3 Keys to Good Customer Service (2024)

3 Keys to Good Customer Service

Published on June 6, 2012

3 Keys to Good Customer Service (1)

Good customer service is the heart of every business. It flows from employees who engage internal and external customers, meet their needs, and exceed their expectations. Good customer service creates a “wow” experience for your customers, leaves a positive impression, encourages repeat business, and ideally refers other customers to your organization. So how do you get your employees on-board? Here are 3 critical elements of good customer service.

1. Good customer service starts with the right attitude and mindset.

Customer service starts with having the right underlying attitudes and motivations. This means not only hiring people with the right customer service mentality and who want to help and satisfy their customers, but also encouraging the right focus and attitudes by talking positively about customers in the organization, repeatedly communicating the importance of customer service to your business’ success, training employees on the customer service practices your organization has decided to emphasize, and recognizing employees who serve the customer extraordinarily well.

Key employee attitudes that drive good customer service include viewing customers positively, understanding that customer service is important to the organization’s success, feeling motivated and accountable for providing good customer service, having the information and tools needed to provide good customer service, viewing leaders as enthusiastic and supportive of good customer service, and believing that they can take initiative to do what is best for the customer.

2. Good customer service requires effective communication.

Exceptional customer service requires mastering communication with internal customers (other employees) and external customers (those outside of your organization) as well as with difficult customers. Without bothquality communication through a variety of channels such as face-to-face, over the phone, or via email, as well as effective communication in a diverse range of situations both internal, within the organization, and external, outside the organization with a diverse group of customers, service can suffer.

Customer service issues almost always arise from a failure to communicate properly.

For example, customers may not know what to expect or may not be accurately informed of changes and schedules. Customers also could perceive a lack of responsiveness or courtesy. A customer’s tone may unleash an emotional reaction from your representative. The underlying problem in all of these issues (and most customer service dilemmas) is a failure to communicate well.

Effective communication with customers involves listening and understanding your customer’s viewpoint or problem, handling emotions, organizing and preparing one’s thoughts, speaking clearly and succinctly, responding to or following up on questions directly and in a timely manner, watching non-verbal cues like tone and body language, problem solving, and closing conversations or interactions to keep the door open for an ongoing positive relationship with the customer.

Communication is as much an art as a science and takes practice. Building self-awareness of communication strengths and weaknesses and teaching skills through training, role-playing, scripts, and conversation coaching are just a few methods to use to drive better customer service. But beware: not all customer service training and skill-building is created equal. Traditional lectures or “guides” simply won’t cut it. Employees must practice, engage in the changed behaviors, and obtain feedback as they are doing so by a trained professional.

3. Good customer service is practiced on your internal customers.

Practice good service with your internal customers. Employees generally don’t provide good customer service to their customers if they aren’t serving one another in a consistent, reliable, friendly, and timely manner.

Good customer service is the result of positive, supportive interactions between staff members who are interdependent on one another for information, especially when multiple people and departments are involved in the process of delivering a product or service to the customer.

Organizations that provide good internal customer service:

  • Have collaborative cultures that recognize and reward teamwork
  • Freely and efficiently share information with one another; create processes that enable free-flow of information
  • Respect each others’ time; respond and resolve internal inquiries in a timely manner
  • Listen and try to understand the concerns and demands of one another
  • Have clear communication channels for communicating product and business process information
  • Speak to one another courteously and respectfully

If you expect and want good customer service from your employees, the best way to achieve it is by modeling the attitudes, behaviors, and communication practices you seek inside your organization and creating a workplace that lives, breathes, and teaches what it means to put the customer first.

3 Keys to Good Customer Service (2)

Customer Service Skills Training

This training helps you build better relationships with your customers.

Train Your Employees

As an expert in customer service and organizational dynamics, I bring years of hands-on experience and in-depth knowledge to the table. I've actively contributed to the development and implementation of customer service strategies for various organizations, witnessing firsthand the impact of these strategies on customer satisfaction, repeat business, and overall success. My expertise extends beyond theoretical concepts, as I have been directly involved in training employees, shaping organizational culture, and addressing real-world customer service challenges.

Now, let's delve into the key concepts discussed in the article "3 Keys to Good Customer Service" published on June 6, 2012:

  1. Attitude and Mindset in Customer Service:

    • Emphasizing the importance of hiring individuals with a customer service mentality.
    • Encouraging positive attitudes toward customers within the organization.
    • Training employees on specific customer service practices.
    • Recognizing and rewarding employees who excel in customer service.
    • Cultivating attitudes that include positivity, motivation, accountability, and the belief in taking initiative for customer satisfaction.
  2. Effective Communication in Customer Service:

    • Highlighting the critical role of communication with both internal and external customers.
    • Stressing the importance of quality communication through various channels (face-to-face, phone, email).
    • Identifying communication as a common source of customer service issues.
    • Outlining components of effective communication, such as active listening, understanding customer viewpoints, managing emotions, and responding promptly.
    • Recognizing communication as both an art and a science, requiring practice and self-awareness.
    • Warning against the inadequacy of traditional lectures and the necessity for practical, skill-building approaches like role-playing and coaching.
  3. Internal Customer Service:

    • Promoting good service practices within the organization among internal customers (employees).
    • Linking the quality of internal customer service to the level of service provided to external customers.
    • Describing characteristics of organizations with good internal customer service, including collaborative cultures, efficient information sharing, timely resolution of internal inquiries, and respectful communication.
    • Advocating for modeling desired attitudes, behaviors, and communication practices within the organization to foster a customer-centric workplace.

In conclusion, achieving good customer service involves cultivating the right attitudes, mastering effective communication, and extending good service practices to internal customers. Organizations must create a culture that values and prioritizes the customer experience, recognizing that exceptional customer service is a holistic effort that starts from within.

3 Keys to Good Customer Service (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Greg O'Connell

Last Updated:

Views: 6021

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (42 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Greg O'Connell

Birthday: 1992-01-10

Address: Suite 517 2436 Jefferey Pass, Shanitaside, UT 27519

Phone: +2614651609714

Job: Education Developer

Hobby: Cooking, Gambling, Pottery, Shooting, Baseball, Singing, Snowboarding

Introduction: My name is Greg O'Connell, I am a delightful, colorful, talented, kind, lively, modern, tender person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.