Make An
Action Plan To Improve
Customer Service
Customer Service
is a critical factor for keeping
your clients coming back and
ensuring they’ll refer you to
others.
Growing your business
will be a difficult task at best if
you don’t perform, meet and exceed
your client’s expectations, and
provide service that creates
customers for life.
Customer service is all about the
customer’s perception. You have to
do more than just get the job done.
You must deliver on all the things
(big and small) that affect the
relationship with your client.
Consider opportunities for
improvement in the following areas.
1. Setting/Reviewing Expectations.
Do you work with your client to set
clear, appropriate, realistic
expectations that you can always
meet or exceed? Are you clear about
the responsibilities (both yours’
and the client’s), timelines, and
expectations of results? Are you
then willing to go back and review
these expectations with the client
at key points along the way?
2. Communication. Do you have
mechanisms in place to ensure you’re
communicating with clients at every
stage of the engagement, from the
sales process through to completion
of the project? Being clear about
where you’re at, what’s been
completed, what’s coming up next,
who’s responsible, what results you
can expect, etc.? Has the client
ever had to ask you for these
things?
3. Organization. Are you organized?
Punctual? Reliable? When you show up
to work with your clients, have you
done the work and are you prepared
to make them feel comfortable and
taken care of? Even though you’ve
done it hundreds, maybe thousands of
times before, do you take the time
to organize and prepare to make it
the best client experience possible?
4. Committing to the Little Things.
Don’t ever dismiss the power of all
the little things. Together they can
make all the difference and really
separate you from the competition.
Returning calls and emails in a
timely manner. Providing useful
information to folks on a regular
basis. Showing appreciation for your
clients through things like thank
you notes, exclusive client-only
briefings, and open house, etc.
Clearly these are not the only
relevant areas for creating great
customer service. I’m sure you can
think of more. But, pick just one of
these areas and create an action
plan to improve it in your business
today. Make a commitment to
continuously improve the level of
service you’re providing and see how
it pays off. When you’ve done it,
pick another area and work on it.
Kevin Dervin, KPD Marketing
About the Author
Kevin Dervin is focused on helping
small businesses that are ready to
grow, but struggle with how to
consistently attract more clients.
Visit
http://www.proven-small-business-marketing-solutions.com
for more great marketing information
you can put to use in growing your
business today. Find Kevin's Kansas
City based KPD Marketing practice at
http://www.ABCDgrowth.com and
subscribe to his free ezine called
ABCD Grow.