to give you free shaver, foam, combs, deodorant etc. if youve forgotten them, theres much their my American hotel & airline could learn from them.

A great technique for managing these unfortunate experiences was pioneered by Jan Carlson (former CEO of SAS Scandinavian Airlines) who coined the expression moments of truth. A moment of truth occurred whenever an employee interacted with a customer; Carlson said that these moments left an impression good bad or exceptional. \r Carlson applied 4 guiding principles for managing these moments of truth positively:\r Everyone needs to know and feel they are needed \r Everyone wants to be treated as an individual \r Giving someone the freedom to take responsibility releases resources that would otherwise remain concealed \r An individual without information can not take responsibility whereas an individual given responsibility can not help but take responsibility

The technique is fairly straightforward to implement. I guess a start is to get your service operations team together and ask them to map out the service experience from the customer perspective. Whenever you come across a moment of truth, you can then work out with your team just how best you can handle that sticky situation. I like to use the high-tech toolset of 2 sets of Post-It notes in different colours for such work available from all good stationers ;-) Use one pack of Post-Its to map out the service experience from a customer perspective, and then use the other pack to define the main alternative events that can occur at each moment of truth and the best options for your own staff in how to deal with these. [For a more extensive and sophisticated approach try the moment mapping technique described in Building Great Customer Experiences by Colin Shaw & John Ivens]. I guess an even simpler approach is the Nordstrom approach; their employees are given the freedom to decide for themselves and have the single rule do whatever you think is right for the customer.

Dont let disappointing service lose you your most valuable customers

And the end to this tale. Well my suitcase was located during the morning and arrived over at my hotel. I was able to locate my special shirt, tie & cuff links. [On a fashion point here Im convinced English mens shirts are more stylish than American shirts]. It made my day when the clients PA complimented me on my cufflinks (OK its a small pleasure but still a delight). On the business front though, one of the key lessons is that a poor service experience is one of the key drivers for customers switching suppliers. The disappointing experience causes customers to shop around other suppliers and they may well find a better value option losing you a very valuable customer. Best to make sure that your moments of truth are well managed.

As for me, Im now minded to try out Silverjet Airways (see www.flysilverjet.com) the new low-cost all business class airline they offer fantastic service (flat beds, 30 minute check-in and even fly Carbon neutral) with much lower prices.

Ill update you on the experience hopefully after my next trip to New York :-)

Best wishes John

John Corr has over 25 years experience working with high-value service businesses (such as AXA, Capital One, EDS & Time Warner) helping them increase their revenues, margins and delighted customers.

You can learn more at http://www.closequarter.co.uk

Quotables For The Customer Service Professionals Day
Here are a few quotes to ponder and reflect on.Go forth and be a happy cabbage. UnknownAre you sending your customers off wit...

The Number One Way To Satisfy More Customers While Increasing Profits
So many articles and books have been published about the current economical tides where the consumer is in control, and compa...

The Irate Customer And You
The next time you have an angry customer ask yourself why this customer is upset. Try to place yourself in this customers sho...

Customer Service Coaching Tip - You Must Measure Relationships
A great customer experience usually means exceptional customer service. This results in the second of the two measurements f...

Clothing and Self Esteem
Clothing has very different impact on our self esteem. The higher is self-esteem the less clothing affects it, but the opposi...

Self Confidence is Like a Plant
Plants grow from small seeds, out of the dirt and can grow into very large plants. Most people start with great self confiden...

Are You Taking These Miss Directed Actions to Build Loyal Customers?
Building a solid customer base is critical to business success especially in todays global market place. If you agree, then ...

Where Has The Service Gone?
Remember the days when the companies with whom you gave your hard earned money to appreciated your business? Today, it is rar...

Steps For Building a Kitchen Cabinet
A great way to customize your kitchen design is building kitchen cabinet. When you build your own kitchen cabinets, you can ...

Deploying Your Frontline For Customer Research
With an over saturation of purchase options, coupled with the fact that consumers today are more sophisticated and educated t...

Role of CRM in Customer Interaction and Service
Every business works for its customers and to ensure success and growth, we need to focus on the needs of the customers. CRM ...

How to Borrow Self-Confidence
Have you ever heard of Abraham Lincoln? Did he have huge self confidence? Read a biography on him and I would say not, he lik...

Protect Your Family: Home Fire Safety Tips
Would you know exactly what to do if you were to find yourself in a burning building? Too many people dont, which is one of t...

How to Deliver the Ultimate in Customer Service Delight
We continue as part of our theme for achieving exactly what you want from your business by considering how to deliver the ult...

Are You Building Loyal Customers?
The old adage about building satisfied customers is worthless in todays 24/7 global economy because of that little creature a...

Uncommonly Good Customer Service Knows the First & Primary Measure for Business Success
Uncommonly good customer service is when the business knows the first measurement for business success. Unfortunately, this ...

The Naked Truth About Clothes - Understanding the Fashion of Your Passion
The saying goes that the clothes dont make the man, or perhaps in our PC world today, the person. The clothes dont make the ...

Customer Service - The Mobile Mechanic With The Winning Ways
Our married daughters car needed a service this morning, but who would she call?Well, last time she had taken her car to a lo...

Good Customer Service Coaching Tip - Know Your Points of Potential
Every business has incredible potential within the customer service experience. The actions that you take identify them and ...

The First Block in Any Business Building Endeavor
The point of business in general is to serve customers. A customer is a person who purchases goods or services and recompens...