From: Jagan Mohan Reddy [mailto:drjaganmohanre...@gmail.com] 
Sent: 11 January 2012 10:16

Subject: January 9, 2012 7:02 AM * Print * Text The 6 best words in customer
service

Two comedians can tell the exact same joke, with the same timing, and one
will have people rolling in the aisles while the other will get blank stares
and an awkward golf clap. The joke itself may not even be funny, but the
difference can come down to a single word choice
<http://scriptfrenzy.org/node/413100> . The same can be said for customer
service -- the delivery often determines the reaction.

I've written quite a bit in the past about what not to do
<http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505143_162-45340963/the-dirtiest-word-in-custom
er-service/?tag=mncol;lst;6>  when speaking to customers. It's a virtually
limitless topic that unfortunately is supported by countless daily examples.
So this time I thought I'd focus on what I call "positive trigger words" --
the ones that convey the exact same messages but with completely different
results.

Of course, what you do is more important than what you say. But whether it's
good news, bad news, or simply passing on information, your choice of words
will have a significant effect on the way the customer hears what you're
saying, and consequently the way she feels about it and reacts to it.

The goal, of course, is to make the customer as happy as possible with the
service experience, even if the outcome isn't exactly as she had hoped for.
It is, in fact, possible for a customer to have a positive feeling about a
company even if she doesn't get what she wants. And that is where words make
a big difference:

- People respond positively to words that are active rather than passive.
There is a world of difference between "I can" and "I will."

- Words of genuine compassion and empathy suggest that you are not just
carrying the company line or reading from a memo. 

- Delivering those words in a cheerful, upbeat, and most importantly,
natural manner (appropriate to the circumstances, of course) suggests one
human being's desire to help another, not just an equivocal, noncommittal
suggestion that something "may" be possible.

Here, then, in no particular order, are six active, enthusiastic,
mood-altering, wonderfully human words that will dramatically change the way
customers react to your conversations, e-mails and text chats. They are
ridiculously simple, yet potent tweaks to the normally gray, predictably
mundane language of customer service:

"Delighted" 

"Absolutely"

"Pleasure"

"Happy"

"Sorry"

"Yes"

Think of the passive catch-all, "Let me see what I can do," which sets the
customer's expectations somewhere between low and zero. But change that to
"I'd be delighted to help," and the customer will be -- I guarantee --
smiling on the other end of the phone, confident that you're actually
interested in helping her, and much more receptive to whatever you have to
say.

Note that this only works if it's genuine, not forced or scripted
<http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505143_162-45340793/this-is-what-fake-customer-
service-sounds-like/?tag=mncol;lst;2> . It presumes a good attitude, and the
desire and authority to help people. Contrived speech is always obvious, so
don't over-pepper (as in the way so many reps cloyingly insert your name in
every sentence). Speak as a normal person, with a smile and a wish to
please, and these "good words" will work wonders.

Customers have been beaten into assuming they'll always get mediocre to
horrible service, and they are defensive before anyone even answers the
phone. When they call, e-mail or chat online with a company representative,
they expect boilerplate, robotic, soulless responses in the standard,
dehumanized voice of the typical customer service interaction. Break that
predictable pattern with the thoughtful use of positive trigger words and
you'll change the entire tone of a customer interaction.

  Lastly, make people happy and pretty much everything else takes care of
itself

-- 
Dr A Jagan Mohan Reddy
Hands that serve are holier than the lips that pray


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