Motivating Customers to Speak Out: If Your Customer Service Headlined USA Today
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"Motivating Customers to Speak Out: If Your Customer
Service Headlined USA Today"
By Barry Maher
We all know that tales of poor customer service
spread faster and farther than reports of great service.
But I have to admit my surprise when a relatively minor
horror story that happened to me ended up on the front page
of USA Today and in newspapers ranging from "The Cincinnati
Enquirer to The Peninsula in, of all places, Qatar.
To avoid having to go through the hassle of getting
copyright clearance to record an incident from my own life,
here's a paraphrase of the way the story appeared in The
London Times.
Author, Barry Maher speaks and trains on topics like
leadership, communication, management, motivation and
sales. On April Fool's Day last year, he flew across
America from California to Virginia to give a presentation
on customer service.
The airline, Delta, surpassed itself, losing his luggage
first on the outward leg, then on the return trip as well.
Arriving late the night before his presentation, Mr.
Maher waited fruitlessly at the luggage carousel at
Roanoke airport in Virginia. His laptop and
presentation notes were in his carry-on. But the
missing bags contained the clothes he was to wear for
the presentation the next day, along with copies of
his books to autograph for the attendees.
The baggage office was closed, so Mr. Maher trudged
off to the Delta ticket counter. No one was there
either. He did see a pile of luggage stacked behind
the counter. After waiting for five or ten minutes,
he started to step onto the baggage scale to get a
better view of whether or not any of it was his.
"Suddenly a scream rang out," Mr. Maher told The
Times. "And a man in a Delta uniform came running at
me as if I were Osama Ben Laden and armed and
dangerous. This was the person I had to deal with
about my lost luggage. As I said, I had flown there
to do a communications session. He taxed all my
communication skills. And then some.
["To this guy, I was clearly the one at fault. And
the minor fact that Delta had shipped my luggage to
Rangoon or Burma or Transylvania, was nothing
compared to my violation of some secret rule about
the sanctity of the baggage scale."]
It soon became clear that the luggage would not be
appearing any time in the immediate future. And after
the cross country trip, the clothes Mr. Maher had been
wearing were hardly suitable for a presentation.
Early the next morning, he ran to a men's clothing
shop, waited for it to open, bought new clothes and
dashed back in time for his presentation. The next
day, the luggage finally arrived. Just before he was
ready to check out of the hotel and head back to
California. Everything was soaked. The books were
ruined.
When Mr. Maher tried to file a claim for the damaged
books as he checked in for his return flight, he was
told he should file the claim at the originating
airport back California.
When he returned to California, Mr. Maher explains,
"the bags were missing yet again. I was amazed. I
went to the baggage office to report them missing and
to put in a claim for the damaged books. The baggage
clerk said Delta wouldn't pay a damage claim unless I
could produce the books so they could verify the
damage.
["When I told the clerk that I'd like to put in a
claim for restitution for the LOST books. He said
that it was too soon. The books would probably turn
up the next day. Besides, if the books were truly
ruined, as I had claimed, what Delta had lost had no
real value, did it."]
That's as far as the story went in The London Times.
There's a limit to how much space a major newspaper can
devote to a single small anecdote in a much larger story on
lost luggage.
Since there's also a limit to how much time you want
to spend reading about this, I won't go into the rest of
the hassle required to get restitution for the ruined
books. I'll just say that it wasn't easy. And through most
of it I got the strong impression that Delta's customer
service reps might just be more concerned with KEEPING me
from getting restitution than with HELPING me to get it.
But one important detail was left out of The London
Times, USA Today and every other newspaper I know of that
reported the story. And that was the extraordinary service
I received from that men's clothing shop in Roanoke, a
store called Davidson's.
Both the salesperson I dealt with and the owner did
everything humanly possible to find me the clothes I
needed, then make sure the pants were properly hemmed and
pressed, and get me back to the conference hotel in time
for my presentation. It was one of the finest examples of
customer service I can remember. And I raved about it to
the reporters who contacted me about the incident.
Not one story ever mentioned it. Not one story even
mentioned the name of the store. But millions of people
have now read about the poor service I received from Delta.
And that reflects two simple facts we all need to
remember, whether we're dealing with external or internal
customers.
First, complaints do spread far faster and far
quicker than complements.
Second, every company that gives lip service to
customer service but doesn't really deliver it opens up
opportunities for those few company that actually do
practice extraordinary customer service.
If you're ever in Roanoke and you need men's
clothing, check out Davidson's. You won't be disappointed.
Even though it didn't get in front of millions of people in
USA Today, The Indianapolis Star, The Qatar Peninsula,
etc., I have told thousands of people about Davidson's.
Literally thousands. After all, I do speak on customer
service.
And now I've told you.
Copyright 2006, Barry Maher. Used by Permission
Author, motivational keynote speaker and workshop leader,
Barry Maher speaks and writes on communication,
motivation, leadership, management and sales. His books
include "Filling the Glass," honored as "[One of] The Seven
Essential Popular Business Books, " "No Lie: Truth Is the
Ultimate Sales Tool" and the cult classic fantasy novel,
Legend. Sign up for his newsletter at _www.barrymaher.com_
(www.barrymaher.com/)
or call him at 760-962-9872.
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