7 Keys to Creating a Customer
Focused Culture
Walking-the-Talk of your Mission
Statement
Copyright
© JC Mowatt Seminars Inc.
Used
with permission of the author
By Jeff Mowatt
From the series Influence with Ease ®
www.jeffmowatt.com
20
March 2007
"I’m
just doing this until something better comes along – like
retirement!” If that
sums up the attitude held by some of your employees, then imagine
the negative impact on teamwork, productivity, and especially on
customer loyalty. Chances
are that you, as a business manager or owner, are committed to
satisfying customers. But
what are you doing about employees who see their jobs merely as
‘fillers’? Business
leaders need to create an environment that motivates employees to want
to take care of customers. Unfortunately,
the conventional methods to create a customer-focused culture
through mission statements have often fallen short.
In the late
1980’s and early 90’s a lot of managers and business gurus
seemed to think that if companies just had a corporate mission
statement, all of their customer service and teamwork problems
would be magically solved. These mission statements almost always
touted the organization’s undying “…commitment to satisfying
customers…” Blah,
blah, blah. If only it
were that simple. A
mission statement is a good idea – provided there’s ongoing
real-world implementation of the principles and values it
conveys.
“Without
implementation, customers and employees find that
mission statements that brag about the importance of
customers are … annoying.”
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Managers need
a fresh approach to ensuring that customers are satisfied and that
employees are personally committed to making it happen. After
working with dozens of corporations over the years that have been
faced with this challenge, I developed the concept of CAST
Meetings© (Customer Service Team Meetings).
Think of it as a way to breathe new life into your corporate
mission.
At CAST
Meetings managers and employees gather for a couple of hours once
a month to focus on enhancing customer satisfaction. You may think
you already do something similar in your organization. Perhaps you
call it a ‘staff meeting’.
The problem is that staff meetings end up focusing on workers’
needs and managers’ needs – not on those of customers’.
So, erase the notion that CAST Meetings have any connection
to your current staff meeting.
Everyone attending CAST – front line
employees, support staff, and managers of all levels – will
focus on the most important person, the customer.
When
introducing CAST Meetings to our clients, we include
these seven key elements.
1.
Spread your Customers’ Words
At CAST
Meetings, everyone learns the latest results of your customer
surveys, letters and comments.
One of the most useful, least expensive ways to collect
customer feedback that we teach in our seminars is to ensure that
employees directly ask customers a magic question, “What can we
do to improve our service?”
Asking that question and bringing the responses to CAST not
only provides valuable information, it also reminds front line
employees of one of their most valuable roles - being the eyes and
ears of the company.
2.
Get People Thinking
Prior to
introducing the first CAST Meeting, we conduct training sessions
for our client’s management and staff on ways to enhance
customer satisfaction - without working harder. As part of these
seminars, we brainstorm ways to boost customer satisfaction at
each Point of Perception©. Here
we generate a list of ways we might enhance customers’
experience at every point where they form an impression of the
company – on the website, when they phone in, as they enter the
parking lot, while waiting on site, and so on.
Later, we bring those ideas to CAST Meetings.
We’ve found
that employees share ideas that are often realistic, innovative
and create tremendous value for customers.
As Sam Walton said, “Listen to everyone in your company,
especially the ones who actually talk to customers.
They really know what’s going on out there.”
The bonus is that since front line employees are the ones
coming up with the ideas, they are more committed to implementing
them.
3.
Sift to Find the Nuggets
At
the monthly CAST Meetings, we sift through the feedback generated
by both the customers and the employees. Just because we’ve
collected a list of ideas from these groups, doesn’t necessarily
mean that we can or should act on each suggestion.
At the CAST we use two primary tools to evaluate the
suggestions. One way
is using a feedback grid that we discuss in our management
training seminars. This grid reveals how your customers rate the
various services you provide and how important those services are
to them.
Another
approach to evaluating the suggestions put forth is simply to ask
all CAST participants to come up with as many pros and cons of the
idea as possible. The result is everyone – not just managers -
does a preliminary assessment of the suggestion. That way, when
ideas are rejected – it’s not just managers rejecting the
concepts (which is demoralizing for everyone).
Instead, everyone understands why certain ideas won’t be
acted upon. This goes a long way to eliminating the ‘them vs.
us’ attitude between managers and front line staff that’s so
prevalent in many organizations.
4.
Implement Now
… Perfect Later
Pilot. Pilot.
