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Be a Service Warrior

Guest post by: Chip Bell

Article Overview: We live in a time of spirit larceny. Layoffs have robbed colleagues of colleagues, leaving those who remain feeling hollow. And, the hustle for razor thin margins has put short term profits at center stage and long term relationships in the cheap seats. As organizations are put in a profit-at-all-cost vise, what can be squeezed out is the positive spirit of service providers. It is a time for service warriors.

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Be a Service Warrior

Be a Service Warrior

By Chip R. Bell


Warrior lessons started as soon as I exited the Army helicopter that had flown me to a remote part of Viet Nam. I entered the only tent at the field command post for the infantry unit to which I had been assigned. At the far end of the tent stood a noticeably serious Army captain. I snapped to attention and saluted. “At ease, lieutenant,” he said with the confidence of general.

I had been told about Captain Jack Hamilton before I deployed to the field. “There’s not a more seasoned commander than Happy Jack,” the battalion executive officer told me. “He’s racked up a lot of medals for bravery under fire. You’ll find there’s no slacking in Alpha Company.”

“Welcome to the 82nd Airborne,” CPT Hamilton said, flashing a contagious smile. Some of the butterflies in my stomach began to calm down. “Your days of being a soldier are over, son. In this outfit you are expected to be a warrior. Ordinary soldiers do their assigned duty; warriors give their absolute best. Now, go see SGT. Short. He’ll get you squared away.” I left his tent knowing I had much to learn about being a warrior.

Service without spirit can come in many forms. It can be emotional indifference, the “it’s-just-a-job” attitude of the night nurse, the sleep-walking movement of the janitor, or the very wooden sound in the operator’s voice. It is service with all the life-form removed.

We live in a time of spirit larceny. Layoffs have robbed colleagues of colleagues, leaving those who remain feeling hollow. And, the hustle for razor thin margins has put short term profits at center stage and long term relationships in the cheap seats. As organizations are put in a profit-at-all-cost vise, what can be squeezed out is the positive spirit of service providers. It is a time for service warriors.

Real warriors fight in the same dire situations as any other soldier. But, warriors take command and, through their sheer zeal to excel, turn lemons into champagne. They live every moment from the adage, “give to the world the best that you have and the best will come back to you.” They have exorcised every “victim” molecule from their body in order to enter all challenges with a fervent belief in a very positive outcome. They take the fight to the enemy; they don’t hunker down and hope difficulty will pass.

Service is not about performing assigned duties, it is making a light come on inside a customer. It is not about what you supply, it is about what you nurture in another. Elevators give service, people promote spirit. And, service without spirit is as memorable as an ATM or automatic car wash.

Generosity over Obligation

Warriors will tell you that the rush of the challenge drowns out the fear of bodily harm. Contrary to what you see in movies starring Bruce Willis or Sylvester Stallone, real warriors do not get a thrill out of hurting people. Rather, they are the military version of Olympic athletes. And, their survival hangs on being the best---bringing more to their role than is required.

“A cash and carry customer brought a small rug in to clean,” reports Ellen Amirkhan of Dallas-based Oriental Rug Cleaning. “All the parking spaces were taken so she parked on the sidewalk; when she came out she had gotten a parking ticket. She came in and told us and we wrote her a check for the ticket. When the rug was ready we delivered it to her and did not charge her for the cleaning! We have a customer for life.”

A generosity attitude has a captivating impact on customers. It attracts them because it conveys the unconditional positive regard that characterizes relationships at their best. Customers like the way they feel when dealing with generous service providers. They believe they are the recipient of a sincere desire to serve, not just a ploy for payback. They enjoy relationships laced with substance and value far more than encounters that are functional, but hollow.
Extra over Ordinary

I learned from my warrior tutelage that “slacking” had an elevated meaning to Captain Hamilton. In the soldier world, slacking meant falling short on your assigned tasks. But to a man who never made a “C” on anything in his life, slacking meant anything short of the best you could deliver.

Service warriors know ordinary service leaves customers only satisfied. Seventy-five percent of customers who leave an organization to go with a competitor say there were satisfied with the one they abandoned. Being a service warrior means delivering a service experience that is remarkable—one that makes customers remark positively to others.

