What happened to customer service?

What happened to customer service?

Have you ever tried to get help from a real human at Google, Comcast, or — heaven forbid — Facebook? Don't bother. You'll likely get a bot, or worse.

Believe it or not, there was a time in the not too distant past when companies actually prided themselves on face-to-face customer service. I know, I've worked at a couple.

I assembled this list two decades ago for a local bank I was fortunate to be working for. When I read it now, it seems a bit naive, self-righteous, and long-winded, but that's how I was 20 years ago.

This list has nothing to do with web design specifically. It would likely apply to just about any business that serves people. And most do at some point. For this article, I haven't changed a word from the original — but probably should have.

Also, I should mention that I can't take credit for originating all of these maxims, only arranging them in this particular order.

20 commandments of customer service

01. Necessary and sufficient

There is only one thing that is both necessary and sufficient for a successful business: Customers.

02. Treat each other better

The better we treat the people we work with, the better we'll treat our customers. We will never treat our customers better than we treat each other.

03. Company problems

Never assign blame to a part of the company for a problem the company created.

04. Secret policies

Customers should never be inconvenienced because of company policies that are known only to employees, and do not become known to customers until they are used against them.

05. Helping customers

If you're not helping customers, then you better be helping someone who is helping customers.

06. Customer complaints

Customers should never be required to restate their request or complaint to several employees before having it resolved.

07. How we feel

How we feel about our company will eventually become how our customers feel about us.

08. Your primary job

The primary job of every person in this company is to make it easier for the customer to do business with us. Our primary job is not to make things easier for ourselves.

09. Saying yes

Saying "No" is the easy way out. We should always try to find a way to say "Yes."

10. Bad service

Most customers will not return bad service with bad behavior. They just never come back.

11. Lifetime value

When we lose a customer for a negative reason, we're not losing just one customer. We're losing every customer that person may have referred. Never underestimate the lifetime value of a customer.

12. Satisfied customers

Satisfying customers isn't enough. We have to exceed their expectations. A "satisfied" customer is six times more likely to leave for a competitor than a "very satisfied" customer.

13. The marketing department

Marketing is not a "department." It is absolutely anything and everything we do to sell our company. And that means all of us, all the time.

14. A service business

We are in a service business. Service is about people and relationships, not tasks and transactions.

15. Two-time customers

The most important piece of business you get from a customer is not the first, it's the second. A two-time customer is twice as likely to come back as a first-time customer.

16. Neglect

Impatience thrives on ignorance. It is the feeling of being neglected that creates dissatisfaction, not the mere fact of delay. Always acknowledge your customers.

17. Get involved

The more we get involved with our customers, the more they will get involved with us.

18. Awareness

Advertising creates awareness, but does not sell products. People do.

19. Better service

Never tell a customer we have "better service" unless you're willing to prove it.

20. Work vs Job

Never allow your work to interfere with your job (#8).


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