|
Most
Popular
Tip
Sheet for How to Handle Tough Calls from Tough Customers.
Recent
Articles by Myra Golden
Recognize
Your Team with Praise
How
Being Gumby Can Transform Your Service Culture
Cancel
My AOL Please!
Beware
of Your Powerful Mind!
The
Moment of Truth
How
to Get to the Root Cause of Any Problem by Asking 'Why" 5 Times
Don't
ask me to talk about customer satisfaction
The
Secret of Socrates
The
ABCs of Customer Recovery
20
Diplomatic Phrases to Help You Regain Control in 7 Common Situations
with Difficult Customers
How
to Craft Friendly & Professional Customer Emails
Are
Your Reps Making Any of These Mistakes In Consumer Email Responses?
How
to Get Any Angry Customer to Back Down
Customer
Service Newsletter
Get
real-world tips & techniques for WOWing customers, dealing with
difficult customers, and handling complaints with finesse delivered
right to your inbox - FREE.
Sign
up now and we'll give you a 6-pack of Myra Golden's Dealing
with Difficult Customers videos. You'll be able to download the
videos immediately!

Recent
Video Postings
Johnny
the Bagger
Jack
Nicholson's hilarious Chicken Salad Sandwich scene
Jerry
Seinfeld car rental episode. A true lesson for those working in car
rental
Ever
have bad service at a restaurant?
Your
Call Is Important to Us. Please Stay Awake
|
I
was very pleased with Myra's presentation, but even more so,
I was left with a sense of new energy and desire to put her
recommendations to use. I can't wait for Monday.
Tim
O'Laughlin
The
Coca-Cola Company
I
have never seen a more poised, polished, and passionate
speaker!
Cindy
Hulsey, Training Manager
Tulsa
City-County Library
You
exceeded our expectations!
Rhonda
Fox
District
IV Manager - Member Relations
Best
Western International, Inc
|
|
 |
 |
 |
|
|
Top 7
Secrets for Moving Customers Out of a Hardball Mentality
by Myra Golden
Here are 7 proven tips
for moving customers out of a hardball mentality into
a constructive dialogue.
- Confidently
acknowledge and address anger.
A big mistake among customer service professionals
is to ignore a customer’s expression of anger or
tip-toe around it. There is something known as the
communication chain. When people communicate, they
expect the person they are communicating with to
respond or react…this response is a link in the
communication chain. A failure to respond to
communication leaves the communication chain
unlinked…broken.
For example, If I walk into my office and say...
“Hello Sherry, how are you?” ....and she says
absolutely nothing, she’s broken the
communication chain. And that leaves me feeling
awkward, perhaps embarrassed.
If a customer expresses anger and we fail to
respond to it, the communication chain is broken
and the customer feels like they are not getting
through. The customer might become even angrier
and more difficult, as they are resorting to
whatever it takes to feel heard and understood.
You can keep your angry customers from getting
angrier by confidently acknowledging their anger
and responding to it. You can respond to anger
with a statement like, “Clearly you’re upset
and I want you to know that getting to the bottom
of this is just as important to me as it is to
you.” This statement directly and professionally
addresses anger – without- making the customer
even angrier. Now that the anger has been
acknowledged, you have completed the communication
chain.
- Allow
the customer to vent, but don’t lose control.
An Angry customer can be compared to an erupting
volcano. When a volcano is erupting, there is
nothing you can do about it. You can’t speed up
the eruption, you can’t put a lid on it, and you
cannot direct or redirect it…it must erupt.
When a customer is angry, they must experience and
express their anger – and often this is done
through venting. We should not interrupt an angry
venting customer or tell them to “calm down.”
This would be as futile as trying to tame a
volcano. A volcano erupts and eventually subsides.
Your angry customer will vent and eventually calm
down.
Always let angry customers vent. In most cases,
your customer will only need to vent for fifteen
to thirty-five seconds. Venting beyond 35 seconds
can become ranting and cause you to lose control.
After a few seconds of venting, you’ll want to
jump back in and move the conversation forward
constructively.
- Don’t
react emotionally.
