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Customer Service Quality

I'm going to take these out of order.

By all means ask if I need assitance, but If I say no please refrain from trying to sell something. Until I'm ready.

I learned very early, the best way to approach a prospective customer was to never ask "Can I help you?", because the almost instinctive reply seems to be, "No thank you, I'm just looking", and it is a closed question. (Meaning it can only be answered yes or no.) Instead I would usually greet someone with "Good_____, what can I point you towards?". By using this approach it served two purposes. One, it was something most people aren't used to hearing, therefore it tended to get their attention. Two, it was an open ended question, requiring an actual answer. Almost all of the time I found it to be a great ice breaker that put the customer at ease, whether they were a legitimate customer shopping for something, or if they were just walking through to kill time.

But I'm less likely to buy if a feel a salesman is trying to get me to buy something. I might be interested in buying a new TV/Car etc.. but when I'm ready I'll come and find you.

Now in both quotes you've pointed out "trying to get me to buy" and "not until I'm ready". If you're dealing with a truly good salesperson that cares about what they are doing, they won't push either point. A goodsales person will spend more time finding out about your wants and needs and fulfilling them, rather than trying to push you into something that might not be right for you. But most importantly, a good salesperson isn't worried about, or focused on, making the sale. They know, if they have done their job correctly, the customer is going to want to make the purchase.

That was a great story. It beautifully and charmingly illustrated the point I was trying to make. Thank you for sharing it! It demonstrates exactly what good salesmanship is about, and should be a lesson to others....

Thanks. I learned much from him in my years at the store, and still find myself picking up things from him to this day.

...Good salespeople can gauge this more accurately than bad ones. Take Alrik's story: to him, just starting out on the job, the woman came off as a difficult customer, and there are plenty of difficult customers who it IS worth engaging & taking money from. It was the experience (and probably innate natural talent) of Alrik's dad that allowed him to make the value judgement about whether pursuing a sale would be worth it. The more independence & seniority a salesperson has, the easier they will find it to say no.

You point to a perfect example of lessons learned. This time it was my turn. About two years later I had been promoted to be the manager of our new store in another city. (Cry nepotism all ya want, my weekly sales usually totalled more than the other 3 guys put together :p ;) ). I had one of the guys from the other store come down for a couple of hours a week during our busier hours to help me cover the floor. If no one was in the store, I always gave him the up so it would make worth his time.

Now to set this, keep in mind I'm in the mid-west (USA). Pretty vanilla around these parts (especially back then). Well this guy walks into the store, so I nod to my guy to greet him. He takes one look, his eyes get real big, and he starts shaking is head no. I go over and ask him if he is sure. He laughs and say totally. You see, Perry was not just openly gay, he described himself as "Flaming", and he had come through the door in full stereotype.

Obviously my salesman was uncomfortable. I came to find out from Perry, he wasn't the only one. Its seems I was the first person in all of the stores in the area that treated him like just another person. I found out he used the stereotypes to see how he would be received. By the time he left, he had purchased a bedroom set, dining room set, and full living room outfit. My salesman fealt like a complete ass. Lesson learned.

On kind of a sidenote. I made a loyal friend that day. It was kind of poetic, because the same salesman was with me a few months later when Perry came back in. This time he had his sister in tow. She was from a small town about 3 hours away, but he insisted she make the trip. I found out her house had burned to the ground earlier in the year and she had finally gotten her insurance settlement. She now had the new house, but not a single piece of furniture. She literally needed a house full. With Perry's help, I provided her just that.
 
If I'm buying a high ticket item, i'll be shopping around several places till i find the rihjt one for me. And I've usualy done a little research before hand. Specs I want, likely price etc...
 
I hate to admit it, but the standard for customer service has plummeted to an all-time low lately. I should know, I work at a grocery store and one (former) employee I worked with was about as exciting as watching paint dry....even to the customers. I mean, it's the customer's money that makes up my paycheck, so why shouldn't I treat them nicely and be friendly? I've even gotten a Customer First pin to wear on my apron simply for giving great customer service. I mean, seriously. Is it that hard to just be courteous?
 
Talked to a friend I mine that works at Food City: Apparently the woman gave the GM a sob story about not ever getting time with her boyfriend or kids and she was just having a really bad day. She was given a verbal and told that next time it'd be a written (oooooooooh, a WRITTEN that'll show her). If my friend is telling the story straight, a few of the cashiers and supervisors have called the DM and filed a complaint on the woman and the GM for letting her get by with her attitude--again.
 
I hate to admit it, but the standard for customer service has plummeted to an all-time low lately. I should know, I work at a grocery store and one (former) employee I worked with was about as exciting as watching paint dry....even to the customers. I mean, it's the customer's money that makes up my paycheck, so why shouldn't I treat them nicely and be friendly? I've even gotten a Customer First pin to wear on my apron simply for giving great customer service. I mean, seriously. Is it that hard to just be courteous?

