Answer Upon
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Business > Customer Service > What is Superior Service?

Tags

  • superior
  • industry
  • destination airport
  • superior servicerichard
  • little effort

  • Links

  • Which is Better, Bare Root or Potted Hostas?
  • How to Choose a Wine Rack to Fit Your Style and Budget
  • Are You Afraid of Making the Wrong Decision?
  • Answer Upon - What is Superior Service?

    A Hard Lesson Learned....
    Are you like me? I like to handle things on my own so I don't even THINK about incorporating help with anything I am working on ... especially my business as a whole.Well, I learned something new recently. It was a HORRIBLE experience that actually turned out for the better. Let me tell you my story:I have a team of about 2000 associates. Since all my sites are hosted at Host4Profit except for the site that their websites are hosted on, I decided to transfer everything over. Well, I have transferred many sites before so I knew how it worked. I knew I would get access to Host4Profit before transferring with my registrar and that all I had to do was upload everything over to the new host while my old host was still active. This would make a seamless transfer. No one wou
    not be expensive as the above examples demonstrate. So, anyone can do it even though few do.

    In my view, experiencing a service that you did not know you wanted until you experienced it, is good start to a definition of superior service, but it is not complete.

    What kills superior service are the small things that are more likely to be described as basic needs.

    The book, "Broken Windows, Broken Business", by Michael Levine clearly points out the need to attend to the basics. That when the basics are not attended to it is like a factory where broken windows are not mended and people in the neighbourhood think it is OK to smash more windows.

    By not concentrating on the small things, by allowing broken windows, you are building a swish penthouse atop a rundown building. Customers will not be looking at the penthouse but the raft of broken windows below.

    In our example, the lack of controls and care that allows a fly to be delivered in soup to a table is a bank of broken windows.

    Delivering a cold towel from the fridge in a surly manner to a golfer who found that their tee time was not booked even though they received confirmation it was will not reside in a

    How's Your Yellow Page Ad's ROI?
    Let’s assume that you are one of the millions of family-run businesses that form the very core of the typical local Yellow Page directory. Say you’re the area plumber, auto repair shop, electrician, insurance agent, or restaurant owner. You have a YP ad because it seemed like the right thing to do when you opened up a few years back. Your YP rep helped draw up the ad and it looks pretty good. It has a picture of your shop, which he took with his digital camera. There’s a nice map and you even opted for some color too. The headline is the business name and you’ve also increased the size a few times. So, how is it working? Are you excited about the results? What about that ROI?Before I go on, let me tell you a bit about myself. I was a Yellow Page consultant for nearly 25 year
    "Waiter, there is a fly in my soup!"

    "I am so sorry sir; let me replace that for you"

    "I am so sorry sir; let me replace that for you and your entr?e will be free of charge"

    "I am so sorry sir, let me replace that for you and have a free bottle of champagne on the house."

    "I am so sorry sir, let me replace that for you and as a mark of how much we value your custom, your meal will be free tonight"

    Are any of these responses superior service?

    No, they are not.

    No application of corrective action can retrieve a situation where such a basic need as hygiene and cleanliness has been breached in a restaurant.

    The requirements of customers for service follow a fairly simple hierarchy. At the basic level, customers need to have an environment in which they feel safe and secure and comfortable.

    Whether they are shopping on the internet, or by phone, or through a bricks and mortar experience, they must have the same feeling of security to which they have become accustomed in their day-to-day shopping experiences. Take them too far out of their comfort zone and they will not buy because they do not trust.

    They need the telephone or face to face experience to meet their level of expectation for friendliness and helpfulness or knowledge. They need the cleanliness of a bricks and mortar operation to meet their definition of cleanliness and order. They need the appearance, the grooming, the tone and pace of voice to meet their expectations. Take any of these basic needs outside of their comfort zone and customers will either not buy or will do so reluctantly, thinking that they have not had good service.

    However, if the basic needs are met, the best a seller can hope for is a feeling that the service was "OK".

    Having a fly in the soup destroys any feeling of comfort and trust and that cannot be regained by offering apologies and free services. Not offering an apology and some recompense can make the situation worse, but offering them does not redeem the situation to the point before the fly was observed in the soup.

    The thought likely to be crossing their mind is "What if the soup came from a tureen and the fly had been cooked in the whole batch?" or "What else can I expect? Mouse droppings in the .......?"

    Meeting the basic needs of customers is the foundation on which superior service is built, but is not superior service.

    Above their basic needs, customers have wants which are individual, but common enough to a wide range of individuals to be analysed, in marketing terms, as a segment.

    For example, the conference segment in the hospitality industry would have basic needs such as audio visual equipment that works and whiteboard pens that work and would have a common want for problems which arise during the conference to be solved quickly, quietly and simply.

