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The Telephone Doctor
Five
Ways to Sabotage Your Business
By Nancy Friedman, Telephone Doctor
Believe it or not, there are
many, many ways to sabotage your business. And,
chances are, your staff is doing some of these now,
without your even knowing it. And worse yet, you've
probably even heard some of this yourself (ouch!).
That’s the bad news.
The good news is, through
our many Telephone Doctor surveys, we’re able to
bring to you the top five sabotage practices and
then show you how to neutralize the effects. So, get
ready. You and your staff are about to be in a much
better position to handle: The Five Top Ways to
Sabotage Your Business Today:
- It’s Not Our Policy
This, unfortunately, is used more as an excuse
than anything else. It’s a sure thing that the
employee has not been shown how to explain a
policy to someone. This phrase is used, then, more
as something to say when the employee doesn't know
what to say. The customer then calls that an
"excuse."
When the customer hears "it’s not our policy,"
they immediately respond (usually silently) with,
"WHO CARES?" What a business needs to understand
is, no one but the management and staff cares
about your policies. Do you really think the
customer says to himself or herself as they enter
or call your place of business, "Gee, I wonder
what their policy is on this issue?"
All this being said, there are companies who do
have policies that make it more difficult to work
with them than with others. So here’s a
suggestion: Decide on your policy, then work as a
team with your staff to find a positive way to
explain it to the customer. Otherwise, it'll be
the customer’s policy not to do business with you!
- It’s Not My Department
Well, then who's is it? Let’s remember one of
the Telephone Doctor mottos: Tell the customer
what you do, not what you DON'T do. If someone
mistakenly gets to your extension and asks for
something that you don't handle, the following is
far more effective: "Hi, I work in the paint
department. Let me get you to someone in the area
you need." This is far more effective than telling
someone it’s not your department. (Let’s not say,
"YOU have the wrong department." Take full
responsibility with the "I" statement.)
- My Computer’s Down
Yeah, yeah, yeah. We've all heard that one. And
Ouch! That one hurts because there are still many
customers who remember the days BEFORE the
computer. My goodness, how did we ever survive?
Sure it’s easier to have the computer but, believe
it or not, millions - of businesses, were launched
and operated on 3 x 5 cards or some other type of
manual database.
When your computer crashes, this sounds so much
better: "I'll be delighted to help you...it may
take a little longer as I'll need to do things by
hand...our computers are currently down." This way
you've still explained what happened and they'll
have a little more compassion as you've offered
assistance - and didn't simply blame the computer
for your inability to help.
- I Wasn’t Here That Day (or I was on
vacation when that happened)
This one personally really makes me laugh. I
don't remember asking them if they were there that
day. Do you really think the customer cares if you
weren't here when their problem happened?
Honestly, they don't, so that’s not even an issue
to discuss. Just hit the problem head on -
apologize without telling them where you were...or
weren't. Remember, you ARE the company whether you
were at work or on vacation when the issue
occurred.
- I’m NEW
SO? OK, you’re new. Now what? Does being "new"
allow you to be anything but super to the
customer? When the customer hears this sabotaging
statement, do you really think they say: "Oh, so
you’re new? So that’s why I'm getting bad service?
Well, then that’s okay...you’re new... no
problem."
Yes, even if you are new, the customer honestly
believes you should know everything about your
job.
Here’s the Telephone Doctor® method on this
one. You can tell the customer, "Please bear with
me, I've only been here a few weeks." That will
buy you time. For whatever reason, hearing the
short LENGTH of time you are with the company
means more to the customer than, "I'm new." Again,
it’s more of an "excuse." Remember to state the
length of time. It’s a credibility enhancement.
"I'm NEW" is a credibility buster.
Good luck. !
Click here to take a
10 point organizational self assessment of your
company's current service level.
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