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Service, service, service…

Posted: 22/07/2010

servie-serviceIf anyone has watched “Mary, Queen of Shops” most recent series, you will have heard Mary Portas continually banging on about service .  As I mentioned last week, service is one of the key differentials between large retailers and small, independent retailers i.e. the small retailer actually cares about the customer and wants to give good service whereas most staff in the large retailers don’t give a monkey’s.  Well, that’s the theory, anyway, one quite borne out by some of the rather grumpy characters featured in the recent series.

To give good service generally means some degree of human interaction. Although there are, of course, some excellent web-sites that give a very good customer experience, what I am talking about is, of course, physically going into a shop.  Face to face contact is required for good service.  What an own goal then when supermarkets started installing self-service checkouts a couple of years ago.  Not only does this remove the last vestige of human contact within the supermarket at the check-out, but the technology doesn’t even work properly!  All I hear when I have used them is a computer voice saying “approval required”.  Why I should need approval for checking out a bottle of olive oil or chunk of cheese is beyond me!  And yet I can’t continue checking out without a supervisor coming over. And they are too busy dealing with another customer over 60 who can’t check-out a bottle of wine and a 16 year-old who can’t buy a tube of glue to complete his homework! And have you ever tried using your own recyclable bags?  The only thing that amazes me is that more of these machines haven’t been smashed in by frustrated customers!

Of course, all this frustration with bad technology results in an even worse customer experience in the supermarkets - if that was possible!  All this plays into the hands of the independents who can give that excellent service that customers are crying out for.  In fact when customers receive any kind of decent customer service, they almost fall over backwards as they aren’t used to it.  Let’s go over the top in smiling when customers come through the door, helping them find products, recommending products and carrying their shopping to the car.  All this makes a huge difference!  Don’t forget it!

One little story to finish, which is where good service goes a bit too far and turns into pushiness. I stop at a BP garage which is attached to an M & S a couple of times a week on the way to work, sometimes to fill up with diesel and other times simply to buy some breakfast, which is usually a croissant or two.  Every time I go to the check-out I get asked whether I would like a hot coffee to go with my croissants.  As my office is only 10 minutes away and I can get much better coffee there, I decline.  Bearing in mind the staff should know me by now and should stop asking, this week I was asked three times whilst paying whether I wanted a coffee, which was ridiculous - it was almost like he wasn’t going to let me buy the croissants unless I bought a coffee to go with them!  Next time I will try and sell him some coffee to improve the quality of their offering.

Posted by Paul Hargreaves
22 July 2010, 05.17 pm
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Roger Allen Says: July 26th, 2010 at 4:10 pm

What about the “do you need any help packing sir?”….when you only have two items on the conveyor. That has happened to me so many times.

Last week my wife Zofia and I were on the Tottenham Court Road looking to buy some bits and pieces for my daughters new flat after having visited our new company office in Soho. We visited three well known stores that offer furniture, kitchen things as well as a whole range of household and garden stuff. No one was interested in helping at all, everywhere it was to much trouble. We did persevere and made purchases to the value of a couple of hundred pounds…perhaps we weren’t big enough customers?

Back to our new office. I nearly cancelled if after the shared receptionist put so many obstacles in my way to me being able to walk down the corridor and sit at my desk. No smiles only problems.

Anyone who works for an organisation that depends on the goodwill of its customers for survival should remember that it takes a long time to get clients but only seconds to lose them.