Well.. for low paying jobs (I'm assuming) many people have no motivation to go beyond anything that's absolutely necessary, i.e. the bare minimum that won't get them into troube and if they're really sick of it they even take complaints/write ups as long as they're not getting fired. It's the "you get what you pay for" motto in worklife and i've seen this attitude quite often at work.

Talked to a friend I mine that works at Food City: Apparently the woman gave the GM a sob story about not ever getting time with her boyfriend or kids and she was just having a really bad day. She was given a verbal and told that next time it'd be a written (oooooooooh, a WRITTEN that'll show her). If my friend is telling the story straight, a few of the cashiers and supervisors have called the DM and filed a complaint on the woman and the GM for letting her get by with her attitude--again.

A bit surprised by that.. everyone has a bad day once in a while when work quality drops and it may get you a reminder by your supervisor to pick it up next day but this one went right out of the park.. as a GM i'd have fired her on the spot (or made it a priority to get her fired sooner than later). The people were right to go over his head to the DM.
 
only slightly off topic, but (and this maybe from TV and movies) but is there a ratio as too how much people in the US pay (or tip) people to pump gas, or park their cars.

Cant say its something ive ever done, the most ive splashed out for is a car wash, but a few Eastern Europeans.

Does this actually happen?
 
Well, I've never been anywhere in the US where you didn't pump my own gas. I've never used a valet service. If I can't find parking on my own, I'm going somewhere else. And if I'm getting a car wash, I'm either doing it myself, or I'm going through a machine-operated one.

So...I have no useful information for you.
 
I mean, seriously. Is it that hard to just be courteous?

I would ask many customers the same question. Don't get me wrong I get where you are coming from and I've never had a legit customer complaint in all my years (the one or two I have had even management agreed it was baseless) but come-on, some customers are just assholes.

Helped a guy today, went up to asked him if he could help and as he was talking on the phone in a loud, boisterous, voice and he kind-of nodded pointed vaguely at he wanted and then held up two fingers. Sigh, okay so I don't get the dignity of his attention or being talked to, whatever. So I start to get it, and then when I pulled the steaks out he knocked on the top of the counter and say "Hey, clown. I said these steaks over here not those!"

So, I said, "Sorry, sir." Got the one he wanted, priced them up set them on the counter and before I could complete a salutation he was off -still talking loudly into his phone.

Guy was a complete asshole to me. Now he's an extreme, sure, but many people barely give me the courtesy of full communication during my interaction with them or even the courtesy of any acknowledgement when I say hi.

To be fair, there's more good customers than bad ones but the bad ones stick out more. Much how it is on this side of things for them. I'm nice, I smile, I try to be as pleasant as possible, chat, and such. But when there's people like this asshole today who hardly treat me as a fellow human being deserving of undivided attention or at the very least been talked to on what he wanted it can get hard to even find the right motivation to be that way.

The quality of being a customer has many problems too. If you want someone to treat you well start acting like they're a person and amazing things will happen. My best customers I'm very friendly with because they treat me as an equal and we can talk, share cooking tips, etc. The worst customers treat me like a so much lower in the social status that I'm not deserving of even a friendly greeting when I say hello.

Others call me a clown because they're so busy talking to on their phone they couldn't be bothered to tell me exactly what they wanted.
 
That's what makes retail great/sucky. You get to experience the full gamut of personalities on a day to day basis. I've had horrible customers (when I was 16 and working at Ames, a customer screamed at me for not having the cell phone he wanted, and I mean screamed, spittle and all right in my face), and I've had wonderful customers (working at Walmart, a sweet, little old couple who were trying to buy a computer for their college age grandson), and everything in between. Some days are worth the poor pay, while others wouldn't be worth it if I were paid in gold sovereigns. That's just the way it is. Hopefully, you always have more wonderful customers than bad ones.
 
I suspect just as much as customers remember poor assistants, those same assitants remember the poor customers.

You see customers on the phone whilst the cashier is trying, As they would consider it rude if the cashier was talking to a colleague when they were supposed to be serving them, what's the difference?
 
Well, I've never been anywhere in the US where you didn't pump my own gas. I've never used a valet service. If I can't find parking on my own, I'm going somewhere else. And if I'm getting a car wash, I'm either doing it myself, or I'm going through a machine-operated one.

So...I have no useful information for you.

....So you have never been to New Jersey and Oregon.

As for a car wash, I have gotten a better washing at a gas station than a full service car wash service. There was a couple of stains on my old car, that a bunch of workers couldn't remove. I drove down to a local Shell station and used that thing we used to wash dirty windows. The stains disappeared instantly.
 
I've been in New Jersey...but I apparently didn't get gas. I also vowed never to step foot in that god-forsaken state ever again.
 
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