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Casual Articles - How to Respond to Customer Complaints
Are You Godiva Chocolate to both keep the customer and to avoid putting your company in jeopardy.Has this every happened to you? You have an account that owes your company a considerable amount of money. Everything goes well for awhile. The payments are made on time, the debtor calls you just because he wants to know how he can make your day better (hey, this is my dream!).Then one day no more calls and worse yet, no more payments. You, being the good em Caution: Sometimes doing the "right thing" is not enough to keep a customer. So calculate what it will cost you in terms of gross profit dollars if you and the customer cannot come to terms. I recall a Colorado lumberyard manager who supplied redwood fascia to a residential builder for his personal home. While the lumberyard did not supply the paint Could Ray Kroc have founded McDonalds in the Era of Sarbaines Oxley? If you are in business, you will eventually offend a customer, or at least fail to meet the customer's expectations. Now that the damage is done, what is the most effective way to deal with the complaint and keep the customer?Over regulation of our free markets is stifling our growth in America and killing the next superstar Entrepreneurs. Let’s discuss just how bad it really is. Let’s us discuss Ray Kroc, founder of McDonalds and the Father of Franchising. In this philosophical discussion let us look at history for a moment shall we? If Ray Kroc had to pay $45,000 to create disclosure Step 1. Identify with the customer. Never take a customer complaint lightly. Rather, do your homework and make sure that the customer understands that you genuinely care and that you want to do the right thing. Doing the right thing, however, doesn't always mean giving customers what they want; it means making sure you do your best to get both sides of the story and respond appropriately. One of the best ways to identify with a customer is to ask yourself, "If this had happened to me, how would I feel? What would I think the right thing to do would be?" If you're truthful with your answers, and you respond accordingly, the odds improve that your customer will also. Step 2: Acknowledge the customer's point of view. Never tell a customer that he or she is wrong, but always respond in such a way that the customer knows that you understand where he or she is coming from. This is best achieved by listening to what the customer has to say and asking questions for clarification. Step 3: Ask the customer this question: "What would you have us do?" This puts the monkey on the customer's back to tell you what would be fair. It still doesn't mean that you are going to do what has been suggested, but you give the customer an opportunity to offer an opinion. Step 4: Get input from others whom you respect before you respond. Ask your supervisor's opinion, a well-respected salesperson or even a fellow businessperson you respect. What you're looking for here are alternatives to both keep the customer and to avoid putting your company in jeopardy. Caution: Sometimes doing the "right thing" is not enough to keep a customer. So calculate what it will cost you in terms of gross profit dollars if you and the customer cannot come to terms. I recall a Colorado lumberyard manager who supplied redwood fascia to a residential builder for his personal home. While the lumberyard did not supply the paint Why A Collection Agency Is Your Small Business's Best Friend hing. Doing the right thing, however, doesn't always mean giving customers what they want; it means making sure you do your best to get both sides of the story and respond appropriately.Does the term “collection agency” put you on edge? If you’re like many small business owners, the mountain of debt you accumulated during startup might have been enough to make you worry about collection agencies every time you answered the phone. But your feelings toward collection agencies are eventually going to change, if they haven’t already.While no one One of the best ways to identify with a customer is to ask yourself, "If this had happened to me, how would I feel? What would I think the right thing to do would be?" If you're truthful with your answers, and you respond accordingly, the odds improve that your customer will also. Step 2: Acknowledge the customer's point of view. Never tell a customer that he or she is wrong, but always respond in such a way that the customer knows that you understand where he or she is coming from. This is best achieved by listening to what the customer has to say and asking questions for clarification. Step 3: Ask the customer this question: "What would you have us do?" This puts the monkey on the customer's back to tell you what would be fair. It still doesn't mean that you are going to do what has been suggested, but you give the customer an opportunity to offer an opinion. Step 4: Get input from others whom you respect before you respond. Ask your supervisor's opinion, a