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soft skills
To delight a customer
Orienting employees to delight customers is critical to the
success of an organisation, writes Prem Apte
When you
dial the hotel reception from your room, a sweet voice responds, Good
morning, how can I help you? even before you have said Hello.
A grocery shop round the corner sends an energetic young boy to deliver a Rs
10 loaf of bread at your doorstep at 10 pm. We in the software industry are
focused on our deliverables. While we keep delivering software successfully,
we always wonder how to orient our organisation to delight the customer.
We can learn from an Aquaguard salesman or a joker in a circus how to keep a
customer pleased. However, software services delivery has its own complications
and difficulties. The workforce is highly educated, technically oriented, and
is hired to meet requirements for technical skills. There is not much focus
on customer delight except for exceeding expectations in technical and qualitative
terms.
Employee orientation
Orienting employees to delight customers is critical to the success of an organisation.
Volumes can be written on the need to imbibe qualities such as a positive approach,
etiquette, proactiveness, values, leadership and the organisations culture
as essential steps to achieve the goals.
However, the most critical aspect for achieving results is orienting the mindset
of the staffespecially those who face customerstowards customer
delight. How does an employee understand what a customer expects? What follows
is something that works.
Appreciation
Every employee undergoes a one-day free-format interaction with an experienced
trainer. The trainer finds out what participants understand about Customer Delight,
Customer First and Customer Orientation. What do they want to learn about customer
orientation? What challenges do they see in satisfying and delighting a customer?
Is it important to delight a customer? Do we ever say no to a customer? How
do we say no to a customer? How do we salvage a messy situation?
Participants are taken through their own real life examples of dissatisfaction
when they were serviced at a gas station, bank, government office, courier,
childrens school and so on. They are asked to recall the emotions they
had experienced, and the promise they had made to themselvesnever to use
that service again. They are also asked to count negative references they provided
to their friends and colleagues.
Every person also remembers the times when they got the best of service. In
brief, participants are reminded of their personal experiences as a customer
through many group discussions and presentations. They are also taken through
real-life success stories and role plays before being reminded that they are
now on the other side of the table. Customers now expect all this from them!
Organisation culture
Setting and managing the customers expectations is the next important
activity in delighting the customer. In an organisation these activities should
happen irrespective of whether a Hema or a Rahul is in charge. Though each employee
has been given inputs on customer orientation, a large software services organisation
cannot expect each software professional to be an expert in managing expectations.
To a large extent, a set of standard processes can take care of setting and
managing a customers expectations. Establishing a reference at every stage
of the project helps to build and manage customer expectations. A formally approved
project plan, customer sign-offs at critical stages in the project life cycle,
regular project tracking, status calls with the customer, and logging of risks
and issues on a weekly basis works to avoid surprises and customer disappointments.
The customer becomes aware of his own achievements with the vendor team through
the regular progress reviews. It takes his own confidence level higher.
However, unless customer care is demonstrated by the senior management through
participation in issue resolution and customer visits, standard ISO 9000 or
CMM processes will not help beyond a point. ISO 9000 and/or CMM accreditations
will take an organisation up to the meeting customer requirements
level but not beyond that.
Customer feedback
There is no substitute for formal customer feedback at regular intervals. This
could be at a weekly status call level, end of project phase, or it could come
through customer meetings. Through formal customer feedback comes understanding
of the customers real priorities and pain points.
I have come across a situation where a customer came to the point of cancelling
an order due to problems in commercial processes whereas our organisation was
focused on software delivery process improvements.
Exposure to the customers social and cultural setting
helps in understanding unsaid expectations of the customer. Exposure through
cross-cultural training or practical project experience goes a long way toward
delighting the customer.

Apte is delivery centre head, Zensar Technologies
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