Deemarch said:Anonymous or not, the OP should never have pressed submit.
Then we would not have had the opportunity to participate in this enlightening discussion.....

Deemarch said:Anonymous or not, the OP should never have pressed submit.
Actually, that does not work. Frankly customers are sometimes wrong, and one cannot always consider everything they want, need, dream up, or ask for is right. A customer may want to park thier car in the lobby so they will be closer to the elevators. A much better saying/philosophy is Customer's need to be allowed to be wrong with dignity. That boulder will get in the way of them really developing customer loyalty.PamOKW said:There is a very successful business in our area that has a giant "boulder" by the front door with the "Rules" engraved on it.
Rule #1 -- The customer is always right.
Rule #2 -- If the customer is ever wrong, refer to Rule #1.
If you're going to run a successful customer service business that needs to be your philosophy. For someone in management to come on a public board and post that the employees "hate" the customers is inexcusable -- no matter how "cute" or "helpful" they felt they were being. If this is truly a CM and not a troll they need to rethink their business judgement.
PamOKW said:There is a very successful business in our area that has a giant "boulder" by the front door with the "Rules" engraved on it.
Rule #1 -- The customer is always right.
Rule #2 -- If the customer is ever wrong, refer to Rule #1.
KNWVIKING said:Do you know what this tells me ? You're afraid of him !! It means "don't give the jerk the dumpster view because he'll have a fit ". End result is the jerk is catered too and the nice guys get the shaft.
KNWVIKING said:.... but I can't come up with an example of what a CM should do special for Mr Jerk that he/she shouldn't do for all guests automatically. If a CM see's a flag be Mr J's name, what could they do to kiss his butt more ?? If they know he's checking in today, do they alert housekeeping to be sure his room is cleaned first thing in the morning so he doesn't have to wait till 4 pm ?? Are they instructed to make it extra clean ?? When MS brings up Mr J's name when he calls for a ressie, does the flag make it possible that they book -right then and there - exactly what he requests so he won't cry at check-in ?? Is there a note that says "Must be NS,absolutely no HC and no dumpster or parking lot views ???
jarestel said:Customer service is what distinguishes one corporate entity from another and the business ( or individual ) who doesn't recognize this is probably always going to be chasing market share from their competitors who do. Though a minority of consumers may be so in love with a product they will tolerate almost anything for the privilege of spending their money on it, the majority of American consumers expect "service after the sale". If Disney didn't have a reputation for providing top notch customer service, DVC would in all likelihood, not even exist.
Should obnoxious, rude customers be catered to? If they have a reasonable complaint that's presented in an unreasonable manner, a properly trained service person should be able to manage the situation. After all, the problem the guest is experiencing is understandable and the CM should react appropriately to this. I suspect many people act unreasonably simply because they know from experience that many times this is the only way to get their problems dealt with. And once the customer understands that the CM is willing to work to resolve the difficulty, most people drop the act anyway.
An unreasonable complaint by an unreasonable person on the other hand, should never be catered to. Again, properly trained CMs would handle the situation without becoming emotional or engaging in verbal jousting with the customer. Once the unreasonable customer sees that they're getting nowhere fast, they will usually depart on their own with the customary, "I'm writing letters to Walt" threat, but if the rules have been followed, the CM has done his/her job and the irate customers have spent valuable vacation time making public fools of themselves.
It's all part of the job, a job that not everyone can handle, but not everyone can be plumbers or astronauts or teachers either.
KNWVIKING said:Can't hurt,right ?!?!?!
I respectfully disagree with this generalization, particularly the portion I bolded. There are many factors which consumers use to make a purchase decision - product quality, price, brand, convenience, etc. - and customer service is only one of them. As for expecting "service after the sale", I believe that the trend towards retailers that offer lower cost but lower customer service (Wal-Mart is the extreme, but most of the big box stores qualify) and away from smaller shops that offer personal service at higher prices shows that the opposite is true. I know that personally I'd rather do the research, make my decision then buy the product at the lowest price; if the product functions, there's no need for "service after the sale" - I don't want someone calling me trying to sell me more....jarestel said:Customer service is what distinguishes one corporate entity from another and the business ( or individual ) who doesn't recognize this is probably always going to be chasing market share from their competitors who do. Though a minority of consumers may be so in love with a product they will tolerate almost anything for the privilege of spending their money on it, the majority of American consumers expect "service after the sale". [...]
KNWVIKING said:I'm not convinced that a CM should ever treat one guest better or even differently simply because of a "list", but I guess to be on the safe side I should try and get on it next time I'm in The World ;-)
Can't hurt,right ?!?!?!