Yes, I Mind Waiting
10
ways to reduce lineup stress for staff and customers
Copyright © JC Mowatt Seminars Inc.
Used
with permission of the author
Author: Jeff Mowatt
From the series Influence with Ease®
http://www.jeffmowatt.com
23
March 2007
How do you
let a cashier know that you’re in a hurry when you’re waiting
in line?
-
look at
your watch and shake your head
-
sigh,
huff, and roll your eyes
-
complain
to others in the line
-
say to
the person at the till, “We’re in a hurry here!”
-
all of
the above
If you
answered positively to any of these options, then you’re like
most of us who definitely do mind waiting.
Lineups are frustrating. They are barriers that prevent
customers from fulfilling necessary and often tedious tasks. That
means that if you don’t manage your lineups properly, you’ll
lose business due to customer frustration.
Not to mention your staff will be stressed-out.
That’s a lose/lose scenario.
Most managers
think the best way to manage a lineup is to get the staff to work
faster. Often, this
only creates worse problems. Consider the impact on your staff of trying to work at full
speed. It’s
impossible to go flat-out without eventual burn-out. Morale drops. Turnover
increases. Tired
employees make more mistakes; which take even more time to fix.
Ditto for the
negative impact of working faster on your customers. Only a fool would want tired, aggravated employees
interacting with customers. Working faster to get through a
line-up cuts short the human interaction that creates customer
feelings of loyalty.
In the long
term, working faster doesn’t work. Instead, we need ways to reduce the stress of lineups for
both customers and staff - without working faster. Here are ten:
1.
Warn the customer in advance
Ever been
frustrated by the long waiting-room lineup to see a doctor?
(I, know- stupid question). Though delays can happen for legitimate medical reasons,
some doctor’s offices reduce patient frustration by phoning in
advance and warning them of the delay.
If your
customer calls and says that they plan to come in, suggest the
best times for them to drop-in to avoid waiting.
2.
Schedule time for preparatory tasks
If you know
the customer will have some “preliminaries” when they arrive -
such as filling out forms, suggest that they arrive early to
complete them before the scheduled appointment or event.
3.
Acknowledge people entering the line
Too often,
the first time the employee acknowledges the customer is when they
get to the front of the
line. That means a person who wants to spend money is being
deliberately ignored. Lousy
strategy. Instead,
acknowledge customers with a “Hi there!” or “I’ll be with
you in just a few minutes!”
as they enter the
lineup.
4.
Organize the line
Often, people
don’t mind waiting if they can avoid standing in line and yet
still keep their place. Some
restaurants and medical offices give customers pagers so they can
go shopping while they wait. They’re paged just before it’s
their turn.
5.
Distract and entertain the customer
A sociology
experiment found that the best way to speed-up a slow elevator was
not to add a faster motor. Instead,
they added mirrors to the inside of the elevator. People got so caught-up in looking at themselves they
thought the ride was twice as fast.
Lesson: you can reduce the perceived
length of the lineup with a distraction. Examples:
-
Restaurants
could offer reading material to people who are dining alone
-
Disney
theme parks provide video updates about the ride you waiting
for
-
Any
unusual conversation piece will take your customer on a mental
holiday. An Orlando
hotel distracts guests waiting to register by herding live
ducks to the fountain in the lobby.
6.
Provide comfort
Provide
seating, food and drink. On busy Saturdays, a Calgary car wash brings you free pop and hot dogs while you wait in your
vehicle.
7.
Amuse the kids
Prevent
frazzled nerves for everyone by providing a play area for
toddlers. Parents will
love you for it.
8.
Update the customer of progress
Even if
you’re not completely ready for the customer, you can still let
them know you’re working on their behalf.
A travel agent, for example, can phone the client to inform
them that they’ve booked the flights, and are working on the
hotel.
9.
Explain unusual delays
If it’s an
unusually long delay, apologize to the customer, explain the delay
and thank them for waiting. When a pharmacist explained to me that
his assistant had quit that day, so he was short staffed, I
didn’t mind the wait. If he hadn’t pointed that out, I
wouldn’t have returned.
10.
Increase staff at
no extra cost
If your
lineups are sporadic you can increase capacity on the spot without
spending extra money. Carol Chuback, manager of a Greyhound
Courier Depot, installed a doorbell under the cashier’s counter.
When the teller notices more than 2 people is line, he
discretely rings the doorbell signaling to a co-worker in the back
to come to assist at the front counter.
Bottom line -
no one likes lineups.
But that’s no reason to ask staff to burn
themselves out. By
getting creative you’ll boost your repeat business, and you’ll
make the buying experience more pleasant for everyone. That’s what I call win/win.
This article is based on the critically acclaimed book Becoming
a Service Icon in 90 Minutes a Month, by customer service
strategist and professional 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
Managing the procedure for dealing with customers will lower
stress for frontline employees as well as customers.
Keywords and
relevant phrases
Acknowledgement, customer service, frontline personnel, morale,
procedure, retention, schedule, stress, training.
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