CUSTOMER COMPLAINTS- Gifts or Hindrances? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 28
About This Presentation
Title:

CUSTOMER COMPLAINTS- Gifts or Hindrances?

Description:

Title: BPS presentation Author: Isabelle Johnson Last modified by: rprice Created Date: 2/23/2005 6:21:03 AM Document presentation format: A4 Paper (210x297 mm) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:382
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 29
Provided by: Isabell160
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CUSTOMER COMPLAINTS- Gifts or Hindrances?


1
CUSTOMER COMPLAINTS- Gifts or Hindrances?
Presenter Rosemarie Price AIM Breakfast 14
April 2010
2
Overview of presentation
  • What is a Complaint?
  • Why do customers complain?
  • How is a complaint a gift?
  • Impact of Managements view of complaints
    handling
  • Complaints handling in a global environment
  • What can be achieved with a Complaint is a gift
    strategy- looking at complaints differently

3
What is a Complaint?
  • AS ISO 10002 Customer satisfaction Guidelines
    for complaints handling in organizations defines
    a complaint as
  • An expression of dissatisfaction made to an
    organization, related to its products (services),
    or the complaints-handling process itself, where
    a response or resolution is explicitly or
    implicitly expected

4
Why do customers complain?
  • Their expectations have not been met!

5
Recent experience
  • Activity-1 minute
  • Turn to the person sitting next to you and
    discuss a recent experience where you handled a
    complaint, focusing on how you reacted to your
    complaint
  • Alternatively, discuss a recent experience where
    you made a complaint, focusing on how the
    business reacted to your complaint

6
Recipients normal reaction to complaints
  • Ignore complaints
  • Defensiveness
  • Anger
  • Concern re loss of trade, reputation
  • Annoyance, time consuming, rectification costs
  • Hindrance- wish they would just go away!
  • Not believe some or all of what the customer was
    saying
  • These reactions are as a result of negative
    attribution blame is being attributed to us or
    our business. A complaint is evidence that, in
    the customers view, we have not met their
    expectations.

7
Customers manner
  • Lack Gracious Social skills to communicate
  • Nervous
  • Harsh, one sided
  • Emotional
  • Lack understanding of commercial/regulatory
    limitations
  • Rude
  • Unreasonable complainant

8
Complaint deterrent techniques
  • Apology only, no rectification
  • Blame
  • Promise but dont deliver
  • No response
  • Rudeness
  • Pass on to another department
  • Customer Interrogation

9
How could complaints be gifts?
  • Underlying Principles
  • There are 2 Levels of messages embodied in
    complaints
  • The customer has 2 separate needs when
    complaining-needs as individuals and needs
    relating to the complaint
  • The benefits of Customer recovery far outweigh
    the cost of losing a customer or attracting
    another customer
  • The majority of customers are honest

10
1. Two levels of messages in Complaints
  • Example 1
  • Surface message product is not working as
    expected
  • Underlying message I dont understand the new
    technology, I need help
  • Example 2
  • Surface message- I am disappointed with the
    service during my last visit/purchasing
    experience
  • Underlying message I am testing the value of my
    loyalty to your business

11
2. Customers needs when they complain
  • Needs as individuals
  • To be heard
  • To be understood
  • To be respected
  • Needs relating to the complaint
  • To have their concern dealt with quickly, fairly
    and properly
  • To be given what they have been denied and
    perhaps an apology
  • To have action taken to fix a problem or address
    a concern- a resultant process change

12
3. Benefits of Customer Recovery
  • Only 4 of dissatisfied customers complain. 96
    leave without any communication to business
  • Of the 96 who leave, 91 will never return
  • A typical dissatisfied customer will tell 8 to 10
    people about the issues with your business-
    significantly more in global communications
  • 1 in 5 dissatisfied customers will tell 20 people
    about the issues with your business
  • It takes 12 positive service incidents to make up
    for one negative incident

13
3. Benefits of Customer Recovery (contd)
  • 7 out of 10 complaining customers will do
    business again with you if resolve the complaint
    in their favour
  • Of complaining customers, 95 will do business
    with you again if you resolve the complaint at
    the first contact
  • On average, a satisfied complainer will tell 5
    people about their problem and how it was solved
  • It costs 6 times more to attract new customers
    than it does to retain current ones
  • Customer loyalty is worth 10 times the price of a
    single purchase
  • How to win and Keep Customers Michael LeBoeuf

