Blocks to Customer Focus
Despite all the proclamations, catchy advertising slogans, and customer service
publicity, service levels have improved only marginally in the last few years.
As Harvard Business School professor, Rosabeth Moss Kanter, puts it "Despite the
recent media coronation of King Customer, many customers will remain
commoners... most businesses today say that they serve customers. In reality,
they serve themselves."
The problem is that most organizations only talk about customer service
improvement. Many executives don't understand what outstanding customer service
really looks, aren't ready to turn their organization inside out to provide it,
are trying to paint happy smiles on their frontline service providers, or are
bolting a customer service program on the side of their organization rather than
making it a part of their core strategy.
Here are some of the biggest reasons that so few organizations successfully turn
their customer service rhetoric into reality:
Little or no segmentation of markets and customer groups. The organization is
trying to be everything to everybody. Customers are lumped into one
indistinguishable mass and their expectations (if they've been gathered at all)
aren't weighted, ranked, and segmented.
Little or no customer data. When it is collected (such as an occasional survey)
positive feedback is acknowledged. But negative data is denied (usually by
challenging the survey methodology). Budget priorities are set, cost containment
initiated, and resources allocated with little, if any, systematic connection to
customer priorities and expectations. Improvement activities are focused on what
the organization or management considers important.
The organization is managed from the inside out. New products and services are
pushed out to the market through sales and marketing. Customers aren't involved
as active partners in research and development activities. A senior executive in
a leading computer company once said, "If customers don't like our solutions,
they have the wrong problems".
Employees are treated as the source of service breakdowns. Training and
motivational campaigns (such as recognition programs) aim to "fix the
frontline". Management pays little attention to all the research that proves
"The 85/15 Rule" -- 85% of service breakdowns originate in organizational
systems, processes, or structures.
Internal customer tyranny runs rampant. Departments who are served by other
departments use the concept of "internal customer-supplier relationships" to get
their own needs met whether or not it improves external customer service.
Blurry line of sight to external customers -- many organizational members (other
then those on the front serving lines) have little interaction with external
customers and often don't understand (and have little reason to care about)
customers' expectations and how their work ultimately helps or hinders meeting
those expectations.
One customer group dominates. For example, the focus is on retailers, agents, or
distributors with scant attention paid to the ultimate consumer. Little effort
is made to understand and balance the needs of both groups while pulling
products and services through the distribution or service chain.
Focus is on customer acquisition rather than retention. Investments in sales and
marketing to bring in new customers are much higher then efforts to retain or
expand business with current customers.
Customer aren't people. Thinking of someone as a customer implies providing
service, partnership, or some form of equality. However, when customers become
"policyholders", "consumers", "patients", "passengers", "taxpayers", "accounts",
or "advertisers" they often become less human.
Business is a lot like tennis; those who don't serve well end up losing. In a
recent interview, Bob Green, a service/quality coordinator with AmSouth Mortgage
in Birmingham Alabama summed up the challenge facing most organizations; "The
financial products from one mortgage company to another are basically the same.
We're out to play `quantum leapfrog' and jump out in front of our competitors.
The only way we can do that is to know our customers overall needs more
thoroughly and move more quickly to meet them then anybody else in our
business."
About the Author
Jim Clemmer is a bestselling author and internationally acclaimed keynote
speaker, workshop/retreat leader, and management team developer on leadership,
change, customer focus, culture, teams, and personal growth. During the last 25
years he has delivered over two thousand customized keynote presentations,
workshops, and retreats. Jim's five international bestselling books include The
VIP Strategy, Firing on All Cylinders, Pathways to Performance, Growing the
Distance, and The Leader's Digest. His web site is
www.clemmer.net