Does your customer feel like a guest or a nuisance?

May 18, 2010

CaffeIbisMany companies use terms like “guest” and “partner” to convey the intimacy they have with their customers but the reality is that most employees, when given the opportunity, do not behave as though they are serving a valued guest.

If you’d like to test this assertion, simply show up at your choice of retailer after it has closed for the day. Assuming you can make eye contact with an employee through the locked glass door, see if she is willing to do more than point at her watch and mouth the words, “We’re closed.”

Now, this is where corporate types jump in using words like: policy, procedure, overtime, security, protocol, etc. While all of their points are valid, it doesn’t mean they’re right.

To illustrate, imagine that you had planned a baby shower at your home from 1:00 to 3:00pm and that one of your guests was delayed for some reason and didn’t arrive until 3:15pm—after the event had officially ended and the other guests had left.

Would you refuse to open the front door and simply make eye contact with her through the glass side light panel, point to your watch, and mouth the words, “The party’s over”?

Of course not.

Then why is it acceptable to treat “guests” like that in a business setting?

If you’re going to cite the above list of policy, procedure, overtime, security, protocol, etc. as your justification for this behavior, at least stop referring to your customers as “guests.”

Instead, call them what they really are to your closing staff: a nuisance—an interruption; someone we accept money from during business hours but whom we’d prefer not to see after closing time until the next business day.

Just last week I was in Logan, UT. Being a coffee enthusiast and having read about the mountain grown, Triple Certified coffee at Caffe Ibis, I made it a point to stop by on the day of my arrival.

I showed up at 6:45pm and learned that the store closed at 6:30pm. I peered through the glass door and made eye contact with an employee who pointed to her watch and mouthed the words, “We’re closed.”

Before I returned to my car, however, an energetic employee named Natalie unlocked the front door and engaged me.

I mentioned that I was in town for one night from Denver and had hoped to try a cup of Caffe Ibis coffee that I had read so much about and pick up a pound of beans to take back home.

She said, “The machines are off and the register is closed but let me see what I can do.”

A few minutes later, she appeared with a steeping (literally) cup of coffee and a pound of Double French Roast Blend coffee beans.

I thanked her, paid her $15 in cash, and enjoyed a delicious cup of coffee back in my hotel room.

The following day, on my way out of town, I returned and spent another $28.05 on a latte, ground Espresso Roast Blend, and a Caffe Ibis t-shirt. That’s $43.05 in revenue from a guest that many employees would have labeled a nuisance—an interruption in their day.

And my purchasing hasn’t stopped. I’m back in Denver but enjoyed the coffee so much that I’m planning a repeat purchase of Double French Roast Blend coffee beans from their website. My potential future value to Caffe Ibis is significant.

If the first employee was my only impression of Caffe Ibis, I would have left empty-handed, kept my $15, and may or may not have returned the following day to spend another $28.05. And if I hadn’t experienced its coffee in Logan, I certainly wouldn’t be ordering it by the pound on-line.

This is key: Did the first employee do anything wrong? No. She was following policy. I get that. She was also behaving in a way that is usual, ordinary, and expected by most customers.

Natalie, on the other hand, treated me like her guest. She behaved in a way that was beyond what is usual, ordinary, and expected by most customers. She was refreshing and unique. As a result, she not only made a positive lasting impression, she made a sale!

More key points:

1.) Natalie recognized that, while her job function was to complete the closing checklist, the essence of her job—her highest priority—was to serve her guests.

2.) Her decision to open the locked door and engage me, unlike the completion of the closing checklist, was optional.

3.) And finally, her willingness to go the extra mile cost her employer nothing—it was free! In fact, it resulted in $43.05 in additional sales (and counting…).

Natalie created a promoter (that’s me).

Promoters are customers who not only buy your products/services, they wear your t-shirts, are less price sensitive, and recommend your business to others (as I’m doing now).

While the first employee’s service was ordinary, expected, and made me feel like an interruption in her day, Natalie’s was extraordinary, unexpected, and made me feel like a valued guest.

Care to comment? Be my guest.

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  • http://www.afinetoothcomb.com Julie – A Fine Tooth Comb

    What a great post, Steve! You should submit this to Caffe Ibis management.

    I wrote an eerily similar post back in December. My husband had a poor customer service experience at a movie rental store shortly after closing time. You might enjoy the post: http://onthedotcreations.typepad.com/fine_tooth_comb/2009/12/some-customers-wont-complain-they-just-wont-come-back.html

    Thanks again for your great posts. I enjoy each one.

  • http://www.stevecurtin.com Steve

    Julie, just left your blog. Thanks for sharing your post. I suspect that Caffe Ibis has a Google Alert set to its name (at least I hope so) in order to capture all of the positive and formative feedback its brand is receiving on-line from its customers. As you pointed out in your post, the on-line community has lots of eyeballs! And that TARP statistic suggesting that only 4 percent of customers complain is a pre-social media and reviewer web site (e.g., Yelp, TripAdvisor, etc.) stat. My hunch is that number will increase as more and more channels are made available for patrons to offer immediate feedback in a way that is quick, easy, and non-confrontational.