Pilot. When you
identify an idea that on the surface looks like it has merit, the
next step is to launch a preliminary test run, or ‘pilot’.
So, let’s say for a 30-day trial basis you are going to
give several front line employees in a specific department the
authority to make a decision that typically requires management
approval. Those same
employees volunteer to try the program, monitor the results, and
report their findings at the next CAST Meeting.
If they indicate that the pilot went well, then at the CAST
it can be fine-tuned and expanded to other areas within the
organization.
One
of the great hidden benefits of conducting a monthly CAST Meeting
is that those participants who agree to test a pilot project
suddenly have a deadline. Moreover, they’ve committed to present
their findings to their peers and supervisors.
Giving a public report of what they’ve done serves as a
tremendous incentive to actually get something done – without
pleading, nagging, or cajoling.
Perhaps the
most critical element of any CAST Meeting is “story-time.”
During this part of the agenda, managers call upon selected
front line employees, who recently provided exceptional service,
to share a specific on-the-job incident, and explain why they did
what they did. These
stories become your organization’s parables - living examples of
your beliefs. Parables
have been used to teach history and values since before the
creation of the written word.
They endure because they are interesting, teach us lessons,
and are easily remembered. These
stories become your ‘code’ - the way you do business.
In other words, these real-life stories not only reflect
your organization’s mission, vision and values – they become
its living and breathing embodiment.
“When
it comes to employee morale, sound decision-making, and
customer loyalty, most organizations would do well to
replace policies with parables.”
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6.
Coach instead of Fighting Fires
We often hear
one of the roles of the manager is to act as a mentor or coach.
Yet managers get so busy that the only time they
‘coach’ people is when a subordinate fouls up.
Worse still, only one person at a time learns from the
mistake. That’s not our idea of being a mentor.
An effective coach is more proactive.
One
of my colleagues, fellow professional speaker, Joe Bonura, told
me, “Spaced repetition is the mother of memory.”
At CAST Meetings one of the roles of the manager is to take
one of the customer service ideas that we’ve shared in the
training seminar and reinforce its application.
That way, simple vital customer service tips are repeated
and are more likely to be remembered and applied.
So rather than reacting to individual crises, managers help
all employees to prevent customer service problems before they
occur.
In a study of
Fortune 500 corporations, researchers found that the number one
motivator of employees is recognition – knowing that they are
appreciated. CAST
Meetings give managers a forum to provide recognition that’s not
based on seniority - but on exemplary customer service.
Perhaps even more important is that the recognition
doesn’t just come from management - it comes from the workers’
peers. That means
you’re creating a shift in culture right at the grass roots.
Add to that a few words of open praise from the senior
manager to the team, and everyone feels like they are part of a
greater good. Combine
it with pizza, snacks or lunch and you’ve created a
customer-focused event that employees look forward to.
Bottom
Line – It Gets Results
It’s easy
for corporate leaders to pay lip service to the importance of
customers. Mission
statements may play well for advertising purposes and look good on
the boardroom wall. But
employees see beneath the veil of slogans. They need to know that
you as a leader actually mean what you say – and that you’re
willing to back statements with action.
Simple logic dictates that if that kind of integrity is
missing, even the best employee will eventually become
de-motivated and start marking time.
With CAST
Meetings employees discover that the company indeed
practices-what-it-preaches. That’s
the kind of trust that translates into improved performance for
everyone. One of our
clients found that within the six months of using CAST, morale had
noticeably improved and employee productivity increased by 34%.
Meanwhile, they reported that number of customer complaints
plummeted fourfold. That’s
a corporate culture where all the stakeholders benefit.
After all, ensuring that everyone wins is very likely what
your mission statement is all about.
“When
it comes to employee morale, sound decision-making, and
customer loyalty, most organizations would do well to
replace policies with parables.”
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This
article is based on the critically acclaimed book, Becoming a Service Icon in 90 Minutes a Month
by business strategist, consultant, and international speaker Jeff
Mowatt. To obtain your own copy of his book or to inquire about
engaging Jeff for your team, visit http://www.jeffmowatt.com
or call 1-800-JMowatt (566-9288)
Short Summary
Improve customer service by focusing on employee motivation and
effective communication between management and front line
employees..
Keywords and related phrases
Authority, coaching, commitment, communication, corporate culture,
customer, customer surveys, decision-making, front line employees,
incentive, management, mentor, mission statement, morale,
motivation, parables, performance, principles, productivity,
recognition, teamwork, training, trust, values.
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