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company might have the greatest sales training in the world. It might have a highly
responsive customer service back end. It might even have near-instantaneous social
network response upon discovering negative comments. Without proper mentoring
and monitoring, however, it won't prevent bad customer experiences. Allow me to
explain: Last
Sunday I had an interesting exchange with a new Twitter friend, Steve Keating
(@LeadToday). Steve was shopping for a new laptop at his local Best Buy store.
He asked an employee if the HP model he was considering had a docking station.
The employee said, "no, we don't recommend you use this model near water." You
can keep reading after you've finished sighing, groaning and rolling your eyes.
It's true, however; that was the response Steve got. Let's
not automatically blame the employee, though. There are many reasons it may not
be the employee's fault. It's possible the responsible supervisors are not attending
to their responsibilities - in terms of training, mentoring and monitoring their
employees. In fact, as I later learned, three employees were clueless as
to what a docking station is. That seems to indicate a lack of follow-up to basic
training. In
defense of Best Buy, I can tell you that my local store has some great employees.
The folks in the camera department are very knowledgeable and helpful. And don't
get me started on how much I love the in-house repair crew known as the Geek Squad.
This tells me the company probably has a decent training program. Then
again, I've hit some really bad ones. The kind where you read the product packaging
six times, can't find what you need, finally find all six computer department
employees in the back sharing a bag of Cheetos, only to have one sigh, roll their
eyes, walk back to the aisle with you only to read the product packaging! This
tells me there's a management team that isn't paying attention.
I know from personal experience that their Customer Service call center receives
useful training, and works hard to provide a pleasant and helpful customer experience.
As of today, I know that the company also monitors Twitter and responds as soon
as they see something amiss. Witness the following tweets: Steve:
At Best Buy, looking at laptops. I ask if this HP has a docking station - salesperson
says - no we don't recommend using it near water. Nice Me:
@LeadToday I find it very hit and miss there. Some are well informed and helpful.
Others clueless and careless. Steve:
@lanebaldwin Yep, I was very disappointed, they are normally pretty good. Just
a couple of goofs mess it up for everyone. Me:
@LeadToday Exactly! Just a few can make the entire team look bad. Leadership lesson
there, I think. Hmmm... and an article, I think. Steve:
@lanebaldwin Yep, no doubt about that :) Steve:
@MIT560 "Best" Buy was certainly not at their best today. Went to an
Apple store - they had ALL the answers.
Monday, at 2:34, Coral_BestBuy: @LeadToday @lanebaldwin I'd disappointed
to read of your recent @BestBuy experience - what store were you at so I can work
with mgmnt? Steve:
@Coral_BestBuy I was at Best Buy, Maple Grove MN. I was particularly disappointed
because of what I do for a living. A very poor experience I
applaud Best Buy's response, and I commend them for having a method to follow
up with management. However, if there were more mentoring and monitoring at the
store - and departmental - levels, there would be less need for Coral and
her team mates. They wouldn't need to work with management in this particular
way. In
a situation like this, all of those good things are useless. The bad experience
very negatively affected the customer's opinion of the company as a whole.
The company's brand identity has been sullied, as has the image of the manufacturer
of the product, albeit to a lesser extent. It only made matters worse that Steve
next went to a competing single-brand store and had an outstanding experience.
For all it's exemplary effort, unfortunately Best Buy still comes out of this
particular encounter with a big, fat FAIL tattooed across it's big blue shirt. How
could Best Buy have prevented this? Certainly they have training. (It's hard to
believe they have proper testing, however, at least at some stores.) However,
what about daily monitoring of employees and mentoring them to improve performance?
Any boss can implement a poorly monitored training plan. It takes a leader to
mentor. And the best mentors are servant-leaders, tightly focused on individual
employee success. The
best mentors are daily coaches, guides, supporters and cheerleaders. They are
constantly working with their team to improve performance, acknowledge quailty
work, and to shore up weaknesses - all in a positive manner. Servant-leaders
know the key to true success is ensuring the success of the followers (employees).
They know their job is to empower the employee to excel at their job, by providing
in-depth training - and frequent testing to ensure assimilation of knowledge.
They know that training is just the beginning, and that consistent monitoring
to catch and correct weaknesses early are crucial to improvement and growth. They
know that ongoing praise and encouragement instills a sense of pride and a desire
to repeat correct behaviors and attitudes. For
me, mentoring has always been an important aspect of servant-leadership. I became
a servant-leader because I was mentored by servant-leaders when I went to work
for Men's Wearhouse. I then turned around and mentored others - even before I
held a management position, and doubled down on my mentoring efforts when I became
store manager. Mentoring is an integral part of a servant-leader's life. I'm convinced
that if Best Buy had a culture of servant-leadership, it would vastly improve
their service to their customers, and therefore their bottom line. My
new friend Steve knows all of this. You see, for the past thirteen years and more,
Steve has been Manager, Selling Skills for the Toro Company. And for more than
seven years, he's been an Area Manager for Dale Carnegie Training. And if I'm
lucky, he'll be my first connection on LinkedIn where he maintains a page. In
some ways it makes it worse when the offended customer is someone like Steve or
me, a service-based sales/management professional. Of course, it's ten times worse
when that person then has several Twitter conversations for tens of thousands
to overhear. Social
networking has magnified by a factor of hundreds, if not thousands, the old rule
that a dissatisfied customer will tell everyone they meet, and Twitter is the
worst of all social networks in this regard. No wonder Best Buy is monitoring
the site, as are many other large companies. Unfortunately, in this particular
case, it didn't do much good. It would have been far better if Best Buy embraced
servant-leadership and the mentoring and monitoring that comes with it. A
committed culture of mentoring and monitoring can drastically reduce the number
of service lapses and negative customer experiences. If you are a leader at any
level, you will better serve your team, your company, your customers, and yourself,
by becoming a mentor. Because mentoring matters.
Permission
to Reprint
Permission
is hereby granted to use this article for e-zines and web sites, as long as
the complete following statement is included at the beginning or end of the
article:
Lane Baldwin
is an authority on humanistic management and servant-leadership. During his
twenty-five year career, he has worked with businesses of all sizes - from mom-&-pop
shops to Fortune 500 companies - helping them increase profits, enhance customer
and employee retention, and enjoy greater fulfillment at work. If you're ready
to push your businesses into overdrive, learn more at LaneBaldwin.com.
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