
SimpleBiz360™ Podcast
The SimpleBiz360™ Podcast focuses on inspiring continuous improvement. Our content features "One Minute One Question" shorts, interviews, and monologues designed to ignite contemplation, and action.
SimpleBiz360™ Podcast
Episode #187: EMBRACING THE MATHMATICS OF EXCEPTIONAL SERVICE
Imagine reducing the quantity of time in order to increase the quality of service?
We invite you to tag along for a five-minute broadcast that unveils the customer-pleasing math of delivering exceptional service in the Experience Economy. More or less, this episode is all about accomplishing more, with less! Are you a “720 Company”, or a “120 Company?” Enjoy the show!
All right, Mr. Simple Show.
Speaker 2:Hello everybody, and thank you for tuning into this Simple Biz 360 podcast. My name is Jeff Mason. I'm your host today for this fast and fun episode. We're on YouTube, I G T v Gab TV 28 audio platforms. And the easiest way to find us is go to our website, simple biz three sixty.com. You can go to the podcast tab, you can find any one of the YouTube experiences over the, the last four seasons on there. You can even find the links to some of the rock and roll tunes we put on there. And you can find access to the audio versions of every show since its inception, uh, back in middle of, uh, October, 2019. Also, uh, our book is on Amazon. It's in three forms, audible, uh, it's in Kindle and it also is in paperback. You can get it there. Simple Biz 360 Timeless Business Tools is the title. And today we're talking about something very passionate to me, and that's reducing the amount of customer questions. Now, this is a customer service type of show, but we're talking about the experience economy, right? In the experience economy, which is the, is the focus of every one of these shows. It's not so much what we do, it's how we do what we do that gets the scores from the customers good or bad scores, right? So one of them is customer service and you know, I mean, we could feel the lot of questions during the course of a day if we accepted phone calls. And this eats up a lot of our personnel time, and it puts the customer in a position where they're saying, you know what? I'm not getting enough, um, upfront information from this company, or I don't trust this company to to, to, you know, do things without me asking a lot of questions. Whereby if you took the opposite attitude and you said, as the company, you know what, most of our customers have the same types of questions. So we're gonna get to the customer before they get to us with our customer service discipline. And we're going to answer a lot of questions upfront. So the customer doesn't have to, for instance, easy, right? They send you an order via email. Well, rather than send them into the cyberspace wondering if you got their order, just simply say, right? And that's one less question you'd have to answer. If you, if you handled it upfront, you'd say, Hey, got your order. Thank you very much. We're processing it now, uh, by the way, we noticed that two of the items on here are outta stock. We can either keep them on back order and ship them when they come back into stock a few months from now, or we can just cancel them off and ship you what you have. What would you like to do? So now you're getting to them before they get to you, you're giving them some options, they can answer that option. And what you've really done is shown the customer, Hey, I'm respecting your money. I'm respecting your time. I'm getting to back to you with questions. You probably have. You just didn't articulate it, but we've been doing this so long. We know what most customers ask anyways, so we're just gonna be upfront about it for you. So these are the types of things where we have an opportunity to be a, what I call a seven 20 company or a one 20 company. Now, I presented this at a national convention a couple weeks ago, and I've, I've mentioned it before in season one on this show, but here's what it really is. If there's 240 business days in a year, and let's say you get one question for a customer, well, if you don't answer that question and you force that customer to ask that question, again, that's 240 questions times two, which is four 80. And if you were really a bad customer service entity and you had that customer ask three times, that's 720 questions they've asked you when really all they had to begin with was 240. And then it becomes like this little visual on the wall here. You see this red guy with a rope, he's tugging four white silhouettes people, silhouettes there, faceless silhouettes if you will. And that's basically the customers, the red, you know, person tugging the vendors along like, Hey, you need to gimme more information, man. You need to help me. I'm, I gotta pester you guys to get the info that I need. We call it the red zone tug, right? But a one 20 company says, you know what? You got 240 questions a year. We know it well, we're gonna take 120 off your plate because we're going to get get to you. Before you get to us, we're gonna re-answer a bunch of questions you have. And so we are a one 20 company, not a seven 20 company. If you can live by that math and do that, you are delivering excellent experience economy service to your customers. And chances are you're gonna get rewarded by a lot of referrals and repeat business. So we're gonna leave you today with the rock and Roll Tune, green Grass and High Tides. The Outlaws 1975. And no, it's not about marijuana. It's actually, uh, it's a song from this Tampa, Florida band that's all about having some of the, the, the lost, uh, rock and rollers come back and perform a concert for this guy. He's kind of just dreaming as he's looking off into the water. And you know what? We don't want to lose customers, do we? So we don't want to have to wonder if our customers ever come back. Let's keep'em to begin with. We will see you in 168 hours.