10 Tips to Soothe Stressed Guests
December 16, 2010
It’s that special season again: the season of crowded stores, whiny kids, irritable customers, and stressed-out employees. And when fuses are short and wallets are shrinking, customers expect great service, says author Maribeth Kuzmeski. Fail to provide it, or fail to instantly implement a recovery plan on those occasions when you do drop the ball, and you may find yourself experiencing a not-so-merry 2011.
“Every business owner knows things will go wrong from time to time,” says Kuzmeski, author of the new book …And the Clients Went Wild! How Savvy Professionals Win All the Business They Want (Wiley, 2010) and The Connectors: How the World’s Most Successful Businesspeople Build Relationships and Win Clients for Life (Wiley, 2009). “It’s how you handle these episodes that counts. And at the holidays, the stakes are higher.
“People have higher expectations and a lower tolerance for mistakes,” she adds. “Combine that with distracted employees and larger-than-usual crowds, and it’s the perfect winter storm, so to speak. Without a good service recovery plan, you can easily lose the disgruntled customer, everyone she knows and possibly a lot of people she doesn’t know if she takes her tale to cyberspace.”
The solution, says Kuzmeski, is to (a) stave off disasters by taking some common-sense preventive measures and (b) develop some service recovery techniques and make sure everyone who interacts with your customers knows them. She offers the following advice:
1. Learn to recognize (and truly understand) your customers’ situations. Provide an individual care approach for your customers. For example, someone shopping with children will have very different needs from, say, an elderly couple. You must train your service staff to recognize these key differences and adjust their responses accordingly.
“Teach service employees to understand the context of a situation and to sympathize with customers,” says Kuzmeski. “When your service people are attentive and proactive, often they can solve a problem before it becomes one.”
2. Make sure you always follow through. Don’t tell someone you will be with him in a moment if that’s not true. He’ll just wait impatiently for awhile, start to feel annoyed, and then leave—probably heading straight to a competitor’s restaurant. Instead, work as a team to serve guests properly.
“Great customer service isn’t necessarily about getting it right every single time,” says Kuzmeski. “I think most people understand that occasionally even the best companies are going to fall short. But what your customers absolutely do have to see from you is that you are doing your level best to deliver on everything you’ve promised them.”
3. Be very specific with customers. Vagueness is a sure path to lost business. When handling a service issue, let the customer know what is going to happen and when it is going to happen. The more information a customer has, the less anxious she feels.
“While hearing that someone is going to address a problem is nice, hearing exactly how it will be solved is more comforting,” says Kuzmeski.
“When people know the specifics, they feel more in control of the problem and are more willing to partner with you on solutions,” she adds. “On the other hand, if you’re vague about timelines and end up interfering with the customer’s holiday plans or even making her worry needlessly—well, do you think she will ever order from you again?”
4. Extend a peace offering. In the hustle and bustle of the holidays, it is all too easy for servers and managers to get caught up in their own stress. “If this stress gets the best of you and you don’t handle a guest properly, immediately reach out and make it right,” advises Kuzmeski. “Even the simplest of gestures can be effective: Offer an apology when you’ve made a mistake. Then, make things right by extending a peace offering. It doesn’t need to be anything extravagant. It can be as simple as a handwritten note, a refund or a coupon.”
5. Have a standard service protocol, and some key “recovery phrases,” at the ready. Make sure all employees understand the customer service plan and that everyone knows how to work together to solve customer problems. Creating standards, procedures and methods of dealing with clients and servicing their needs can really help when it comes to resolving conflicts or handling a dissatisfied customer. You might even consider giving employees “key words” to use in tricky situations, says Kuzmeski.
“Sometimes people have good intentions but just don’t know what to say,” she adds. “It’s not unusual for a well-meaning employee to get flustered and say the wrong thing, which only exacerbates the situation. You don’t have to provide a rigid script—just a few phrases like ‘I’m so sorry this happened to you’ or ‘I would feel the same way if I were in your shoes’ can calm a customer down and salvage the relationship.”
6. Give frontline employees more power. It’s important to empower your employees to become connectors. Often, they might think offering a discount or a coupon is the right way to handle a situation, but they may be worried that you, their leader, won’t approve. Make sure employees know they can and should do exactly what it takes to keep the guest coming back—even if it costs your restaurant a little in the short run.
“It’s better to give a customer a price break than to lose the hundreds of dollars he may spend with you in the future,” says Kuzmeski. “Express it to employees that way so they can truly understand it that way and make a smart decision.”
7. Look for ways to reward employees for saying “yes.” Have you ever considered how easy it is for employees to say “no” to customer requests? The truth is, saying “yes” usually creates more work for employees and forces them to take risks. And frankly, it seems that some service people don’t feel like they are being paid to say “yes.” It’s too much hard work. Admittedly, it may not be practical to rebuild your entire pay structure around incentivizing yeses and penalizing nos, says Kuzmeski. But you can create a “culture of yes” in other ways.
“Why not occasionally ‘catch’ people saying yes to customer requests and reward them on the spot?” she suggests. “You might keep a stack of $10 gift cards on hand to give to yes-sayers, or perhaps send them home an hour early, with pay? It doesn’t have to cost a lot of money to reward people for creating happy customers—and your bang for the buck can be impressive, indeed.”
8. Don’t assume your customers will give you a second chance. You don’t always get a chance to make it right. Often, guests will just move on. In fact, for each client who does complain, there are nine others who’ll just disappear without bothering to tell you why.