| |
| |
There's
an old cliché that says “When the cat's away
the mice will play.” In the service industry
this anecdote is quite appropriate. The cat has to
be there all the time to protect the brand and ensure
proper service to the customer. Some companies rely
on mystery shopping with 1 or 2 shops a month, but
with thousands of customers coming through your doors
your employees rarely worry about mystery shoppers.
Why no worries? With only 1 or 2 shops a month mingled
among thousands of real customers they never expect
it to be them, or more likely they've never heard
about them at all so why would they worry. But what
if you could change this paradigm? How would it be
to have thousands of eyes watching your shop every
month? And with more monitoring, you will have no
more mice at play
But how do you get more eyes on the shop?
|
|
The mice may not like it but the cat loves it.
So, who is protecting your customer? Your store?
Your franchise? Your brand? Your customer is! And
who better to tell you what's right and wrong, or
what things they'd really like to see. Customers
know your business surprisingly well. They're the
ones paying for it. Give them the power to review
your business and your employees will quickly learn
that every customer has a voice, and the customer
is always watching. No longer can comment cards
be torn up, or customers told to just 'go away'.
A new culture develops that is focused on service.
The employee becomes 'aware' of the customer and
seeks to attain high marks on customer service.
By using CONNECTT, Mindshare's automated feedback
system, you can turn your customers into your own
mystery shopping force. They will 'watch the shop'
for you and help foster a "culture of quality" within
your staff. The valuable data you capture on demographics,
marketing, and service will also help you to protect
your store, your franchise, and your brand.
The information comes straight from your customers,
not filtered by servers and managers. You can actually
listen to your customer's comments and hear how
they felt about an issue. What an amazing thing
to actually understand the perceptions of your customers.
|
| |
|
|