    There are always unforeseen problems at conferences. This is usually more to do with lack of planning and contingency planning by the conference organiser than hotel staff. However, well organised events management staff in a hotel will anticipate the problems and issues. The will have approaches they know will resolve the majority of those problems and issues with little effort by the hotel, creating high value for the guest.

    Meeting these wants is not superior service. It is good service and will get repeat custom. It will not, however, create raving fans unless the customers have never had their wants fulfilled before.

    Above and beyond their wants, customers have unexpected or unknown desires. For example, when a club member comes off the golf course on a hot day, they have a need to cool down. They have a want to be in air conditioning, to have a cold drink in comfortable surroundings to chat over the round with their playing buddies.

    Present to them a cold refreshing towel, direct from the fridge as a free service and you will be providing a service they did not even know that they wanted until it was provided to them. In the scale of things cooling, the gesture is off the scale because of the sensory impact of the cold towel hitting the hot skin and because it is personal, unlike air conditioning.

    That is superior service.

    Richard Branson's Virgin Atlantic is the best exponent of superior service that I have personally experienced.

    When you arrive in their business lounge, you are greeted personally to ensure your details are correct for the limousine to take you home from your destination airport. You can order your meal for the flight in the lounge or even eat whilst in the lounge if there is time so that you might sleep on the flight. Hostesses offer scalp and shoulder massages to help you relax in flight. The list does go on.

    Providing superior service need not be expensive as the above examples demonstrate. So, anyone can do it even though few do.

    In my view, experiencing a service that you did not know you wanted until you experienced it, is good start to a definition of superior service, but it is not complete.

    What kills superior service are the small things that are more likely to be described as basic needs.

    The book, "Broken Windows, Broken Business", by Michael Levine clearly points out the need to attend to the basics. That when the basics are not attended to it is like a factory where broken windows are not mended and people in the neighbourhood think it is OK to smash more windows.

    By not concentrating on the small things, by allowing broken windows, you are building a swish penthouse atop a rundown building. Customers will not be looking at the penthouse but the raft of broken windows below.

    In our example, the lack of controls and care that allows a fly to be delivered in soup to a table is a bank of broken windows.

    Delivering a cold towel from the fridge in a surly manner to a golfer who found that their tee time was not booked even though they received confirmation it was will not reside in a

    5 Steps to a New Job
    The economy is picking up, budgets are new, positions are open and companies are hiring. Now is the time to rev up your job search efforts. Use these tips to dramatically improve your results.Get on the job boards and make sure you setup search agents so you get a daily e-mail whenever a new job is posted that meets your criteria. Look for niche boards that focus on your profession.Make sure your resume is great. If your resume has been posted for a while and you have not been getting calls, then run, don’t walk, to a professional resume writing service. This is one of the best hiring times of the year and an investment of a couple of hundred dollars to have a resume that gets you noticed is well worth it.Identify companies that you like and focus on opportunit
    ce experience to meet their level of expectation for friendliness and helpfulness or knowledge. They need the cleanliness of a bricks and mortar operation to meet their definition of cleanliness and order. They need the appearance, the grooming, the tone and pace of voice to meet their expectations. Take any of these basic needs outside of their comfort zone and customers will either not buy or will do so reluctantly, thinking that they have not had good service.

    However, if the basic needs are met, the best a seller can hope for is a feeling that the service was "OK".

    Having a fly in the soup destroys any feeling of comfort and trust and that cannot be regained by offering apologies and free services. Not offering an apology and some recompense can make the situation worse, but offering them does not redeem the situation to the point before the fly was observed in the soup.

    The thought likely to be crossing their mind is "What if the soup came from a tureen and the fly had been cooked in the whole batch?" or "What else can I expect? Mouse droppings in the .......?"

    Meeting the basic needs of customers is the foundation on which superior service is built, but is not superior service.

    Above their basic needs, customers have wants which are individual, but common enough to a wide range of individuals to be analysed, in marketing terms, as a segment.

    For example, the conference segment in the hospitality industry would have basic needs such as audio visual equipment that works and whiteboard pens that work and would have a common want for problems which arise during the conference to be solved quickly, quietly and simply.

    There are always unforeseen problems at conferences. This is usually more to do with lack of planning and contingency planning by the conference organiser than hotel staff. However, well organised events management staff in a hotel will anticipate the problems and issues. The will have approaches they know will resolve the majority of those problems and issues with little effort by the hotel, creating high value for the guest.

    Meeting these wants is not superior service. It is good service and will get repeat custom. It will not, however, create raving fans unless the customers have never had their wants fulfilled before.

    Above and beyond their wants, customers have unexpected or unknown desires. For example, when a club member comes off the golf course on a hot day, they have a need to cool down. They have a want to be in air conditioning, to have a cold drink in comfortable surroundings to chat over the round with their playing buddies.

    Present to them a cold refreshing towel, direct from the fridge as a free service and you will be providing a service they did not even know that they wanted until it was provided to them. In the scale of things cooling, the gesture is off the scale because of the sensory impact of the cold towel hitting the hot skin and because it is personal, unlike air conditioning.

    That is superior service.

    Richard Branson's Virgin Atlantic is the best exponent of superior service that I have personally experienced.

    When you arrive in their business lounge, you are greeted personally to ensure your details are correct for the limousine to take you home from your destination airport. You can order your meal for the flight in the lounge or even eat whilst in the lounge if there is time so that you might sleep on the flight. Hostesses offer scalp and shoulder massages to help you relax in flight. The list does go on.

    Providing superior service need not be expensive as the above examples demonstrate. So, anyone can do it even though few do.

    In my view, experiencing a service that you did not know you wanted until you experienced it, is good start to a definition of superior service, but it is not complete.

    What kills superior service are the small things that are more likely to be described as basic needs.

    The book, "Broken Windows, Broken Business", by Michael Levine clearly points out the need to attend to the basics. That when the basics are not attended to it is like a factory where broken windows are not mended and people in the neighbourhood think it is OK to smash more windows.

    By not concentrating on the small things, by allowing broken windows, you are building a swish penthouse atop a rundown building. Customers will not be looking at the penthouse but the raft of broken windows below.

    In our example, the lack of controls and care that allows a fly to be delivered in soup to a table is a bank of broken windows.

    Delivering a cold towel from the fridge in a surly manner to a golfer who found that their tee time was not booked even though they received confirmation it was will not reside in a

    How to Seize Control of Your Finances
    As the end of another financial year comes to a close, I thought it would be ideal to focus this newsletter on your personal affairs.I'm always amazed that so many people spend most of their life at work and totally neglect their personal affairs. Many business people I coach want to get their professional lives in order, and often admit that their personal affairs are in chaos.They have no systems for handling this most important area. The household paperwork is disorganised... piled up in a corner of the house... somewhere. They have no idea where they spend their money and often have no plan for their financial future. Sure they are busy in their businesses or job and lose focus as to why they are doing what they do in the first place... and generally that is to ma
    uperior service.

    Above their basic needs, customers have wants which are individual, but common enough to a wide range of individuals to be analysed, in marketing terms, as a segment.

    For example, the conference segment in the hospitality industry would have basic needs such as audio visual equipment that works and whiteboard pens that work and would have a common want for problems which arise during the conference to be solved quickly, quietly and simply.

    There are always unforeseen problems at conferences. This is usually more to do with lack of planning and contingency planning by the conference organiser than hotel staff. However, well organised events management staff in a hotel will anticipate the problems and issues. The will have approaches they know will resolve the majority of those problems and issues with little effort by the hotel, creating high value for the guest.

    Meeting these wants is not superior service. It is good service and will get repeat custom. It will not, however, create raving fans unless the customers have never had their wants fulfilled before.

    Above and beyond their wants, customers have unexpected or unknown desires. For example, when a club member comes off the golf course on a hot day, they have a need to cool down. They have a want to be in air conditioning, to have a cold drink in comfortable surroundings to chat over the round with their playing buddies.

    Present to them a cold refreshing towel, direct from the fridge as a free service and you will be providing a service they did not even know that they wanted until it was provided to them. In the scale of things cooling, the gesture is off the scale because of the sensory impact of the cold towel hitting the hot skin and because it is personal, unlike air conditioning.

    That is superior service.

    Richard Branson's Virgin Atlantic is the best exponent of superior service that I have personally experienced.

    When you arrive in their business lounge, you are greeted personally to ensure your details are correct for the limousine to take you home from your destination airport. You can order your meal for the flight in the lounge or even eat whilst in the lounge if there is time so that you might sleep on the flight. Hostesses offer scalp and shoulder massages to help you relax in flight. The list does go on.

    Providing superior service need not be expensive as the above examples demonstrate. So, anyone can do it even though few do.

    In my view, experiencing a service that you did not know you wanted until you experienced it, is good start to a definition of superior service, but it is not complete.

    What kills superior service are the small things that are more likely to be described as basic needs.

    The book, "Broken Windows, Broken Business", by Michael Levine clearly points out the need to attend to the basics. That when the basics are not attended to it is like a factory where broken windows are not mended and people in the neighbourhood think it is OK to smash more windows.

    By not concentrating on the small things, by allowing broken windows, you are building a swish penthouse atop a rundown building. Customers will not be looking at the penthouse but the raft of broken windows below.

    In our example, the lack of controls and care that allows a fly to be delivered in soup to a table is a bank of broken windows.

    Delivering a cold towel from the fridge in a surly manner to a golfer who found that their tee time was not booked even though they received confirmation it was will not reside in a

    Employers' Are Creating a Weather System That Forecasts a Hurricane of Discrimination Lawsuits
    California small business employers are creating a hurricane of lawsuits for themselves. With the elimination of vocational rehabilitation under California workers' compensation and after the Raine v. City of Burbank decision in January 2006, Employers' are misinterpreting the law and are refusing to accommodate employees, which is causing a massive flood of claims. Raine is an instructive opinion in that it gives the employer a step by step approach in finding whether an employee's request is reasonable in order to accommodate after a work related injury. Raine teaches employers' how to avoid the eye of the Hurricane.Recently, I mediated and litigated claims where the employee, permanently disabled from a work related injury, was terminated following the finalit
    when a club member comes off the golf course on a hot day, they have a need to cool down. They have a want to be in air conditioning, to have a cold drink in comfortable surroundings to chat over the round with their playing buddies.

    Present to them a cold refreshing towel, direct from the fridge as a free service and you will be providing a service they did not even know that they wanted until it was provided to them. In the scale of things cooling, the gesture is off the scale because of the sensory impact of the cold towel hitting the hot skin and because it is personal, unlike air conditioning.

    That is superior service.

    Richard Branson's Virgin Atlantic is the best exponent of superior service that I have personally experienced.

    When you arrive in their business lounge, you are greeted personally to ensure your details are correct for the limousine to take you home from your destination airport. You can order your meal for the flight in the lounge or even eat whilst in the lounge if there is time so that you might sleep on the flight. Hostesses offer scalp and shoulder massages to help you relax in flight. The list does go on.

    Providing superior service need not be expensive as the above examples demonstrate. So, anyone can do it even though few do.

    In my view, experiencing a service that you did not know you wanted until you experienced it, is good start to a definition of superior service, but it is not complete.

    What kills superior service are the small things that are more likely to be described as basic needs.

    The book, "Broken Windows, Broken Business", by Michael Levine clearly points out the need to attend to the basics. That when the basics are not attended to it is like a factory where broken windows are not mended and people in the neighbourhood think it is OK to smash more windows.

    By not concentrating on the small things, by allowing broken windows, you are building a swish penthouse atop a rundown building. Customers will not be looking at the penthouse but the raft of broken windows below.

    In our example, the lack of controls and care that allows a fly to be delivered in soup to a table is a bank of broken windows.

    Delivering a cold towel from the fridge in a surly manner to a golfer who found that their tee time was not booked even though they received confirmation it was will not reside in a

    6 Steps to a Successful Job Fair
    Whether you are graduating from college, returning to the work force, or contemplating a career change, career fairs have lots to offer a job seeker. Following a few basic guidelines can help you make the most of the experience and maximize some great networking opportunities.Dress as you would for a job interview. The interactions you have with prospective employers at a job fair are likely to be brief, and first impressions count. Put your best foot forward with proper attire, a smile, and a confident hand shake. Also remember your own promotional materials, and a professional looking case to hold them as well as the information you collect.Come prepared. Bring copies of your up-to-date resume, and be ready to talk about yourself. What kind of positions are you inte
    not be expensive as the above examples demonstrate. So, anyone can do it even though few do.

    In my view, experiencing a service that you did not know you wanted until you experienced it, is good start to a definition of superior service, but it is not complete.

    What kills superior service are the small things that are more likely to be described as basic needs.

    The book, "Broken Windows, Broken Business", by Michael Levine clearly points out the need to attend to the basics. That when the basics are not attended to it is like a factory where broken windows are not mended and people in the neighbourhood think it is OK to smash more windows.

    By not concentrating on the small things, by allowing broken windows, you are building a swish penthouse atop a rundown building. Customers will not be looking at the penthouse but the raft of broken windows below.

    In our example, the lack of controls and care that allows a fly to be delivered in soup to a table is a bank of broken windows.

    Delivering a cold towel from the fridge in a surly manner to a golfer who found that their tee time was not booked even though they received confirmation it was will not reside in a customer's mind as superior service.

    Superior service must be built on a foundation of meeting the needs and wants of customers without broken windows. When that foundation is laid then "experiencing a service that you do not know you want until you experience it" is SUPERIOR SERVICE.

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.hubyou.info/article/14526/hubyou-What-is-Superior-Service.html">What is Superior Service?</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.hubyou.info/article/14526/hubyou-What-is-Superior-Service.html]What is Superior Service?[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Expecting Your Staff to Multitask? It's Not Necessarily a Good Idea

    Criminal Justice Jobs

    Fear Of Changing Careers-Learn From David & Goliath

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com