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Wednesday, January 25, 2012

How to Provide Great Customer Service, Part Four



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The customer is always right, until the customer is wrong.

The customer is always right. This saying has been attributed to Marshall Field, J.C. Penny, and Harry Gordon Selfridge. No matter who said it, the idea is the same. Marshall Field is also quoted as saying, “Right or wrong, the customer is always right.” This too is true, up to a point.

Whenever possible the customer should be treated as if they are, in fact, right. But there is a time when the customer is wrong.  Sometimes a customer makes such an outlandish demand that it is abusive. When a customer clearly abuses an employee, then the customer is clearly wrong. In that instance, management should step in. Remove the employee from the situation. Refund the customer whatever money has been paid, if any. Then, the manager should tell the customer: “I am sorry you have received bad service here. I hope you will be able to find a store that can better serve your needs.”
When a customer clearly is in the wrong, there are times when it is still appropriate to help the customer out. However, when a customer is clearly abusing the store, then the store does not need that customer. We have all seen the sit-coms where a person buys an expensive article of clothing, keeps the tags and the receipts and then returns it after wearing it to a big event. Clearly the store does not need this customer. They aren’t making anything off of this customer and it drives up the price that other customers have to pay to cover the overhead of damaged or soiled goods.

If one were to go into any Wal-Mart, Target, Macy’s, or pretty much any clothing store, they would be able to see where so called “unworn” clothing is returned dirty for a refund. In many cases, the store has no choice but to refund the money because they really can’t prove that the customer abused the clothing.

There is a legend that tells of Nordstrom Department Stores once refunding the price of a set of snow tires to a customer who insisted that they purchased the tires at Nordstrom’s even though the company had never sold tires. Snopes records this as being only a legend and not true. http://www.snopes.com/business/consumer/nordstrom.asp

The first year that my family owned a Western Auto Associate Store in Iva, South Carolina, we had a man knock on the door of our home on Christmas Day (the store was closed that day) demanding a refund on a toy car. My father drove to the store and unlocked it. Upon seeing the toy, my father was able to see that the toy clearly had a K-mart sticker on it. My father refunded the man the cost of the toy. The man never shopped with us after that.

In cases like this, where the customer is clearly wrong, the store loses money on the customer every time it deals with that customer. It is those times that management has to welcome them to shop elsewhere.



Disclaimer
The opinions or advice listed in this blog or website should be used as a place to start only. It is not a substitute for the use of a professional.
Please be sure to consult your attorney and/or accountant with any specific questions.
There is no one right answer to any business question that will cover all circumstances.
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