Chanaka Demel was working the front desk at the Toronto Airport Holiday Inn when two men arrived to register late one evening. They were angry the airline had lost their luggage. Both had interviews early the next morning and did not have the proper clothes. Realizing the men were about his size, Chanaka signaled another clerk to fill in while he went home to secure two business suits, shirts, and all the accessories for the two guests. They returned to the hotel late the next afternoon after a successful day of interviews in Chanaka’s clothes. “He’s a miracle worker,” they told the general manager. “We’ll tell everyone to only stay at this hotel.”

Extra telegraphs affirmation. William James, the famed psychologist, wrote: “The deepest craving of human nature is the need to be valued.” Extra says to customers, “You are worth it.”

Colonel Hamilton retired from the Army in 1992 and then spent several years developing senior leaders in the Croatian Army. “Once you become a warrior,” he told me, “you can never go back to being an ordinary soldier.” Be a service warrior for a while. Like Jack Hamilton, you’ll never again settle for service that is “just ordinary.”

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About the Author: Chip Bell
RSS for Chip's articles - Visit Chip's website

Chip R. Bell is a senior partner with The Chip Bell Group and manages their office near Dallas, Texas. Prior to starting CBG in 1980, he was Director of Management and Organization Development for NCNB (now Bank of America). Dr. Bell holds graduate degrees from Vanderbilt University and the George Washington University. He was a highly decorated infantry unit commander in Viet Nam with the elite 82nd Airborne. Chip is the author or co-author of several best-selling books including Customer Loyalty Guaranteed, Magnetic Service, Service Magic, Customers as Partners and Managing Knock Your Socks Off Service. His newest book is Take Their Breath Away: How Imaginative Service Creates Devoted Customers.. His work has been featured on CNBC, CNN, Fox Business Network, Bloomberg TV, and in the Wall Street Journal, Fortune, USA Today, Fast Company and Business Week. A renowned keynote speaker, Chip has served as consultant or trainer to such organizations as GE, Microsoft, CVS/pharmacy, Marriott, Universal Orlando, Ritz-Carlton Hotels, Harley-Davidson, Pfizer, Lockheed-Martin, Allstate, and Victoria’s Secret.

Click here to visit Chip's website
Dashed Line

More from Chip Bell
The Ethics of Service
Fingering the Goods
Comic Relief Rx for Great Service in Gloomy Times
Wheres Buster
Time for Service Warriors


Related Forum Posts
Re: Service Or Product? Re: Service Or Product? - I agree with starting a Service-based Business in the economy. Here is what I think is critical: 1. Researching that your Service business has a market. 2. Marketing the Service with as much leverage as possible. 3. Product-izing the Service (aka Package Expert Knowledge). This will only help elevate you as "the" expert in your niche and make you accessible to people in different price points.
Re: Would you hang this poster on your wall? Re: Would you hang this poster on your wall? - Hi GT, I am also a member of Warrior Forum, can you please post the link of your thread in Warrior Forum here so I can post this graphic as well on it.
Re: How many mambers of this forum are also member of WF? Re: How many mambers of this forum are also member of WF? - I am a Warrior and have been for over 5 years. I joined there in February 2004.
Who Said Twitter Doesn't Work...? Who Said Twitter Doesn't Work...? - Last month, the BBC World Service programme, The Strand, featured 21 year-old Icelandic pianist/composer Olafur Arnalds. Arnalds achieved extraordinary success through his internet-led project to compose 7 tunes in 7 days, post them on his website and then post links to it via TWITTER. As a result his website got thousands of visitors eager to listen to his music, catapulting him to fame and bringing his music to the attention of the BBC, who featured an interview with him on the World Service programme, The Strand! So who says Twitter doesn't work? (HINT: It does help if you have something uniquely your own that other people want to get hold of...)
Re: Getting Press Coverage Re: Getting Press Coverage - Thanks Evan for this great post.What you have giving us here could easily sold as a $17 report on Warrior Forum (WSO).


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