Are you keeping your promise to the customer?
The question I pose to you is simple. Is your business keeping its promise to your customers? It's a "yes" or "no" answer. An answer like, "Most of the time," is unacceptable because it's a compromise to your promise. Actually, the reality at your business may be that some people believe in and deliver on the promise - the rest of your team delivers something less. That's breaking your promise. That's compromise.
Here are three red-hot strategies to keep your promise to the customer:
1. You need to commit first: If your business has compromised on its promise, as the leader, you watched it happen. It will take a major initiative and a lot of pushing to get your entire team up to speed. You must be resolute.
2. Define your promise: Create a two- or three-person team charged with the responsibility to define every aspect of your promise. What does it look like, feel like and sound like from a customer perspective?
3. Skill certify EVERYONE: Build skill-certification training modules that address phone skills, greetings, consultations, client interaction, service closing procedures, client assistance procedures, problem procedures, ending-the-visit procedures... you name it, train and skill certify everyone how to do it all perfectly.
4. Across the board accountability: This is where no-compromise leadership needs to engage and stay engaged. It's 100% keep the promise or it's compromise.
All too often, customers are at the receiving end of a company's indifference and apathy. And sadly, too many customers have gotten used to inconsistent service and breaching of a company's promise to deliver amazing experiences. The winners invest the time and energy to master the disciplines of customer service and respect. By doing so, the no-compromise winners stand out like shining stars in a sea of compromising mediocrity. Can you deliver on your promise?
Pass this email on to your business colleagues, managers and friends They'll appreciate it.
Neil Ducoff, Strategies founder & CEO

The question I pose to you is simple. Is your business keeping its promise to your customers? It's a "yes" or "no" answer. An answer like, "Most of the time," is unacceptable because it's a compromise to your promise. Actually, the reality at your business may be that some people believe in and deliver on the promise - the rest of your team delivers something less. That's breaking your promise. That's compromise.
Here are three red-hot strategies to keep your promise to the customer:
- You need to commit first: If your business has compromised on its promise, as the leader, you watched it happen. It will take a major initiative and a lot of pushing to get your entire team up to speed. You must be resolute.
- Define your promise: Create a two- or three-person team charged with the responsibility to define every aspect of your promise. What does it look like, feel like and sound like from a customer perspective?
- Skill certify EVERYONE: Build skill-certification training modules that address phone skills, greetings, consultations, client interaction, service closing procedures, client assistance procedures, problem procedures, ending-the-visit procedures... you name it, train and skill certify everyone how to do it all perfectly.
- Across the board accountability: This is where no-compromise leadership needs to engage and stay engaged. It's 100% keep the promise or it's compromise.
All too often, customers are at the receiving end of a company's indifference and apathy. And sadly, too many customers have gotten used to inconsistent service and breaching of a company's promise to deliver amazing experiences. The winners invest the time and energy to master the disciplines of customer service and respect. By doing so, the no-compromise winners stand out like shining stars in a sea of compromising mediocrity. Can you deliver on your promise?
Pass this email on to your business colleagues, managers and friends They'll appreciate it.
Neil Ducoff, Strategies founder & CEO and author of No-Compromise Leadership
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