The Shocking Truth About Your Image: Four Bizarre
Reasons Customers May Not Like You
By: Jeff Mowatt
Whether it's fair or not, we are often judged on
first impressions.
This harsh reality is nowhere better seen than in
today's ultra-fast business world where customers size-you-up in
a nano-second based on your personal image. Since their impression
of you will determine whether or not they want to do business with
you, the impact on your career and on your organization's bottom
line can be staggering.
Ironically, when corporations bring me in to speak at conventions
on how to boost customer retention, I often find that there's been
little or no professional training for employees about personal
image. Since it's often awkward to confront employees on these sensitive
issues, you need some ammunition to make the task easier. Here are
4 image-related reasons that customers may not like you or your
employees. Incidentally, customers will never tell you these reasons
to your face - they'll simply do business elsewhere.
1. You look different than expected.
Customers prefer conducting business with individuals who meet their
visual expectations. So if you want to keep customers, dress in
a manner that customers expect. A plumber dressed in an Armani suite
makes the client uncomfortable. An alderman in khaki shorts would
shock the council members of City Hall. A waitress with too much
makeup, sporting tattoos and body piercing would likely put off
a patron in an upscale restaurant. On the other hand, a bartender
in a conservative suit and tie may appall a customer in an alternative
nightclub.
"But that's not fair!" decry so many employees at the
thought of being told what to wear. Again, first impressions may
not be fair, but they are the realities of the business world. You
hire employees to take care of customers - not for the sake of expressing
their sartorial individuality. They can do that on their own time.
Your job as a business owner or manager is to create an environment,
including staff wardrobe, where your customers feel comfortable.
The most effective way to convey this message to employees is
to have a written dress code. When writing your code, it's best
to check with an attorney for the laws that apply in your jurisdiction.
The great thing about a dress code is it often weeds out would-be
applicants who wouldn't feel comfortable in that environment. That's
better for everyone.
2. You're hard to understand - Customers
don't want to strain themselves to understand front line staff.
If you or other employees don't speak the local language clearly,
then customers will generally go to your competitors where they
won't have to work so hard to communicate - or to spend their
money. This is doubly important when speaking on the telephone,
where customers don't have the benefit of non-verbal communication
to help them interpret what's being said.
This concept has nothing to do with discrimination based on ethnic
differences or nationality. It has to do with basic communication
skills that are essential to do the job. If it's a question of improving
your knowledge of the local language, then take courses until you're
fluent and easy to understand- not just enough to get by.
3. You exaggerate - Don't exaggerate
to tell customers what they want to hear. If a task will take 15
minutes to complete, don't say, "It'll only be 5 or ten minutes."
This is called lying. Customers hate that. Organizations that stay
in business over the long term, adhere to the age-old adage, under
promise and over deliver. 'Nuff said.
4. You're indiscreet - 'Indiscreet'
describes the cashier at a self-serve gas station who chatted with
his friends while I entered to pay. He barely stopped his conversation
with his buddies to take my money. I felt like I was crashing a
private party. I never went back.
While this obvious display of rudeness is relatively rare, a much
more common example is when employees converse amongst themselves
in front of the customer. Numerous times I've been on airplanes
when the flight attendants, while rolling food carts down the aisles,
are so engaged in their personal conversations that they barely
stop long enough to take the dinner orders. Meanwhile every passenger
has to listen to their private conversations, whether they want
to or not.
To top-off the indiscretion list, far too many employees inadvertently
tell customers more than they want to hear. For example, when a
customer asks a front line employee, "How are you?", they
really don't want to hear complaints. It's just a greeting. Yet
some employees take this as an excuse to complain with, "Oh,
I'm 60-40", or as a security guard once told me, "I'm
vertical." (Yikes)! Some employees respond with, "I'll
be great when my break starts." In other words, the employee
will be happy as soon as he or she can get away from their job and
us - the customers. All of these indiscretions make customers
wish they were dealing with professionals.
There is hope - Awareness of these
problems is half the battle. A lot of employees simply don't realize
they're committing these offenses. Another part of the solution
is training. Bringing in a professional trainer to address the employees
as a group provides the advantage of third party objectivity, in
a fun non-threatening manner. One thing is clear though, if you
do nothing about these issues, your business will continue to suffer
without anyone else telling you why.
Taken from an article on Canada One.com
Published May 2001
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