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  • Will You Add? - What Are You Measuring your Customer Service Department With? 7 Things to Look For

    Postage Meters
    Postage meters save money and time on any type of mailing that people need for their business. They can be easily made use of for mail, handouts, or invitations.Postage meters are an excellent way to handle precanceled stamps or sanction imprints, as well as bulk mailing of a business. Individuals can make use of the same postage meter for any of their mail. However a special permit is required in order to be able to use it for bulk mail. Additionally, special markings are required for bulk mailings that must be applied with the meter stamp. Individuals have to visit a local branch of the post office, in order to get the permit that is required, and they also need to find out exactly how are they are suppose to stamp their mail.A lot of business owners have preference for postage meters because of the flexibility they provide, as well as for the supplementary serv
    what the Customer wants and needs.

    And it is a skill that is trainable. You cannot train intelligence or personality. You can train someone to listen.

    5. Do they respond to Customers requests in a timely fashion? Do they acknowledge that the Customers time is more important than their own? Anytime you save a Customer time or money, you win them over. Let me give you an example.

    In my days as a service advisor, I had a Customer come in that I promised I would personally take care of her situation. I told her I would arrange for a courtesy shuttle for her to be brought back to the dealership when her vehicle was ready. I got everything 99% right. It was the 1% that killed her experience. I made sure the vehicle was completed, the paperwork ready, got the shuttle to pick her up, I was home free right!

    WRONG!

    When she arrived, her vehicle was still being washed. It was a particularly busy day and it took an additional 15-20 minutes for her vehicle to be brought up.

    It may not sound l

    Go Global With International Business
    With the development of an integrated global economy, marked by free trade and free flow of capital, now is the time to pursue a cutting-edge international business career.Around the WorldIn case you hadn't noticed, U.S. firms are expanding abroad. This requires organizations to form effective strategies for entering the international business market. They need to be aware of legal matters pertaining to specific countries, and they need to be concerned with organizational and administrative issues, especially if they are involved in a partnership with a foreign firm. As international business markets become more competitive, U.S. firms are learning to use resources more efficiently by reducing costs, streamlining operations, and developing marketing strategies. That's why today's professionals need comprehensive knowledge of international business as
    I have been thinking about what makes a really great Customer Service experience and I have narrowed it down to about 7 things that make or break Excellent Customer Service Personnel.

    This list is based on my own observations, travels and experiences. When I have good or bad encounters, I try to write down what I liked or disliked. I use those notes to write about what I have observed.

    If you are a responsible for the Customer Service in your organization, you might get into the habit of taking notes wherever you go. You can then use them to train your personnel, or make changes to your own company mission statement or vision.

    You might even send your Customer Service representatives to places that have exceptionally good or bad service so that they might see for themselves and understand what the difference is between good and GREAT!

    So here is a list of 7 things that you might want to take a look at if you are interested in developing better Customer Service.

    1. Are your personnel friendly? I don’t mean the “fake” friendly or the “work” friendly, I mean genuinely friendly. You could start by asking yourself “Would I want to spend time with them if they were not team members or employees?”

    Does their personality match the position in which they are working? There are certain things to look for like do they smile with their eyes when greeting someone? Is their demeanor on the phone the same as it is in person? Are they frequently surrounded by the smiling faces of customers and co-workers? Do they receive unsolicited compliments, cards and letters thanking them for their service?

    Would they be the first one to eat if you were stranded on a desert island? If you answered yes to that question, why are they working in your Customer Service Department?

    Do you use personality profiles in your employment screening process? You might want to consider implementing a personality profile test so that you don’t end up with a “thinker” type personality in a “touchy-feely” type position. You might want to have everyone take one now to see if there are some obvious mismatches.

    2. Do they have excellent communications skills? If not, what are you doing to improve it? Are you offering classes, lunch and learn, or reimbursement for tuition at a local college?

    If English is their second language, are you encouraging them to expand their skills by stimulating their pay package with incentives? (I used stimulating on purpose. Who wouldn’t want a stimulating pay package?)

    And how about speaking skills? Why not pay for a membership in Toastmasters? Better yet, start a Toastmasters club at work. What better way to grow and develop speaking skills!

    3. Do they go out of the way to help a Customer?

    Let me give you an example. I was in a hotel conducting a seminar, and was expecting a fax. I was walking down the hallway in the direction I thought I should be going, when I passed one of the hotel employees pushing a cart loaded with boxes.

    He noticed my somewhat puzzled look, and stopped what he was doing. He asked me how he might help and then escorted me to the correct office, and even looked for the fax.

