How to Respond Effectively to Customer Complaints
John Stevens
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Every business has customers, and customers sometimes complain. Whether their complaints are legitimate or their expectations are unrealistic, responding effectively to them is part of doing good business and building your customer base.
Continue reading for tips on how to respond to customer complaints.
What are Customer Complaints?
Some of the customers who buy whatever you sell will sooner or later find something to complain about.
When you make a mistake, or your customer thinks you did, how you respond to their complaint is a critical factor in their view of you as a supplier of what you offer.
Do it right, and you gain a loyal customer and, in many cases, a friend. Do it wrong, and you not only lose a customer; you also lose potential business from the people to whom your disgruntled customer relates their unpleasant experience.
Doing Business the Customer-Friendly Way
Whatever product or service you sell, someone somewhere buys it from you. From time to time, one of those "someones" will complain about what they bought, how they were treated, or something else.
Customers come in all sizes, shapes, and temperaments.
Sometimes you’ll believe their complaint is legitimate. Sometimes you'll see that the customer expected something you didn't offer or promise. Perhaps sometimes you'll find that the customer is just being unreasonable because that's their nature.
Here are some suggestions for how to respond to customer complaints, whatever your opinion is of their claim.
As a side note, I highly recommend that, when you become the customer, you avoid being one of those people mentioned in point #6!.
Here are Some Ways Not to Respond to Customer Complaints
In your conversation with a dissatisfied customer, it's essential to avoid an adversarial exchange whenever possible. This can be difficult when the customer is not only dissatisfied but angry as well. You must avoid getting angry in response. Your anger will never add anything useful to the exchange, and it'll keep you from thinking clearly, which is essential.
Some responses you should avoid when answering customer complaints are:??
When you respond to customer complaints in the ways I’ve suggested, you can turn a mistake into a gain. When you respond in a positive manner to a complaint, (most of) your customers will respect you for it and recognize that you're the kind of person or company they want to buy from again.
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