Dynamic Business Logo
Home Button
Bookmark Button

How to create a customer service mindset within your business

In this age of digital transformation and technology, many argue we are more connected than ever before. But at what cost? Employees now provide products and services to consumers without ever having a face-to-face conversation. Customers type questions or issues into live chat feeds on websites, Facebook Messenger and other online conduits. We see more and more people in stores with headphones on, sending a strict message to service staff that they are not to be disturbed.

It is our desire for speed and convenience that is compromising our customers’ greatest and basic needs as humans: care, kindness and one-on-one attention.

Service is simple

Yet we have made it overly complicated. We have created com­plex systems and internal processes that, while designed to help our teams, often stop us from delivering the service we know our customers crave.

We get set in our own ways, stay in our own heads and forget that we are simply serving humans with our product or service. We try to control what happens in a service environment, which as you well know isn’t possible!

Like many other small business owners and companies, you have probably tried – and failed – many times to operationalise your customer service culture. You’ve probably forgotten that human beings are unpredictable creatures and customer service is anything but routine and automatic.

Customer service is a privilege and those employees who inter­act with your customers on a day-to-day basis have the power to positively impact someone’s life, not to mention your brand.

Look at your behaviour

When it comes to winning the hearts and minds of your cus­tomers, it’s the behavioursof your frontline employees that influence your whole organisation’s performance and results.

How customers feel when they interact with your employees determines how they feel about your com­pany itself. This is what determines whether they will be a one-click wonder or a customer for life.

Procedures and steps of service may be great for robots and androids, but it’s the ways in which your service staff act and the emotional connection they create with your customers that will determine your ultimate success.

Rather than look at complex customer service strategies and ways to engage your staff, you must look to the most powerful and influential people in your business – you and your frontline employees.

Get the edge

As a small business owner, you are responsible for your people who are respon­sible for your results. Even if everyone in your business is already excellent at what they do, sharpening their emotional competencies and their behaviours at work will contribute to a service mindset that will give you and your organisation an extra edge.

When we are highly tuned in to the people in front of us we start to frame questions differently, pause before we speak and even start to see things from someone else’s perspective.

Small business owners and leaders who operate with a service mindset help build a service culture: a high-performing culture where customer loyalty is constantly increasing. In fact, if we were to replace the word ‘customer’ with ‘humans’, we could say that our goal in business is to cre­ate greater loyalty with other humans

Develop six service mindsets

So the best, simplest and easiest way of developing this success­ful service culture is to work on your service mindset. This is a continuum of behaviours that impact your employees’ performance, which in turn impacts your customer interactions and loyalty, creating a virtuous circle that enhances your whole business.

The six mindsets you need are:

  1. Empathy – Practise empathy to create a team of employees who feel understood. Cultivating trust in this way is essential if you have teams who are continually coaching, mentoring, teaching and caring for others.
  2. Questions – Show sincere interest in your employees as humans to help them grow into their role. Ask the right questions, and you’ll start to encourage your staff to think for themselves and learn the effect of their decisions.
  3. Energy – Shift the focus, the energy, onto supporting all employees to deliver great service. What you give attention to, grows.
  4. Heart – Trust and appreciate your staff and they’ll have a greater willingness to serve, which automatically increases their discretionary effort. This creates a cumulative advantage for a business.
  5. Purpose –Make staff feel valued and that will motivate them further. An engaged workforce interacts with your customers more positively and this creates customer loyalty.
  6. Practice – Seek information, develop your people and helping them grow in their working roles. Knowing that you are only as good as your last performance is key to continual growth and improvement and business longevity.

When you do this, when you build this service mindset (instead of an automatic one), then and only then, do you start to move the needle in your business.

You connect to your customers as humans, and watch your profits grow.


Jaquie Scammell is a customer service relations expert. Jaquie works with leaders of large teams who want to influence their staff to love serving customers. She is also the author of the new book, Creating a Customer Service Mindset (Major Street Publishing).

 

What do you think?

    Be the first to comment

Add a new comment

Jaquie Scammell

Jaquie Scammell

View all posts