Celebrate Customers More Frequently and Less Formally

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It’s Customer Service Week (Oct. 5-9) and, since I work in the field, I suppose I should contribute to the conversation this week. Let me start by saying that celebrating the customer is a good thing especially when you consider that, without customers, there wouldn’t be much else to celebrate.

The issue that I have with Customer Service Week is that, to me, it places a superficial focus on customers for one week in October that quickly returns to business as usual the following week as the helium balloons droop, the banners sag, and the buttons are relegated to desk drawers. Wouldn’t it be better to run your business as if every week was Customer Service Week?

Rather than pass out logoed pens and koozies to call attention to customer service for one week in October, why not place the spotlight on customer service daily?

Here are some ways to do it:

  • As a team, develop your very own definition of customer service. Then, post it and revisit the definition often to verify its continued relevance. (Here’s mine: customer service is a voluntary act that demonstrates a genuine desire to satisfy, if not delight, a customer).
  • Provide timely feedback, positive and corrective, to team members on their ability to practice the service behaviors contained in the definition of customer service developed by your team.
  • Gather customer feedback via pithy satisfaction and/or intercept surveys that request meaningful input pertaining to criteria such as: ease of doing business, willingness to recommend, intent to return, etc.
  • Track your progress and “plot the dots” during each feedback cycle and display the results prominently to increase team awareness of customers’ perceptions of service quality.
  • Talk about customers daily.
  • Discuss your customers’ perceptions of service quality daily.
  • Seek ways to improve product and service quality daily. Consider these sources: customers, employees, competitors, companies outside your industry, books on the topic, relevant articles, etc.
  • Tweak processes and service models regularly based on customer and employee feedback, competitive analysis, personal observations, etc.
  • Celebrate successes often. (If you tend to the above list, there will be successes.)

Years ago, I read a book by Harry Woodward titled Navigating Through Change. In it, Dr. Woodward advocates “more frequent and less formal” as it applies to communicating organizational change. However, it also applies to communicating more than change (e.g., daily pre-shift meetings vs. monthly department meetings to convey operational information). It also applies to training (e.g., just-in-time training “shorts” of even 15 min. per day vs. annual or semi-annual classroom training for one or more days at a time), feedback [e.g., in-the-moment feedback, positive and corrective (as appropriate), vs. reliance on annual performance appraisals], and recognition (e.g., a $5 Starbucks gift card to recognize outstanding performance as it occurs vs. a flat screen television set to recognize an “Employee of the Year” once a year).

In the same way, Dr. Woodward’s counsel applies to celebrating customers: let’s practice celebrating customers more frequently (daily) and less formally (a single week in October during Customer Service Week).

What are some ways that you place the spotlight on customers daily?

Don’t settle for ordinary. Choose extraordinary. (It’s always a choice.)

Author: Guest Author

Published On: 6th Oct 2015 - Last modified: 5th Feb 2019
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1 Comment
  • This article tickled me somewhere and reminded me that i should do something to boost morale in my team. I work in a Bank in Rwanda, central Africa as the call center manager. I was thinking of what to do different this week to spice up the customer service week, now i have.
    1. Am going to do some short quiz on what their priorities are as call center staff and what they think we can do to improve the way we work and better serve our customers internally and externally.

    I agree with you, customer service excellence should be a daily celebration not a one week in a year celebration. We should make it a culture

    Zakhia 3 Oct at 17:06