Am I Great at Customer Service?
By Ed Gagnon
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About this ebook
Do you want to be great? Do you want to be able to set yourself apart from 99% of the employees in your industry? Do you want to go to work, knowing you’re the best you can be at customer service? If so, you need to ask yourself one question: “Am I Great at Customer Service?” This book showcases the 25 qualities of people who are Great at customer service!
Ed Gagnon
Ed Gagnon, President and Founder of Customer Service Solutions, has ridden the cutting edge of the customer service industry for over ten years. A regular expert resource in his field, Ed has been featured on WJZY’s Charlotte Now and WFAE’s Charlotte Talks with Mike Collins and has a regular column on the subject featured in the Charlotte Business Journal. Ed and Customer Service Solutions work across industries and across regional lines, completing 450 projects in 15 states over the years. 2008 saw Customer Service Solutions sign as clients such diverse organizations as the Orlando Magic, Anson County Schools, the Los Angeles Clippers and the Public Library system of Mecklenburg County.
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Book preview
Am I Great at Customer Service? - Ed Gagnon
Introduction
Are you great at customer service?
I don’t mean good or above average. I don’t mean "Are you nice? or
Do you have a warm smile?" I mean, are you GREAT at customer service?
If you are reading this book, maybe it is because you want to be great. Maybe it’s because you think you are, or you’re getting very close. Maybe you were given this book because somebody wants you to be great. Or, just maybe, you just care about continuously trying to learn how to get better.
Whatever your reason for reading this, it’s important to have an understanding of what this book is intended to do. It’s intended to paint a picture of some of the most important characteristics that people demonstrate who want to be great at customer service.
So much of the world today, particularly in America, is driven by service industries. Even if you are in a manufacturing industry, there are so many functions that require you to serve others, serve clients, serve internal customers, and even serve vendors and suppliers.
So this can apply to virtually anybody who - as part of their role - needs to serve and satisfy others.
The key characteristics discussed in this book have been determined by Customer Service Solutions, Inc. co-founder Ed Gagnon based on his 20+ years of work in the world of customer service. If you become highly effective at living these principles, taking on these traits, and continuously trying to do better in building your attitude and skills, then you will be taking a dynamic step toward reaching the very top level of the occupation you undertake.
We give you guidelines on what these important characteristics are, we tell you stories to illustrate what it looks like when these characteristics are lived as well as when these characteristics are ignored. And we give you a series of self-tests so that you can evaluate yourself and determine Am I Great at…Customer Service?
In the television show So You Think You Can Dance,
thousands of people audition for the show thinking they’re great dancers. But many are REALLY wrong about this self-assessment!
We’ve conducted customer service training sessions where participants (especially early on in the session) say I know all about customer service…why do I keep having to come back to these courses?
Usually, it becomes readily apparent during the session that these folks don’t exactly have service attitudes or the best skills out there, even though they think they’re great.
But there are truly some outstanding customer service-oriented people in this world. Do you think you’re one of them?
It’s fine to think you’re great at customer service. Confidence is an important part of service success. But we need to understand what it takes to be on the road to greatness. We’ll provide you with 100 questions to consider and 25 key qualities to strive to develop.
We hope this book helps you to learn, to grow, and to become great!
CSS Background
Customer Service Solutions, Inc. is a management consulting firm focused entirely on customer service and client retention. CSS has conducted research and provided consulting and training services since 1998. This book has been crafted from the thousands and thousands of mystery shopping experiences (where we and our shoppers pose as customers to evaluate telephone, e-mail, onsite, and website experiences for our clients). The characteristics were defined through the observations of those who are great (and those not so great) in the world of customer service.
The skills are taken directly from much of the training content that we provide to clients, where we guide them in how to improve communications with, relationships with, and satisfaction from their customers. We have conducted hundreds of projects, trained thousands of individuals on many of the principles and skills noted in this book. Now we are using all our experience and expertise to provide this core set of key characteristics for anyone wanting to be great at customer service.
Enjoy learning about customer service.
We want you to be GREAT!
Is Your Attitude Great?
People who are great at customer service are typically more upbeat, hopeful, focused more on what can be done instead of what can’t be done. Is that you?
You need to have the attitude that drives success. That’s an attitude of yes we can,
of I hope so,
of it’s got a better chance to be a great day if I try to make it a great day.
How full is the cup?
People Great at Customer Service…
Have a Positive Orientation
What is your mindset on a typical day? Is it a mindset of what can be done or what can’t be done? Individuals who are great at customer service have a mindset of "how can I help a customer achieve their goal, how can I address their needs, how can I say ‘yes’ to what will accomplish that goal even if I have to say ‘no’ to the particular solution or method or timeframe that they desire?"
People who are negative seem to ooze negativity; it’s like an odor that permeates their being and impacts both customers and co-workers alike. Sure they may smile and tell jokes occasionally, but there’s a certain air about them that dampens the laughter and questions the sincerity of the smile. There’s an orientation of "No or
We’ve already tried that or
That won’t work."
Your attitude and orientation are choices. Maybe they’re learned behaviors, but they are habits that can change for people who are wired more negatively.
People who are great at customer service are inherently more positive.
Illustrating the point...
It was a simple little exercise, but it made the impression of a lifetime. The social studies teacher told his freshman high school class to take an index card, and he asked each student to write their name at the top. So Rickie put his name at the top of the card. Then the teacher said to start passing the cards up and down the rows until everyone had written one positive thing about the person whose name was on the card.