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Customer Complaints
by Tash Hughes of Word
Constructions
The most important aspect of any business is the customer –
without customers, your business will not succeed. And happy, satisfied
customers will carry your business to great success.
Knowing that, most business owners and their staff will work to
make customers happy with the service and products. You can value
add, offer quality products and do it all professionally for a good
price.
However, even the best business will have unhappy customers. They
may be unhappy about something out of your control or be unreasonable,
but if they are unhappy it can impact on you and your business.
Complaints can be a positive!
Instead of avoiding complaints and being scared of them, consider
the advantages of hearing your customers’ complaints.
If you make it easy for customers to come to you, you will know
about their complaints and be able to do something about it. Consider
their complaint as a feedback system where you can learn and improve.
Have you heard the stories which say an unhappy customer will tell
10 people about their bad experience with you while a happy customer
will tell only 2 or 3 about you?
Think about going out for dinner. The first few people you talk
to after a good meal will hear about it, but you may soon forget
to mention the restaurant name. But if you are served slowly and
get bad food, you will warn many friends and colleagues to avoid
that restaurant.
How often do you complain about a business to friends rather
than to the business itself?
For instance, if a customer complains that your contact details
are too hard to find on your website you can be sure that others
also find it hard to find those details. Now that you know about
it, you can move the contact details to the front page or make the
link to them more obvious.
It is much easier to deal with complaints than to deal with a bad
reputation because you have a number of unsatisfied customers.
Dealing with complaints
No matter what the complaint is or how the customer reacts, stay
as calm and professional as you possibly can. Taking the complaint
personally and arguing will only make you both feel worse and won’t
get a positive result.
The key is to listen to the customer. Ask questions to make sure
you fully understand the problem and sympathise with their situation,
even if you don’t think it is your fault. Just being heard
will make most unhappy customers feel better about the situation.
Show concern for their inconvenience and thank them for telling
you about their concerns. If it’s a mistake on your part,
then make sure you apologise for that, too. Most people will respect
you for the apology.
Find a solution with the customer. It’s no good you offering
a solution that doesn’t work for the customer as that doesn’t
help them. Make sure you both understand the agreed solution and
write it down so no one forgets it. Determine a time frame for the
solution, unless it is an immediate solution, and make sure it is
done by that time.
Follow up the complaint a few days later. Whether it is a call
to make sure the replacement arrived, an email to say the website
has been altered or a letter apologising for the error, the follow
up shows you are serious about trying to fix their problem.
The results
Sometimes, the customers who complain can become the most loyal
and positive customers for your business. Knowing that you will
look after them in bad situations, they can trust you to look after
them in the normal course of business.
By dealing with customers calmly and with respect, even when they
are complaining about your business, you will reduce the negative
feedback about your business. And you get the opportunity to improve
your business as well.
Tash Hughes is the owner of Word Constructions and is available
to solve all your business writing problems! From letters to policies,
newsletters to web content, Word
Constructions writes all business documents
to your style and satisfaction.
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