Feedback Form
Home Features Mastermind Forums About Advertise Blog Network Contact Be An Author

Speed Kills - The service standard that does more harm than good

About The Author


Jeff Mowatt
(Visit Jeff's Website) Jeff Mowatt, B.Comm., CSP is an award-winning professional speaker, customer service strategist, and bestselling author of, Becoming a Service Icon in 90 Minutes a Month. His Influence with Ease® column has been syndicated and featured in over 200 business publications including Canadian Manager, HR Reporter, and Commerce and Industry. He has worked with thousands of leaders, professionals, and front-line employees on enhancing the service and sales culture and boosting results with customers. Jeff heads his own training company and his clients include some of the most admired corporations in North America including: Home Depot, Shell Canada, CIBC, and WestJet. The Influence with Ease® approach that Jeff shares with audiences is effortlessly professional. Spiced with humour and dramatic examples, audiences discover how to engender more trust, feel more motivated, and enhance influence with just about anyone. It's powerful, and it's profitable. To obtain your own copy of his book or to inquire about engaging Jeff for your team, visit www.jeffmowatt.com or call 1-800-JMowatt (566-9288).

Jeff Mowatt is a Platinum author on EvanCarmichael.com
About The Author

View Author Blog
View Author Blog

View Author Video
View Author Video

Free Downloads


Jeff Mowatt's

Complete
List Of
Sales
Articles

Name
Email
If you enjoyed this article, get Jeff Mowatt's Complete List of Sales Articles For FREE!

More Jeff Mowatt
Speed Kills The service standard that does more harm than good
When Talking to Strangers
Grand Intentions to Greater Sales
Yes I Mind Waiting 10 ways to reduce lineup stress for staff and customers
Tea and the Secrets of Staff Retention
Managing Multiple Priorities How to juggle customers projects and admin and still have a life
10 Ways to Break it to them Gently Diplomacy tips that keep customers
Getting your Foot in the Door 7 steps to successful coldcalling
The Shocking Truth about your Image Four bizarre reasons customers may not like you
Crucial Questions to Superior Sales
Free Downloads


 
 
 
Speed Kills - The service standard that does more harm than good

As a business owner or manager, you have probably heard management experts refer to the importance of service standards for frontline employees. The idea is that managers should give customer-contact people a performance goal or service standard by which they can be measured and rewarded. Sounds good in theory. Unfortunately, over my years as a consultant and business advisor, and as a customer myself, I find that some service standards are not only ineffective, they are actually counterproductive. I wonder if this may be the case in your organization.

When most managers hear the term service standard, they think in terms of delivery and turnaround times. In other words, phone calls will be returned within twenty-four hours, customers will wait in line no longer than five minutes, etc. Those types of standards assume that faster is better, which isn’t always the case. Consider this scenario…

When my wife, Lydia and I decided to buy a new home, we quickly concluded that my forty-year-old lifelong pals could no longer be bribed to spend a weekend helping us to move. At this stage in life, they knew that we could afford to hire movers, and we knew that they could afford their own beer and pizza. So, when we were scheduling our move, I set up appointments with two moving company sales reps for estimates.

The representative from the first company seemed willing to take his time. He was interested in hearing about the home we were moving into and the special requests we had for handling certain pieces of furniture. He walked us through his presentation binder and shared tips to make the move go more smoothly. The impression I got was that he genuinely wanted to help.

On the other hand, the sales rep from the second company seemed rushed. He dashed through the house, checking items off on his chart, answering my questions in clipped tones. Overall, I felt like I was just an interruption to his important day.

Both sales reps had spent over twenty years in the industry, so experience wasn’t the issue. The services offered were more or less the same. When it came to price, the second rep’s - the one who was in such a hurry - was actually lower. Yet, as you might have guessed, the first rep got the business because he took his time. In other words, he got better results by going slower.
Keep in mind that shopping for a moving company is not something most people relish. For most of us, even if we love the new home we’re moving into, the thought of the move itself is about as welcome as undergoing amateur eyeball surgery. It’s a chore that we want to get over-with quickly and painlessly. Ironically, when it comes to the face-to-face time spent between the customer and the company rep, speeding up the process won’t necessarily be perceived as providing better service. When customers are uncertain about what they are buying, they want the service rep to take their time. In doing so, the rep shows that they get what the customer really needs - understanding.

How Managers Make Things Worse
Strange but true, is the fact that in most cases the company rep does not want to rush. Rather, it’s the company’s employee-performance measurement system that encourages and rewards this kind of hurried behaviour. Such was the case with a client whose organization suffered the effects of time-driven service standards.