    That is genuine friendliness, concern and training all rolled into one. Now some of you are saying, “Oh sure, big fancy hotel” blah, blah, blah. Be quiet Schleprock.

    It was not a big fancy hotel at all, I wasn’t even a guest, and he had no idea who I was or what I was doing there. I just happened to be one person riding the same merry-go-round on the same day as him. Do your personnel stop what they are doing to help the Customer?

    And do they understand WHY they do it?

    4. Do they listen completely and without judgment and reservation? Have they been trained in Assertiveness skills? Dynamic Listening? Memory?

    Do they let the Customer finish or do they interrupt? There is a reason we are born with one mouth and two ears. We cannot provide a service, sell a product, be good stewards of our company and move forward with Company Goals or anything else if we are not listening to what the Customer wants and needs.

    And it is a skill that is trainable. You cannot train intelligence or personality. You can train someone to listen.

    5. Do they respond to Customers requests in a timely fashion? Do they acknowledge that the Customers time is more important than their own? Anytime you save a Customer time or money, you win them over. Let me give you an example.

    In my days as a service advisor, I had a Customer come in that I promised I would personally take care of her situation. I told her I would arrange for a courtesy shuttle for her to be brought back to the dealership when her vehicle was ready. I got everything 99% right. It was the 1% that killed her experience. I made sure the vehicle was completed, the paperwork ready, got the shuttle to pick her up, I was home free right!

    WRONG!

    When she arrived, her vehicle was still being washed. It was a particularly busy day and it took an additional 15-20 minutes for her vehicle to be brought up.

    It may not sound li

    Business Cards: The Face of Your Business
    Business cards are a very popular way of providing your contact information to others. Business cards are used for a variety of reasons including promoting your service or advertising your business to others and are an extremely important tool. In our busy world, it is often inconvenient to write down someone’s information. Being able to simply exchange cards with all that information is very quick and easy. It allows the accurate information to be accessed over and over again. How many times have you wrote down a phone number and put it away? The next time you pulled it out, you couldn’t remember what the number was for. Business cards eliminate that from happening.What should you put on the card?It is important to make sure all your important contact information is on your business card. Make sure you include your name, business name, address, p
    ly? I don’t mean the “fake” friendly or the “work” friendly, I mean genuinely friendly. You could start by asking yourself “Would I want to spend time with them if they were not team members or employees?”

    Does their personality match the position in which they are working? There are certain things to look for like do they smile with their eyes when greeting someone? Is their demeanor on the phone the same as it is in person? Are they frequently surrounded by the smiling faces of customers and co-workers? Do they receive unsolicited compliments, cards and letters thanking them for their service?

    Would they be the first one to eat if you were stranded on a desert island? If you answered yes to that question, why are they working in your Customer Service Department?

    Do you use personality profiles in your employment screening process? You might want to consider implementing a personality profile test so that you don’t end up with a “thinker” type personality in a “touchy-feely” type position. You might want to have everyone take one now to see if there are some obvious mismatches.

    2. Do they have excellent communications skills? If not, what are you doing to improve it? Are you offering classes, lunch and learn, or reimbursement for tuition at a local college?

    If English is their second language, are you encouraging them to expand their skills by stimulating their pay package with incentives? (I used stimulating on purpose. Who wouldn’t want a stimulating pay package?)

    And how about speaking skills? Why not pay for a membership in Toastmasters? Better yet, start a Toastmasters club at work. What better way to grow and develop speaking skills!

    3. Do they go out of the way to help a Customer?

    Let me give you an example. I was in a hotel conducting a seminar, and was expecting a fax. I was walking down the hallway in the direction I thought I should be going, when I passed one of the hotel employees pushing a cart loaded with boxes.

    He noticed my somewhat puzzled look, and stopped what he was doing. He asked me how he might help and then escorted me to the correct office, and even looked for the fax.

    That is genuine friendliness, concern and training all rolled into one. Now some of you are saying, “Oh sure, big fancy hotel” blah, blah, blah. Be quiet Schleprock.

    It was not a big fancy hotel at all, I wasn’t even a guest, and he had no idea who I was or what I was doing there. I just happened to be one person riding the same merry-go-round on the same day as him. Do your personnel stop what they are doing to help the Customer?

    And do they understand WHY they do it?

    4. Do they listen completely and without judgment and reservation? Have they been trained in Assertiveness skills? Dynamic Listening? Memory?

    Do they let the Customer finish or do they interrupt? There is a reason we are born with one mouth and two ears. We cannot provide a service, sell a product, be good stewards of our company and move forward with Company Goals or anything else if we are not listening to what the Customer wants and needs.

