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Want to know why most service cultures fail… and how the best ones thrive?
A lot of service initiatives start off strong, but too many often lose momentum.
We’ve seen it too many times (and perhaps you have, too). Teams get excited for change, but then drift back to old patterns.
In reality, true service excellence isn’t about programs or initiatives.
When you build the right foundation, service excellence becomes as natural as breathing. It becomes an integral part of your organization’s culture.
And once service excellence becomes cultural, a powerful shift occurs:
- Teams naturally seek ways to raise standards
- Excellence flows through every interaction
- Innovation emerges spontaneously
- Competitive advantages multiply naturally
Then you have sustainable momentum – and an edge that your competitors can’t copy.
Watch the video to discover more…
And be sure to check out my full conversation Ashen Joseph on the Service with Responsibility podcast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WPqUpgsC0go
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Below is an Autogenerated Transcript
You know when you think about the volume of customers that an organization has and how all of them are going to be uniquely different in some way. Then let’s take a B2B example, business-to-business, so even within that customer company, you’ve got people in so many different positions that are responsible for different things. There’s a finance department, there’s a purchasing department, there’s the people who are actually going to use the product, the ones that need to be trained on blah blah blah blah blah. And over here you are as the providing company in that B2B interaction, and you’ve got so many different people, and they’re all doing this with each other.
And you’ve got to build a culture where the experience that the client organization has, all those different people at different points in time in different situations, says you know what, everybody from that company seems to get it. Everybody in that company seems to understand that their job is to create a better experience for me and my colleagues. And when I ask them about something, I get the sense that the culture inside their companies, they’re always doing that with each other as well. Now that’s rare because so often you see the silo behavior, this is just my department, right?
When you build a culture of continuously uplifting service, then what you’ve done is you reach the point where everybody understands that my job is to take action, but the purpose of the action is to create value. And the culture of this company is always looking for what’s the next action that I could take or what’s the next action that we could take that would create more value for the person or the people or the department or the company that we serve. When everybody in an organization understands what I just said, which is my definition of uplifting service, taking the next action to create more value for someone you care about, woo okay. Now you asked how do you achieve that? You’ve got to provide the fundamental what we call actionable service education. Bring those tools, those principles, those worksheets, those workshops to your people so you build up what’s called a common service language.
Because every department has a language: HR, hiring, recruitment, compensation and benefits, appraisal; finance, bottom line, top line, budget report, cash flow. You know, everybody’s got their, but they don’t have a common service language, and you’ve got to bring it to them because our schools are not teaching it. Then when they have that understanding together, give them the practical tools to improve: six levels of service, four categories of value, mapping out your process points and your perception points, blame shame excuses TPR which stands for what? Personal responsibility. Where did you learn that? That’s what they call actionable service education.
Now that’s foundational, but it’s not enough to build a culture. The leadership team has got to be aligned and in agreement and understand what the behaviors are that they need to demonstrate. And then there’s something that we created which, as you mentioned, is in the book called the 12 building blocks of service culture. So, for example, what’s your recruitment process like? Are you getting the right people? Is it giving the new recruit the kind of experience even at the point of interview or seeing the offer where they’re going, I like this company, the way they treat me, I’m not even in the company yet. And then if you hire them, what’s that onboarding experience like? Is it a boring HR administrative paperwork thing, or is it another experience of the culture of the organization? And then the way you communicate and recognize and reward and how you capture voice of customer and what you do with it, there are 12 building blocks, and all of those can be connected to each other in a way that consistently reinforces, strengthens the culture with reminders, with education, with encouragement, with recognition. That’s how you build the culture. That’s what we do, as you know, and whether people look in the book or on the website or on YouTube or on LinkedIn, they can find out a lot more about.