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Speed
Kills
The
service standard that does more harm than good
Copyright
© JC Mowatt Seminars Inc.
Used with permission of the author:
From the series Influence with Ease ®
Author: Jeff Mowatt
http://www.jeffmowatt.com
24
August 2007
As a business
owner or manager, you have probably heard management experts refer
to the importance of service standards for frontline employees.
The idea is that managers should give customer-contact people a
performance goal or service standard by which they can be measured and rewarded. Sounds
good in theory. Unfortunately, over my years as a consultant and
business advisor, and as a customer myself, I find that some
service standards are not only ineffective, they are actually
counterproductive. I wonder if this may be the case in your
organization.
When most
managers hear the term service
standard, they think in terms of delivery and turnaround
times. In other words, phone calls will be returned within
twenty-four hours, customers will wait in line no longer than five
minutes, etc. Those
types of standards assume that faster is better, which isn’t
always the case. Consider this scenario…
When my wife,
Lydia and I decided to buy a new home, we quickly concluded that my
forty-year-old lifelong pals could no longer be bribed to spend a
weekend helping us to move. At this stage in life, they knew that
we could afford to hire movers, and we knew that they could afford
their own beer and pizza. So, when we were scheduling our move, I
set up appointments with two moving company sales reps for
estimates.
The
representative from the first company seemed willing to take his
time. He was
interested in hearing about the home we were moving into and the
special requests we had for handling certain pieces of furniture.
He walked us through his presentation binder and shared tips to
make the move go more smoothly.
The impression I got was that he genuinely wanted to help.
On the other
hand, the sales rep from the second company seemed rushed.
He dashed through the house, checking items off on his
chart, answering my questions in clipped tones. Overall, I felt
like I was just an interruption to his important day.
Both sales
reps had spent over twenty years in the industry, so experience
wasn’t the issue. The services offered were more or less the
same. When it came to
price, the second rep’s - the one who was in such a hurry - was
actually lower. Yet, as you might have guessed, the first rep got
the business because he took his time. In other words, he got
better results by going slower.
Keep in mind
that shopping for a moving company is not something most people
relish. For most of us, even if we love the new home we’re
moving into, the thought of the move itself is about as welcome as
undergoing amateur eyeball surgery. It’s a chore that we want to
get over-with quickly and painlessly.
Ironically, when it comes to the face-to-face time spent
between the customer and the company rep, speeding up the process
won’t necessarily be perceived as providing better service. When
customers are uncertain about what they are buying, they want the
service rep to take their time. In doing so, the rep shows that
they get what the customer really needs - understanding.
How
Managers Make Things Worse
Strange but
true, is the fact that in most cases the company rep does not want to rush. Rather, it’s the company’s employee-performance
measurement system that encourages and rewards this kind of
hurried behaviour. Such was the case with a client whose
organization suffered the effects of time-driven service
standards.
In this
particular company, all of the service standards focused on
delivery times. In other words, the company policies spelled out
that the sales rep should return a customer’s call within x
hours. Services should be delivered within y days. These standards
were proudly posted in public view.
The result was a mess.
Employees
rushed through as many customer contacts as they could manage.
When I interviewed their customers and reviewed complaint letters,
it was clear that customers perceived the staff as arrogant and
insensitive. Those
customers who couldn’t find any other reason to complain were
quick to point out that many employees weren’t living up to the
company’s own posted standards of speed. Employees got fed-up,
became demoralized and productivity dropped - exactly the opposite
effect the company expected when they set the standards. In
this case, the adage is true - speed kills. All of this needs to
be balanced with the fact that at some point speed of delivery is
an issue.
The Good
News
Service
standards can and should play a role in guiding the decisions of
frontline employees, but only when those standards include the other deliverables that help create customer loyalty.
I’m referring to quality, courtesy, safety,
innovation, and so on. Of course, each of these factors are
important, but where the real impact happens is when you prioritize these standards so that frontline employees can make more
appropriate decisions without having to talk to their manager. The
good news is that prioritizing your service standards is
relatively easy. And it’s the topic of another discussion.
Meanwhile, I encourage you as a manager to review whether or not
your service standards – formal or implied – are primarily
focused on speed. If so, forget theory – ask yourself what the
real impact is on your employees and your customers.
This
article is based on the critically acclaimed book, Becoming
a Service Icon in 90 Minutes a Month
by business strategist and international speaker Jeff Mowatt.
To obtain your own copy of his book or to inquire about engaging
Jeff for your team, visit www.jeffmowatt.com
or call 1-800-JMowatt (566-9288)
Short summary
Corporate culture, service standards and company policies could
support frontline employees or undermine their efforts.
Keywords and
relevant phrases
Communication, company policy, corporate culture, customer
service, frontline personnel, management, service standards, speed
of delivery.
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