    And it is a skill that is trainable. You cannot train intelligence or personality. You can train someone to listen.

    5. Do they respond to Customers requests in a timely fashion? Do they acknowledge that the Customers time is more important than their own? Anytime you save a Customer time or money, you win them over. Let me give you an example.

    In my days as a service advisor, I had a Customer come in that I promised I would personally take care of her situation. I told her I would arrange for a courtesy shuttle for her to be brought back to the dealership when her vehicle was ready. I got everything 99% right. It was the 1% that killed her experience. I made sure the vehicle was completed, the paperwork ready, got the shuttle to pick her up, I was home free right!

    WRONG!

    When she arrived, her vehicle was still being washed. It was a particularly busy day and it took an additional 15-20 minutes for her vehicle to be brought up.

    It may not sound l

    Retail History
    It is one of the biggest employers in the world. It eats up a large chunk of our money. It is the retail industry.Retailing is a massive, passive beast that pervades just about all our lives. Virtually all of us shop, sometimes as a pleasure and sometimes as a burdenous chore.But when and how did it all begin? The answer is probably to do with surpluses. As we got better at cultivating the land, some people found that even after feeding their families and animals and putting food into storage, there was some left over. Rather than waste this surplus, it was traded for other surpluses or perhaps tools or other objects.Those that had enough land and were particularly good at producing food from it would have realized that they were on to a good thing by deliberately producing surpluses. Eventually the informal trade in goods would have become more organized,
    ant to have everyone take one now to see if there are some obvious mismatches.

    2. Do they have excellent communications skills? If not, what are you doing to improve it? Are you offering classes, lunch and learn, or reimbursement for tuition at a local college?

    If English is their second language, are you encouraging them to expand their skills by stimulating their pay package with incentives? (I used stimulating on purpose. Who wouldn’t want a stimulating pay package?)

    And how about speaking skills? Why not pay for a membership in Toastmasters? Better yet, start a Toastmasters club at work. What better way to grow and develop speaking skills!

    3. Do they go out of the way to help a Customer?

    Let me give you an example. I was in a hotel conducting a seminar, and was expecting a fax. I was walking down the hallway in the direction I thought I should be going, when I passed one of the hotel employees pushing a cart loaded with boxes.

    He noticed my somewhat puzzled look, and stopped what he was doing. He asked me how he might help and then escorted me to the correct office, and even looked for the fax.

    That is genuine friendliness, concern and training all rolled into one. Now some of you are saying, “Oh sure, big fancy hotel” blah, blah, blah. Be quiet Schleprock.

    It was not a big fancy hotel at all, I wasn’t even a guest, and he had no idea who I was or what I was doing there. I just happened to be one person riding the same merry-go-round on the same day as him. Do your personnel stop what they are doing to help the Customer?

    And do they understand WHY they do it?

    4. Do they listen completely and without judgment and reservation? Have they been trained in Assertiveness skills? Dynamic Listening? Memory?

    Do they let the Customer finish or do they interrupt? There is a reason we are born with one mouth and two ears. We cannot provide a service, sell a product, be good stewards of our company and move forward with Company Goals or anything else if we are not listening to what the Customer wants and needs.

    And it is a skill that is trainable. You cannot train intelligence or personality. You can train someone to listen.

    5. Do they respond to Customers requests in a timely fashion? Do they acknowledge that the Customers time is more important than their own? Anytime you save a Customer time or money, you win them over. Let me give you an example.

    In my days as a service advisor, I had a Customer come in that I promised I would personally take care of her situation. I told her I would arrange for a courtesy shuttle for her to be brought back to the dealership when her vehicle was ready. I got everything 99% right. It was the 1% that killed her experience. I made sure the vehicle was completed, the paperwork ready, got the shuttle to pick her up, I was home free right!

    WRONG!

    When she arrived, her vehicle was still being washed. It was a particularly busy day and it took an additional 15-20 minutes for her vehicle to be brought up.

    It may not sound l

    Career Joy - Step Four in Aligning Body, Mind, and Work
    The reason most people never reach their goals is that they don't define them, or ever seriously consider them as believable or achievable. Winners can tell you where they are going, what they plan to do along the way, and who will be sharing the adventure with them. - Denis WatleyStep Four to Achieving Career Joy - Commit to ActionWhat came up for you when you were taking inventory? Were there any themes that kept emerging? How did it feel to wave your realistic magic wand and say what you want? For some people the answer is scary and by saying what they want, they suddenly feel a responsibility for achieving it and realize that if they don't, they only have themselves to blame.I think that is a pretty powerful concept actually because when we look at it from this perspective, we have 100% control over what we have and what we want. In fact,
    he was doing. He asked me how he might help and then escorted me to the correct office, and even looked for the fax.