14
4. The majority of customers are honest
  • 1-4 of customers systematically cheat businesses
  • If complaining customers are treated with
    suspicion or rudeness, customers will take a
    defensive position

15
The Gift
  • If a customer is complaining, you are being given
    a chance to retain that customer

16
Unwrapping The Gift
  • Free direct communication from customer about
    service failures, competitors offerings-no survey
    costs
  • Readily available market research-Complaints
    define what customers want
  • Opportunity to increase customer trust
  • Opportunity to build long term relationships-custo
    mers will re-purchase if they believe complaints
    are welcomed
  • Opportunity to rectify service failures
  • Opportunity of engaging customers as advocates

17
Engaging Customer as your Advocate
  • Customers becoming your advocates is based upon
    reciprocity principle humans like to return
    favours
  • When businesses handle customer complaints in a
    respectful way and a token of atonement is
    offered beyond their expectation, customers are
    likely to reciprocate with positive advocacy
  • Token of atonement can be financial, but can also
    be an apology, acknowledgement of making a
    difference- recognition of their value

18
What are the elements of Complaint is a gift
strategy (1)
  • Complaints Policy and guidelines based on
    complaint welcoming culture
  • Complaints data base to maximize complaints
    capture
  • Complaint handling training, including empathy
    and conflict handling training- front line staff
    and induction training
  • Target response and resolution times
  • Regular complaints reporting

19
What are the elements of Complaint is a gift
strategy (2)
  • Clearly defined Escalation path for difficult
    complaints
  • Specialist Complaints case managers
  • Customer Surveys
  • Continuous improvement focus
  • Unreasonable Complainant conduct management
    guidelines (demands, persistence, lack of
    co-operation, arguments, behavior)
  • Complaints Analysis- root cause analysis

20
Practical Implementation of Gift Strategy
  • Thank customer for contacting you
  • Explain why feedback is appreciated
  • Apologize for service failure
  • Take responsibility and make commitment to
    customer to do all you can to rectify situation
  • Collect all information from customer
  • Correct or facilitate correction of service
    failure as promptly as possible
  • Check customer satisfaction
  • Prevent future service failures of this type-root
    cause analysis (5 whys, causal factor tree
    analysis etc)

21
Impact of Management view of Complaints Handling
  • Customer Charter set by management- includes
    complaints handling
  • Focus on complaints welcoming not reduction of
    complaints
  • Culture, Complaints Handling guidelines/policy,
    KPIs, reporting, escalation path for complaints
  • Management set mandate for staff re customer
    recovery, give confidence/framework
  • Mindset of staff is easily sensed by customer

22
What can be achieved from a Complaint is a
Gift strategy
  • Improved Customer Experience
  • Access to valuable source of knowledge- at no
    cost
  • Knowledge of most common service failures
  • Increased customer trust and loyalty
  • Opportunity to partner with customer as advocate
  • Opportunity to strengthen service quality
    management
  • Increased satisfaction for complaints handling
    staff

23
Application of Gift Strategy
  • Can be applied to large corporations, individual
    departments, small businesses, monopoly
    businesses, government departments or government
    owned corporations
  • Comment re monopoly/ businesses equally
    important focus is on improved customer
    experience, improving complaint handling staff
    experience, achieving best practice, reducing
    external ombudsman costs

24
Using Complaint is a gift knowledge as a
Complainant
  • Be clear and specific in describing what you are
    complaining about
  • Be respectful
  • Describe the impact and what you are expecting as
    a resolution
  • Make suggestions re improvements
  • Give the business a chance to rectify the issue
    and retain your business
  • See your complaint as a gift

25
Readings/References
  • Complaint is a Gift Janelle Barlow and Claus
    Moller 2nd edition, TMI
  • How to Win and Keep Customers, Michael LeBoeuf

26
SUMMARY
  • Complaints are packages with 2 levels of messages
    waiting to be unpackaged
  • Complaints are given freely
  • Businesses can use the gifts in different ways-
    correction of immediate and systemic issues
    through direct communication of unmet
    expectations
  • Complaints give businesses opportunities to
    retain customers business and loyalty

27
A question to ponder
  • Putting yourself in the customers seat , what is
    your preference
  • Would you rather be dealing with a business that
    ignores complaints or with a business that
    welcomes complaints and sees them as a gift a
    powerful source of information ?
  • Let your response to this question be the driver
    for your approach in managing complaints for your
    business.

28
  • Questions
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com