well-respected salesperson or even a fellow businessperson you respect. What you're looking for here are alternatives to both keep the customer and to avoid putting your company in jeopardy. Caution: Sometimes doing the "right thing" is not enough to keep a customer. So calculate what it will cost you in terms of gross profit dollars if you and the customer cannot come to terms. I recall a Colorado lumberyard manager who supplied redwood fascia to a residential builder for his personal home. While the lumberyard did not supply the paint Tube Cuts Made Easy - A Cutting-Edge Technology mprove that your customer will also.Dynasties fall, empires break, seasons pass—but one thing that never ends is mankind’s technological progress. To prove it one more time and this time, with remarkable prospects, laser tube processing has come to make things easier for the tube-cutting industry. Laser cuts being a reality now, production efforts have sharply shrunk to a minimum of 50%; and quality h Step 2: Acknowledge the customer's point of view. Never tell a customer that he or she is wrong, but always respond in such a way that the customer knows that you understand where he or she is coming from. This is best achieved by listening to what the customer has to say and asking questions for clarification. Step 3: Ask the customer this question: "What would you have us do?" This puts the monkey on the customer's back to tell you what would be fair. It still doesn't mean that you are going to do what has been suggested, but you give the customer an opportunity to offer an opinion. Step 4: Get input from others whom you respect before you respond. Ask your supervisor's opinion, a well-respected salesperson or even a fellow businessperson you respect. What you're looking for here are alternatives to both keep the customer and to avoid putting your company in jeopardy. Caution: Sometimes doing the "right thing" is not enough to keep a customer. So calculate what it will cost you in terms of gross profit dollars if you and the customer cannot come to terms. I recall a Colorado lumberyard manager who supplied redwood fascia to a residential builder for his personal home. While the lumberyard did not supply the paint Why Ticket Design Matters ts the monkey on the customer's back to tell you what would be fair. It still doesn't mean that you are going to do what has been suggested, but you give the customer an opportunity to offer an opinion.Ticket design is often overlooked. Event planners and organizers plan how many tickets they will need for a given event and how to distribute those tickets, but stop short of putting much thought into the ticket design itself. From a branding perspective this is a lost opportunity. Branding is, after all, managing all of the different touch points that an organiz Step 4: Get input from others whom you respect before you respond. Ask your supervisor's opinion, a well-respected salesperson or even a fellow businessperson you respect. What you're looking for here are alternatives to both keep the customer and to avoid putting your company in jeopardy. Caution: Sometimes doing the "right thing" is not enough to keep a customer. So calculate what it will cost you in terms of gross profit dollars if you and the customer cannot come to terms. I recall a Colorado lumberyard manager who supplied redwood fascia to a residential builder for his personal home. While the lumberyard did not supply the paint Inevitable Change to both keep the customer and to avoid putting your company in jeopardy.Once there was a time in business when you could experience a change and then return to a period of relative stability. Nowadays, changes occur constantly - one on top of another. We need to acknowledge change and realize that change is a continuous journey - a way of life rather than a one-time event that can be lived through. With considerable momentum and cont Caution: Sometimes doing the "right thing" is not enough to keep a customer. So calculate what it will cost you in terms of gross profit dollars if you and the customer cannot come to terms. I recall a Colorado lumberyard manager who supplied redwood fascia to a residential builder for his personal home. While the lumberyard did not supply the paint or the painter, the painter that they builder selected used water-based paint on the fascia. When the grain swelled, the builder demanded that the dealer replace the fascia. The lumberyard was clearly not responsible and the builder's demand was absurd. However, the manager made the decision to replace the fascia because he knew that the builder was the kind of person who would punish him by taking his business elsewhere if he didn't meet the his demands. What is the right thing to do and what will keep the customer may not always be the same. In this case, the manager looked upon the cost of replacing the redwood fascia as an investment. His goal was to do whatever was necessary to ensure that he would retain this customer's business.
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