5 Simple Tips for Dealing with Nasty Customers
You have permission to publish this article electronically
or in print, free of charge, as long as the bylines are
included. A courtesy copy of your publication would be
appreciated - send to jason@freeclassifiedlinks.com.
Title: 5 Simple Tips for Dealing with Nasty Customers
Word Count: 592
Author: Jason Tarasi
Email: jason@freeclassifiedlinks.com
Article URL: www.submityourarticle.com/articles/easypublish.php?art_id=3648
The article is preformatted to 60CPL.
5 Simple Tips for Dealing with Nasty Customers
Copyright 2005 Jason Tarasi
If you’ve been in business very long, you’ve likely heard
it all! You know, the irate customer who is going to sue
you over the nineteen dollar product that they claim is
bogus; the one that’s going to “shut your business down”
because they conjure up in their minds that you might have
breeched your privacy policy, or the one that takes
complete advantage of your money-back guaranty. My
favorite has to be the one that calls and screams
vulgarities into the phone for apparently no reason.
It doesn’t happen often, but if you’re going to be in
business, you will run across some nut cases from time to
time. Some can be diffused, some can’t. That’s just the
way things go in business.
There are some simple techniques for dealing with irate
customers without burning yourself an ulcer over them and
without telling them you hope they get cancer and die!
Here are some tips you may find useful…
1. Don’t take it personal
There is one thing that almost all nasty customers have in
common. They try to attack you on a personal level. Name
calling is not unusual. When you take it personal, you are
likely to get into a yelling match with the customer which
resolves nothing and only stands to make things worse. Try
to diffuse the situation – kill the anger with kindness so
to speak. If that doesn’t work, ask them to contact you
again once they have calmed down and are willing to speak
reasonably. Refuse to speak with a customer in an irate
state. You don’t have to put up with abuse ever.
2. Don’t overdo the “customer is always right” concept
In customer service training you will always hear that the
customer is always right. While that is true to some
extent, sometimes they are just flat wrong. You should
always try to accommodate a customer within reason, but do
not allow that concept to go too far.
3. Realize it isn’t always your problem
Sometimes people just have a bad day and are looking for
someone to take it out on. A hateful, ugly customer is
often one of these people. If you listen to their ranting
and raving, then respond kindly telling them you understand
their frustration and you want to work with them to come to
a resolution, you will often diffuse the anger and uncover
the rational human being beneath it.
4. Don’t fall for fear invoking bluffs In customer service
some business people tend to do anything to avoid the
potential harm of a threat even if it means losing money or
giving in to irrational demands. When you are threatened,
consider the validity of the threat. Do you really think
someone is going to pay thousands of dollars in attorney
fees to sue you over a low dollar transaction? Likely not.
Again, do what you can to accommodate within reason but
don’t give in to unsubstantiated threats.
5. Be prepared to decide whether or not a customer
relationship is worth salvaging
You’ve heard it said that one happy customer tells one
person about your business while an unhappy customer will
tell 10 or more. Undoubtedly, word of mouth can be the
best or the worst exposure for your business. This is the
very basis of the “the customer is always right” concept.
Of course it is best to salvage a customer relationship if
you can, but again, do so within reason.
About the Author:
Jason Tarasi publishes the reciprocal links newsletter
"Elite Links" Learn HOW thousands of other Elite Links
members generate FREE traffic and increase their search
engine rankings by swapping links. Grab your free lifetime
subscription now at: www.elitelinksnewsletter.com
|