It can be easy to lose our cool when a customer
gets hot, but be warned: In most cases, showing
frustration, impatience, or acting even mildly
upset doesn’t help you move the customer out of
a hardball mentality. Usually, losing our own cool
does nothing but make the customer even more upset
or our attitude will make the customer even firmer
in his original position.
If you feel you’re beginning to lose your cool,
don’t be afraid to hit the “pause” button.
You hit the pause button by putting a customer on
hold or telling the customer you will call them
back.
- Heed
Steven Covey’s Words…Understand, then be
understood.
In The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People, author
Steven Covey tells a story of a patient going in
for an eye exam. After briefly listening to the
patient’s complaint, the doctor takes off his
glasses and hands them to the patient and tells
the patient to simply “take his glasses where
them.”
What are the chances you’d go back to a doctor
that prescribes a solution without even diagnosing
a problem? You don’t have much confidence in
someone who doesn’t diagnose before they
prescribe… But how often do we prescribe a
solution before completely diagnosing the
situation, in dealing with customers?
Seek first to understand. Before you try PRESCRIBE
a solution for a customer’s problem, before you
quote policy or tell a customer what you cannot
do, seek to truly understand the customer’s
viewpoint. How has the problem impacted your
customer? Has your customer lost money, time,
respect, or confidence because of this problem?
Does the customer feel embarrassed, wronged,
discriminated against, or powerless? Try to really
understand what your customer is experiencing and
feeling. when you respond, communicate your full
understanding of the problem from the customer’s
perspective. Only then can you truly diagnose,
BEFORE you prescribe a solution.
Listening with the intent to understand gives you
empathy for the customer and puts you in the
position to solve the real issues. Once you really
understand your customer, you naturally begin to
communicate with empathy and to communicate more
effectively. Your customer, who feels understood,
can now begin to understand you.
Featured
Web Seminar...
How
to Negotiate with Customers
10
Strategies for Negotiating with Crafty, Cunning,
& Unreasonable Customers
Friday,
July 27th 1:00pm - 2:30pm ET
Presented
by Myra Golden
Read
course outline
- Don’t
belabor your point…no matter how right you are.
be•la•bor - [bi-ley-ber] – verb: (1) to
assail persistently, as with scorn or ridicule (2)
work at (something) repeatedly or more than is
necessary: He kept belaboring the point long after
we had agreed.
If you really want to tick a customer off or
incite an already upset customer, belabor your
point. Repeat your point (your policy; your
position) over and over again. I mean really
badger the customer with your elementary
explanation so that the customer feels they
aren’t too bright.
Customer service professionals all around the
world make the mistake of belaboring a point when
speaking with customers. Don’t let this happen
to you. Simply make your point once diplomatically
and then enter into a constructive dialogue with
your customer.
- Get
the customer saying ‘yes’, and if possible,
keep them from saying ‘no’.
When a person says “no,” all of their pride
demands that they remain consistent with
themselves. And it is very difficult, once
they’ve said ‘no’, for them to change their
mind and become “agreeable” with you, because
their sense of pride is now involved. And we
invest so much in our pride.
Here’s how it works. Build an affirmative path
by asking your customer two simple and obvious
closed-ended questions that you know will result
in a YES response. Once you do that, the customer
will be on an affirmative path (with you) and it
is far easier for them to agree with your next
question. It’s very much psychological…your
customer won’t feel comfortable disagreeing with
himself…and will feel compelled to say yes to
your third question so that he agrees with
himself!
- Have
a graceful exit.
When all else fails, you need a way to gracefully
get out of a conversation with a difficult or
unreasonable customer. Here’s a simple way to
gracefully exit: “We see this differently and
I’m going to have to put thought into the
perspective you have shared with me. I will visit
with my supervisor about your concerns and call
you back with a response.”
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
Answers
& Free Resources
for
your toughest customer service
challenges
» Managing service professionals
»
Getting
angry customers to back down
»
Resolving
complaints without giving the store
away
»
Negotiating with customers
like a pro
|
|
|
Video Tip of the
Month
|
|
|
 |
|
 |