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Customer Service is Customer Care

Customer Service Has Moved Towards Customer Care

A truly service-driven economy is really a customer care economy!

Customer Service is Customer Care

As we move forward into a truly service-driven economy it’s beginning to dawn on us that it’s really a service care economy.

As I waited for an answer to my inquiry to a stereo company, the recording stated a customer care representative would be available shortly.

Customer Care

At that moment, I realised, it’s finally catching on everywhere.

With aging baby boomers, world events, and additional pressures in today’s society; it is customer care that has evolved in our economy.

We have moved from a manufacturing economy to a service economy and are currently leaning towards a service care economy.

Personal Contact

As we live in a high tech-high button touch environment, many personal contacts have been decreased making each customer interaction more important than ever to corporate imagery.

For example, if you call for computer tech support, the representative often makes it a point to address you by your first name.

If it’s the bank credit card company, they may ask How are you doing today?

Human Touch

This makes the customer feel less like a number and more like a human being.

Successful restaurateurs always took service one step further towards care because they understood restaurant customer service literally involves the immediate health of the patron– more so than any other industry (except for the healthcare industry itself).

A recent survey asked diners why they went out to eat and the main response was to feel good. (After all, the word restaurant has French origins meaning to restore).

As a waiter for many years, I felt my job was to restore humanity, especially to diners arriving from a stressed-out day.

Higher Level

In my past dining room work experiences, I remember certain actions lifting customer service to this higher level of care.

One time I saw a customer request margarine that wasn’t available in the restaurant.

The owner walked across the street to the grocery purchased the margarine and brought it table-side.

The patron was delighted.

Regular Customers

There was a regular customer (diabetic) who always got immediate attention with some kind of bread or crackers to keep from feeling faint before her food arrived.

If there was a baby present at a table, our staff ensured their food would come out as soon as possible to pacify.

These kinds of actions create a lasting positive image for any company or establishment.

The owner cared about his guests and it permeated through the dining room and staff — even after he left to open other restaurants for the company.

Customer Service involves major three points:

  1. Care and Concern for the Customer
  2. Spontaneity and Flexibility of front-line workers which enhances the ability for on-the-spot problem-solving.
  3. Recovery- making things right with the customer when the process has gone astray.

These three points should always be highlighted in any customer service training program.

If they are kept in mind, then quality service will occur.

This article was contributed by Andy MacDonald

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