    That is genuine friendliness, concern and training all rolled into one. Now some of you are saying, “Oh sure, big fancy hotel” blah, blah, blah. Be quiet Schleprock.

    It was not a big fancy hotel at all, I wasn’t even a guest, and he had no idea who I was or what I was doing there. I just happened to be one person riding the same merry-go-round on the same day as him. Do your personnel stop what they are doing to help the Customer?

    And do they understand WHY they do it?

    4. Do they listen completely and without judgment and reservation? Have they been trained in Assertiveness skills? Dynamic Listening? Memory?

    Do they let the Customer finish or do they interrupt? There is a reason we are born with one mouth and two ears. We cannot provide a service, sell a product, be good stewards of our company and move forward with Company Goals or anything else if we are not listening to what the Customer wants and needs.

    And it is a skill that is trainable. You cannot train intelligence or personality. You can train someone to listen.

    5. Do they respond to Customers requests in a timely fashion? Do they acknowledge that the Customers time is more important than their own? Anytime you save a Customer time or money, you win them over. Let me give you an example.

    In my days as a service advisor, I had a Customer come in that I promised I would personally take care of her situation. I told her I would arrange for a courtesy shuttle for her to be brought back to the dealership when her vehicle was ready. I got everything 99% right. It was the 1% that killed her experience. I made sure the vehicle was completed, the paperwork ready, got the shuttle to pick her up, I was home free right!

    WRONG!

    When she arrived, her vehicle was still being washed. It was a particularly busy day and it took an additional 15-20 minutes for her vehicle to be brought up.

    It may not sound l

    Choosing a Philippine Private Investigator
    Whenever you have problems that require some investigation in the Philippines, the country has a number of private investigators that will be able to help you out. There are several Philippine private investigation agencies that are usually affiliated with other agencies from other countries for cases requiring international assistance.No matter where in the world you are looking for private investigators, it is always important that you know how to find the right one that will be able to do the job well. You should have a pretty good idea on how to look for a good private investigator. The job that you require would depend on the expertise and the experience of the private investigator that you eventually choose.Before all that, you should have a good idea of what a private investigator can and can't do for you. Their job may not be a bit limited than what the po
    what the Customer wants and needs.

    And it is a skill that is trainable. You cannot train intelligence or personality. You can train someone to listen.

    5. Do they respond to Customers requests in a timely fashion? Do they acknowledge that the Customers time is more important than their own? Anytime you save a Customer time or money, you win them over. Let me give you an example.

    In my days as a service advisor, I had a Customer come in that I promised I would personally take care of her situation. I told her I would arrange for a courtesy shuttle for her to be brought back to the dealership when her vehicle was ready. I got everything 99% right. It was the 1% that killed her experience. I made sure the vehicle was completed, the paperwork ready, got the shuttle to pick her up, I was home free right!

    WRONG!

    When she arrived, her vehicle was still being washed. It was a particularly busy day and it took an additional 15-20 minutes for her vehicle to be brought up.

    It may not sound like a big deal, however, 15-20 minutes to a person who has responsibilities to other people like children at school, parents who need medications at home or people who have tight schedules, 15-20 minutes turns into 30 minutes lost that turns into hours at the end of the day.

    She let me know that her time was valuable and if I sent the shuttle to pick her up, her car had better be ready. Not almost ready.

    I never forgot the lesson “Customer time is more important than mine.”

    6. Do they follow up on Customer requests without prompting? Without an additional phone call or reminder?

    We all forget things from time to time. With Customers however, you might want to write everything down. I am at an age that if I don’t write it down it does not get done.

    When I am dealing with a Customers concern, everything is written. I have a much better chance of completing the list of tasks if I have taken the time to document it.

    When I follow up without the Customer calling me back it makes them feel like they received value and personal service.

    If they have to call you back, they feel like they are being ignored or worse, ripped off.

    7. Do you have goals? Are they published for all to see? Are they updated to reflect changing circumstances in your business?

    When is the last time you reviewed the “Big Picture?” Do you involve the personnel in developing those goals? Are they helpers in the decision or just “following orders?”

    Without clear measurable goals it’s hard to have everyone on the same “sheet of music.”

    And when you hit those goals, do you have a big “WOOHOO” for all involved? Have a Party, lunch, bonus award, whatever it takes to keep the people focused on the vision and working towards the same end.

    There you go. A good list to help you measure and fine tune your Customer Service Department.

    Now can someone help me find the right merry-go-round?

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