I recently worked with two clients in the same industry.
There were a lot of similarities between the organizations. The business models were similar, they were roughly the same size, and their products were essentially the same.
Both even professed to be fans of the principles outlined in The Service Culture Handbook.
Yet one company was growing while the other struggled.
The difference was leadership. The CEO of the growing company consistently modeled the service culture he was trying to create. The other did not.
You have to walk the talk if you want your employees to be customer-focused. Here are seven ways to do it.
#1 Clarify your vision
Give employees a customer service vision to follow. This is a shared definition of outstanding customer service that gets everyone on the same page.
A vision gives employees clarity. They know the direction the company is headed in and understand how they contribute. The customer-focused CEO used this step-by-step guide to engage the entire organization to quickly create a compelling vision.
The other leader talked a lot about vision, but did nothing to craft a concrete statement that could be shared by everyone.
#2 Share illustrative stories
Help employees understand the right types of customer-focused behaviors by sharing illustrative stories. These should serve as real examples that help clarify the vision and give it further meaning.
The model CEO consistently shared illustrative stories about individuals in the company providing great service, and encouraged his leadership team to do the same. This helped employees better grasp what they were supposed to do.
The other CEO also shared stories on occasion, but these were usually stories about admired companies from the latest book he was reading. They did nothing to give employees more clarity about their own roles.
#3 Make aligned decisions
Use the customer service vision as a guide for strategic decisions. This reinforces the service culture and gives employees a consistent example to follow.
The customer-focused CEO constantly referred to the vision when making decisions or discussing important issues with his team. The vision served as a compass that constantly pointed the company in the right direction.
The other CEO tended to fire from the hip. Without a vision to guide him, his decisions were often unpredictable and inconsistent. Employees were often confused as a result.
#4 Empower the team
Give employees the tools, resources, and authority needed to do their job. Trust that most people inherently want to do great work and will work hard to produce results if they are enabled.
The CEO of the growing company recognized the importance of empowerment. He carefully selected employees for key assignments, gave them the necessary resources, and let them decide the best way to get it done.
The other CEO tended to hoard information and power. He was reluctant to trust other employees because he felt it took too much time and effort to make sure they were doing things the way he wanted them done.
#5 Hold people accountable
Follow-up with employees to make sure they are on the right path. Recognize great performance when it happens and coach people to get them back on track when needed.
The customer-focused CEO was big on accountability. He regularly checked in with his team and was readily available if someone needed help. Employees didn't hesitate to go to the CEO for help because they knew he was supportive.
The other CEO had more of a fire-and-forget style. He'd fire off an email asking an employee to do something and then forget he sent it. People didn’t take new initiatives seriously because they knew the initiative wouldn’t last long.
#6 Be responsive
Respond to people with the same urgency you expect employees to demonstrate with customers.
The model CEO responded to emails the same day. He quickly returned phone calls and texts, too. Employees knew they didn't have to wait long if they needed something.
The other CEO took days to respond to anything.
#7 Keep commitments
Do what you say you are going to do.
The customer-focused CEO kept his commitments to employees and customers, and was always on time for meetings. If he said he was going to do something, you could count on it getting done.
The other CEO had a reputation for being someone you couldn't count on. He was late all the time. Late to meetings and late on projects. Many things he promised to do never got done.
Conclusion
Take a moment to do an honest assessment.
How many of the actions above do you regularly model?
What can you do better as a leader?
How else can you model your service culture?
I’ll share one bonus way you can model great service: serve customers. Don’t be afraid to join the frontlines and show your team how it’s done.
When I managed a contact center, I regularly took calls at a workstation on the contact center floor. I wanted my team to see and hear me soothe an angry customer or put a nervous caller at ease. It also gave me empathy for my agents because I had put myself in their position.
Your employees are watching you and learning from your actions. Model a customer-focused culture and you'll likely see employees do the same.