ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Customer Service

Who Says the Customer is Always Right?

Author : Diane Hughes

We all know the old adage, "The Customer is Always Right." If you are an online business owner or offline for that matter, you are on both sides of the subject almost everyday.

Before I started my online business, I was just on one side... the customer. I whole-heartedly believed in the above adage and never questioned it at all. In fact, I would get rather perturbed at ANY business owner, manager, or supervisor that would disagree with any complaint I had.

When I started my own online business back in 1997, I slowly began to learn the "other side."

My business products are all downloadable. If your business includes downloaded material, you know where I'm going with this one. I get NUMEROUS complaints EVERYDAY about usernames and passwords not working, corrupt downloads, and the big one... "I can't open the download." Now I always reply in a very helpful gesture, but my first question is always, "Are you entering the username and password exactly as shown?" This seems to be one of the "biggies" with newbies. They do not understand "case-sensitive" -- heck -- they don't even know what that means!

But it doesn't matter HOW simple I make the instructions and overall download process, I STILL get these everyday. I am accused of being a "scammer" at least 4 - 5 times a week... and that's on a GOOD week! :o)

The whole point of the above example is NOT that customers are wrong -- that's not the problem at all. Many of them are very new to the internet and sadly, they do not read through the directions most of the time. I have found that I basically have to put myself back into the "newbie" frame of mind -- as hard as that is to do! I don't remember NOT knowing how to download, enter case-sensitive passwords, etc.

You MUST try to understand that customer... at the point of contact, whether by email or phone, they have probably sat there for HOURS trying to figure it out. They are irritated, angry, and they've pretty much decided at that point that you scammed them.

Yes, it's irritating getting these "dumb" questions and emails even when you have them broken down so simply in the instructions. But face it, you're going to get them and you will get them often as more and more climb on the "web wagon."

When I get a very insulting email (yes, I HAVE been called the "B-word," the "MF-word," and recently a new one that I have never heard before... it was quite disgusting), I do not answer it immediately. I let my initial anger subside. When I can read through it and giggle... it's time to answer. I find that 80 - 90% of the time, the customer is VERY embarrassed of their initial email by the time I have helped them courteously through their problems.

I had to learn this process through time. Believe me... I am a VERY sensitive person and I used to take these to heart. It HURT! I had to revert back to my "customer side" as well as the "newbie" frame of mind and do my best to understand the person's anger.

One angry customer can lead to thousands if not millions in lost business revenue! Especially on the internet. That one customer tells one friend who in turn tells another and so on a so forth. You COULD get a real "psycho" customer that decides to start a website all about YOUR company and YOUR poor service or product.

Watch that one spread like a virus! :o)

On the other hand, exercise great customer service (get those emails answered within 24 hours, folks) and watch the *praise* of your company spread! I guarantee that you just GAINED thousands in sales!

MOST importantly remember these three things:

** LOVE YOUR CUSTOMER

** UNDERSTAND YOUR CUSTOMER

** VALUE YOUR CUSTOMER

You are NOTHING without them. Treat them like gold and you will RECEIVE gold in return!

Diane C. Hughes * ProBizTips.com

FREE Report: Amazingly Simple (Yet Super Powerful)
Ways To Skyrocket Your Sales And Build Your Business
Into A Tower of Profits! ==>> http://madmarketer.com/diane

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. CRM = Customer's (don't) Really Matter
  2. Does Your Customer Talk Back To You?
  3. Are You Giving Your Customers Enough Reasons To Return To Your Business?
  4. Listening to Customers - 5 Tips
  5. Top Ten Strategies for Delivering 5-Star Customer Service
  6. Renewing Customer Loyalty
  7. Dissatisfied or Rude Customers Can Be Satisfied Customers
  8. Increase in Customer Sales = Increase in Customer Service
  9. Transforming Disgruntled Customers into Your Biggest Advocates
  10. My Child Has Opie Eye!
  11. Restaurant Scheduling for Success
  12. Don't Eliminate The Middle Man - Add One
  13. Service Equals Performance Equals Service
  14. Keeping Clients Happy Keeps them Coming Back
  15. Doors by Catering to Your Clients
  16. What's For Lunch?
  17. Improving Customer Service
  18. How To Build a Profitable Business
  19. Difficult Customers - There's No Such Thing
  20. The Death of the Loyal Customer
  21. Communicating Value
  22. Why Can't Microsoft Make "Soft" Packaging?
  23. Post Office, Incredible Lady Postmaster
  24. Your Number One Asset
  25. Handling Customer Complaints
More related feeds
America the Affable
the bartender says, exasperated. "Hey," America says, "freedom's all about getting what you want, when you want it. Ever hear that the customer is always right?" "Sure," the bartender says, "but I'm not going to mix drinks in my bar ...

Is the Customer Always Right????
BUT someone else says nope, it must be the write-up the customer gave. So here’s the question, should the customer be right when there’sa blatant wrong? Wasn’t I hired to THINK for the customer? To second-guess? ...

Type 5 Reasons Why “The Customer Is Always Right” is Wrong!
What I like about this attitude is that it balances employees and customers, where the “always right” maxim squarely favors the customer - which is not a good idea, because, as Bethune says, it causes resentment among employees. ...

Steynian 234
A NEW OATH for doctors: the customer is always right: “Conscientious objection is becoming harder and harder for doctors in the United States, Canada and Britain” …. (mercatornet). ~ THE CONSERVATIVE rebels in Hollywood are taking aim ...

Adventures In The Third Dimension
Customer: “OH MY GOD! LET ME OUT! LET ME OUT! MY WALLET IS IN THE CAR, UNLOCK THIS DOOR!” Me: “It is unlocked.” Customer: “But it says you’re closed!” Me: “What does the other side of the sign say?” Customer: *looks at me like I’m ...

Comment on A personal experience with the hatred of Islam by Jehanzeb
The system says the customer is always right, and if the customer doesn’t want me working there, the management had to let me go. Forget the fact that one of my supervisors cried when I was fired, or that I always came in whenever they ...

Collaboration Cafe Style!
“Just like many small businesses, I notice that you don’t get customer’s information“, he says carefully. I jump to my defense and tell him about our coffee cards. You know buy 10 coffees get one free, but we do better than the ...

The Pist - Ideas Are Bulletproof (Elevator Music, 1995)
06 - The Customer (Is Always Right) 07 - Slogans 08 - Ideas Are Bulletproof 09 - Small Town 10 - Energy 11 - Textbook Salvation 12 - Do What You’re Told 13 - New School 14 - Great American Sportsman 15 - Perceptions ...

The Schweefter Rants - #5 - The Customer Service Experience
... who is more than likely going to cave into their demands rather than defend their staff or indeed a principle, to save face and adhere to one of the longest held (and misguided) beliefs in retail; that the customer is always right. ...

No man is always right. . . excepting Jesus
One of my friends on a private blog put up a link to a rather coarse (so no link) blog essay about how damaging the phrase "the customer is always right" has been to American society - that it has destroyed a lot of simple decency in ...

 


 

2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved