Your
Customer is Not a Statistic
by J.Conners
When a customer walks into your office, you want
to make sure they feel welcome, you want
to treat your customer as though they are a piece of gold, and not
as a statistic.
Have you ever been standing in a line, and when
it comes to your turn to be waited on, the sales associate yells
out “next?”
Just thinking about that scenario makes me cringe.
It is hardly a way to build a relationship with your customer.
I have been working in sales for more than fifteen
years, and I have literally had customers tell me that the most
important thing to them is to be appreciated and not treated as
a statistic.
Keep this in mind the next time you wait on a
customer, instead of yelling “next,” you can politely
say, “may I help you Ms. Jones.”
We all have our daily, weekly, and monthly goals
that we must meet. And with this pressure applied to our daily work
day, it is easy to lose sight of the fact that it is the customer
who is the most important thing when it comes to our company’s
existence. They are the backbone. Without customers, we cease to
exist.
Here are a few tips to ensure that your customer
is appreciated by you and your company, and not viewed as just another
number in line.
1. Address Your
Customer by Name
When addressing your customer, make sure you call
them by name. This will put your relationship with your customer
on a personal level, and customers like to know that they are remembered.
It gives them a felling of importance with you, and your company.
2. Don’t Hurry
Them Out the Door
The last thing the customer wants is to be hurried
out the door. Remember. You are running a business, where people
are your greatest asset. You are not on an assembly line manufacturing
cars, so don’t treat your customer as though you are.
When you are finished with your customer’s
transaction, ask if there is anything else you can do for them,
or if they have any questions for you. You could even use this opportunity
to ask if you could go over some of your companies products with
them, which you feel could benefit them.
The last thing you want to do is get them in and
get them out.
3. Discuss Non-Business
Topics
There is more beneath the surface of your customers
than just the business that they do with you. People love to talk
about themselves, such as their family, their job’s, their
pets, their hobbies, etc.
So ask your customer about one of the topics mentioned
above, I guarantee they will be delighted to tell you all about
it.
This is also a great way to get to know your customer,
and build a strong relationship with them.
A strong business relationship is a great opportunity
to obtain all of your customer’s business as well as the business
of all of their friends and relatives through referrals.
So remember, don’t treat your customer like
a statistic, treat them as you would treat one of your friends.
This
article may be reproduced by anyone at any time, as long as the
authors name and reference links are kept in tact and active.
Jay Conners has more than fifteen
years of experience in the banking and Mortgage Industry, He is
the owner of http://www.jconners.com,
a mortgage resource site, he is also the owner of http://www.callprospect.com,
a mortgage lead company.
|