  • Gwen

    Steve,
    I have a similar story from a local nursery here in town named Redmonds. In January, a close friend’s father had passed away and a group of us wanted to get a gift certificate from Redmonds so that she could plant a tree or whatever she would like in his honor. I called to see what their winter hours were, as it wasn’t prime foilage season and found they were open until 5. I told them I would be there before 5 and would need a gift certificate. Between work and traffic, and a wrong turn, I was pushing it to get there by 5. At 8 minutes after I pulled in, fully expecting disappointment. Much to my surprise, one associate, (and I cannot remember her name) was there. She said that she knew I was coming because of my phone call. She didn’t even know my name or how much the gift certificate was for! As a result, I returned last weekend and spent $120 on flowers and plants. This is in addition to the $200 gift certificate purchased in January. I will always go back to Redmonds for my future planting needs. It’s a little out of my way but they now have a loyal customer…and I do a lot of planting!

  • http://www.stevecurtin.com Steve

    Gwen, so then it’s really true that extraordinary service (beyond what is usual, ordinary, and expected) results in loyal customers who spend more?! It’s a simple concept that, remarkably, many businesses fail to understand and embrace. Great example. Thanks for sharing.

  • http://www.zealcoaching.com/blog Caroline Cooper

    Steve
    I love your baby shower analogy; it really reminds us what ‘guest’ should mean.

  • http://www.stevecurtin.com Steve

    Though no one’s mentioned it here, I came across a comment on Twitter re: the danger of opening up a business after hours. And while I get that (you’ll notice “security” in the list of corporate rationale for poor customer service in the blog text), it’s a shame when service-based organizations use safety, liability, etc. as excuses for poor service. The airlines have done a masterful job of limiting customer service in the name of safety (e.g., “The flight attendants are primarily here for your safety” now prefaces the “if there’s anything we can do to make your flight more enjoyable…” announcement). And hotels frequently decline jump-starting car batteries “due to liability.” I understand the need for safety and liability protections. I just don’t think these exceptional claims support extraordinary customer service.

  • http://www.impactlearning.com Vasudha | Consultant

    This is a great story! It’s the unusual experiences like this that build customer loyalty and, as you pointed out, promotion of a brand to friends, family, and blog readers. The mindset of the first employee was “work” whereas that of the second employee–the one who opened the door and got you a coffee–was clearly “service.” She probably went home feeling great about her job.

  • http://www.newport-enterprises.com Curt Newport

    Steve- A great, fresh analogy. It would be easier to refer to them as “customers’ and not “guests”, given the treatment most provide, and many have come to expect.

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  • David Toomey

    Loved the story, Steve. I also liked your reference to function vs. essence. We have all experienced the employee going through the transactional motions of their job. What a delight to experience essence at Caffe Ibis! Thanks for sharing. Oh, I’ll be trying their coffee at some point, I’m sure.

  • http://www.caffeibis.com randy wirth

    Thank you very much Steve! Michelle, our cafe manager, immediately shared your blog with our staff. While it is very common to receive negative feedback or, worse yet lose a customer without knowing why, it is a treat and a treasure to have specific positive feedback to reinforce good customer service.

    Our coffee relies on consumer support for both our survival but for the survival of the very special organic, fair trade, and Smithsonian Shade Grown,” Bird-Friendly” connections the consumer makes with his or her dollar vote. In exemplary fashion you have done all this!

    All the Best,
    Sally Sears and Randy Wirth
    CoOwner/Roastmaster
    Caffe Ibis Coffee Roasting Company,Inc.
    1-888-740-4777 toll free order line
    http://www.caffeibis.com

  • http://www.stevecurtin.com Steve

    David, thanks for your comment. Here’s the whole story: http://www.stevecurtin.com/blog/2009/07/26/function-vs-essence/ I’m sure you can picture the scene. ; )

  • http://www.stevecurtin.com Steve

    Sally/Randy, I’m happy to hear that! And by now I’ve heard from several readers, including Linda M. in CO and Lynn T. in KS, who plan to order your coffee online. The payback for outstanding customer service continues…

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  • http://reallyjeannie.com Really Jeannie

    Oh my goodness, kudos to her. And, you deserved that service because you truly wanted their coffee. One good turn deserves another you know! Your enthusiasm must have made the difference and you chanced upon a nice person.

    I worked in retail and HELLO. I remember being so achy after being on my feet for HOURS. Once the store closed, I was done! Surely if you need something to wear THAT BAD you can go to Walmart – the 24 hr one.

  • http://www.prolimehost.com/ dedicated servers

    hahahah this was the problem we are facing from long, really nice info :P

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