In this particular company, all of the service standards focused on delivery times. In other words, the company policies spelled out that the sales rep should return a customer’s call within x hours. Services should be delivered within y days. These standards were proudly posted in public view. The result was a mess.

Employees rushed through as many customer contacts as they could manage. When I interviewed their customers and reviewed complaint letters, it was clear that customers perceived the staff as arrogant and insensitive. Those customers who couldn’t find any other reason to complain were quick to point out that many employees weren’t living up to the company’s own posted standards of speed. Employees got fed-up, became demoralized and productivity dropped - exactly the opposite effect the company expected when they set the standards. In this case, the adage is true - speed kills. All of this needs to be balanced with the fact that at some point speed of delivery is an issue.

The Good News
Service standards can and should play a role in guiding the decisions of frontline employees, but only when those standards include the other deliverables that help create customer loyalty. I’m referring to quality, courtesy, safety, innovation, and so on. Of course, each of these factors are important, but where the real impact happens is when you prioritize these standards so that frontline employees can make more appropriate decisions without having to talk to their manager. The good news is that prioritizing your service standards is relatively easy. And it’s the topic of another discussion. Meanwhile, I encourage you as a manager to review whether or not your service standards – formal or implied – are primarily focused on speed. If so, forget theory – ask yourself what the real impact is on your employees and your customers.





Speed Kills The service standard that does more harm than good - To learn more about this author, visit Jeff Mowatt's Website.

Like this article? Share it with your friends

Article Feedback
 Article Feedback No article feedback found.
  Leave Your Feedback
article feedback

Article Feedback

To learn more about the Evan Elite Author Program please contact us.



Evan Elite Authors
Joe Dager  
David Acheson  
Kim Castle  
Evan Elite Authors

Become An Author
Have you written articles that would be of value to entrepreneurs? Become an expert on our site by publishing them! Expose yourself to a wide audience, drive more traffic to your website and get more sales! Click Here for details.
Become An Author

Evan's Latest Video
Modeling the Masters: Learn the true secrets behind Walt Disney's business success factors & grow your company! Video produced by Phanta Media
Evan's Latest Video

Business Opportunities
"Learn straight from Evan how you can Make a Full Time Income (And More) from a Website"

How to Start An Online Business

Click Here To Learn More
Business Opportunities



Evan's Newsletter
Get advice & tips from famous business owners, new articles by entrepreneur experts, my latest website updates, & special sneak peaks at what's to come!
Name:
Email:
Evan`s Newsletter

Free Downloads
Visual Pipeline Icon Visual Pipeline
Trainning Template Icon Trainning Template
Leadership 2.0 Icon Leadership 2.0
Increase Sales Icon Increase Sales
Instant Brochures Icon Instant Brochures
Free Downloads - Complete List

Entrepreneur Tools and Guides
Top 50 Marketing Blogs To Watch In 2008
Top 50 Marketing Blogs
Top Blogs To Watch In 2008
 
Top 50 Social Entrepreneur Blogs of 2009
Top Social Business Blogs
Top Social Entrepreneur Blogs
 
Entrepreneur Tools and Guides

SEO For Africa
SEO For Africa
Patience Ayadi Benin City, Nigeria,
Patience Ayadi
Benin City, Nigeria
SEO For Africa

If I Were A Startup...
John Zarei and Shaan Parekh , $516k to $1.5 Mil in 2 years
John Zarei and Shaan Parekh
$516k to $1.5 Mil in 2 years
Catherine Daw, > $4 Mil in revenues
Catherine Daw
> $4 Mil in revenues
If I Were A Startup... - Complete List

Famous Entrepreneurs
Simon Fuller, 19 Entertainment
Simon Fuller
19 Entertainment
Dave Thomas, Wendys
Famous Entrepreneurs - Complete List

Entrepreneur Advice
Jay Conrad Levinson, Guerilla Marketing
Jay Conrad Levinson
Guerilla Marketing
Seth Godin, Ideavirus Author
Seth Godin
Ideavirus Author
Entrepreneur Advice - Complete List

Popular Articles
(Premium Authors)

     THE BRAND AS JIHAD
By Stanley Moss
     2005 Global Brand Letter
By Stanley Moss
     Trekking in Andalucia
By Stanley Moss

Have A Suggestion?
Toronto Salsa Classes / Toronto Salsa Lessons Email us your ideas on how to make our website more valuable! Thank you Sharon from Toronto Salsa Lessons / Classes for your suggestions to make the newsletter look like the website and profile younger entrepreneurs like Jennifer Lopez and Sean Combs!
Have A Suggestion?

More Evan Carmichael
More Information