articleexposed.com articleexposed.com
  Home >> About Us >> Add Your Link >> Privacy >> ToS >> Submit Article
Search:   
Add Url
 
 

Medical Care

 

Health & Hygiene

 

Shopping & Auction

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Entertainment

 

Issues & News

 

Careers & Employment

 

Automobile & Automotive

 

Realty & Property

 

Self Management

 

Games & Play

 

People & Society

 

Government & Politics

 

Business & Companies

 

Sports

 

Travel & Vacation

 

Cooking & Drinking

 

Teens & Kids

 

Technology & Science

 

Finance & Investment

 

Academics & Education

 

Culture & Art

 

Software & Networking

 

Family & Home


 

  Home › Business & Companies › Customer Service
   
 

The Moment of Truth

   
Author: Myra Golden
Every customer contact is a Moment of Truth that creates a Moment of Misery, a Moment of Mediocrity, or a Moment of WOW. In the Moment of Truth you can create customers for LIFE or you can initiate a slow and painful demise of your company one customer at a time.

A Moment of Mediocrity is what most often occurs in business to customer interactions and this is where the customer's expectations were met - and those may even be low expectations. Customers who experience a Moment of Mediocrity, feel "satisfied" but will not reward the company with loyalty. These customers are only your customers because they haven't found a better experience.

A Moment of Misery is created each time you fail to meet the customer's expectations. Often, Moments of Misery result in damaging and highly persuasive negative word-of-mouth advertising and customer defection.

A Moment of WOW is created when you exceed the customer's expectations. Service must be truly outstanding and service providers have to go "Beyond WOW" to create the Moment of WOW. Moments of WOW create a profitable base of loyal customers, which results in growth, increased profits, and lasting value. (For hundreds of ideas on how to create Moments of WOW, pick up my brand new book, Beyond WOW by going to Beyond WOW.)
Two years ago I stayed in a luxury hotel in Miami with a corner ocean view room. I paid $179 for a one-night stay and my expectations for service were high. I experienced a myriad of problems during my short stay and one situation stands out. The morning of my departure I called the Concierge to arrange transportation to the airport. Here's a summary of this Moment of Truth:

Me, the Customer: "I need to be at Miami International Airport by 5:00 pm for a 6:00pm flight. Can you arrange transportation with Super Shuttle for me? " Simple request - or so I thought.

Concierge: "Ma'am, you have to give at least a 24 hour notice for a shuttle to the airport. I cannot call for you. You can take a taxi or we can arrange a car for you for $99. "

Me, the "paying" customer:"Why do you need a 24 hour notice for a routine ride to the airport?

Concierge: "It's our procedure. You can take a taxi or I can arrange a car. Those are your choices."

Me, the customer/ the reason you have a job: "Okay, can you just veer away from "procedure" and see if the shuttle can pick me up eight hours from right now?"

Concierge: "I can give you the number and you can call."

I called Super Shuttle and the representative said, "Sure, the royal blue van will meet you out front at exactly 4:30." See how easy that was? Why couldn't the Concierge just pick up the phone and check?

Here's what the Concierge should have said upon my request for a shuttle: "Ms. Golden, typically Super Shuttle requires a 24 hour advance notice, but I'll see what I can do. If I cannot arrange transportation with the shuttle, we can get you to the airport by taxi or private car. Let me check on that and I'll call you right back." This response would have made the Moment of Truth a Moment of Mediocrity and perhaps I would have considered another stay at the hotel. But my moment was Misery and not only will I not return, but like every customer, I'll spread negative word-of- mouth advertising.

A Moment of Misery is created every time you:

*Tell a customer "No" without first telling them what you can do

*Quote policy

*Fail to follow-up/follow through

*Make the customer tell and retell their story with unnecessary transfers

*Respond to complaints with an accusatory or interrogatory style

*Refuse to take responsibility for problems

*Fail to apologize to customers

*Tell a customer they are wrong - even when they are wrong

*Cut a customer off

*You only get one Moment of Truth with customers. What will it be?

Author Bio:

Myra Golden is an award-winning professional speaker and principal of Myra Golden Seminars, LLC, a customer service training firm serving clients in food and beverage, banking, healthcare, hospitality, and other industries. Her client list includes McDonald��s, Johnson & Johnson, Coca-Cola, Frito-Lay, Michelin Tires, Pirelli, and Procter & Gamble, among many others. For hundreds of ideas for customer service improvement for use in customer service training, visit the customer service training resource portal by going to www.totalcustomerservicetraining.com

You can search for this article using: The Moment of Truth, Business & Companies, Customer Service, customer service & support, customer
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Zero To Hero - How A Simple Homemaker Became A Successful Entrepreneur
 
Successful Major Account Management - The jfa Model
 
The Dare-To-Be-Different In Marketing Checklist
 
The DMAIC Method in Six Sigma
 
3 Unusual Home-Based Businesses Ideas
 
What's the Difference Between Successful Businesses and Struggling Businesses?
 
The Benefits of Owning a Wall Safe
 
How to Use Testimonials as an Additional Marketing Tool
 
Establishing Rules in a MasterMind Group
 
Resume Writing Business Opportunity
 
 
 
   Home >> Privacy >> ToS
Copyright © 2008 www.articleexposed.com All Rights Reserved.