Does your PR start at the back of the queue? 8 ways you can win over customers while they wait for you.
The UnNoticed Entrepreneur July 06, 202000:20:1914 MB

Does your PR start at the back of the queue? 8 ways you can win over customers while they wait for you.

How can you improve your business by giving 5 smiles to your customer from waiting to making a purchase?

Listen to David Maister's law of service explained and his 8 aspects of waiting which give clues to how we can win over our customers; which is really free and effective public relations.

Satisfaction = Perception - Expectation.

1. Unoccupied time feels longer than occupied time.

2. People want to get started.

3. Anxiety makes waits seem longer,

4. Uncertain waits are longer than known, finite waits.

5. Unexplained waits are longer than explained waits.

6. Unfair waits are longer than equitable waits.

7. The more valuable the service, the longer the customer will wait.

8. Solo waits feel longer than group waits.

Public relations is not just about media relations, it's about how we treat our customers. The reason for this is because people who deal with our companies now can share their experiences not just with the company but via their own social channels.

Read the article version of this episode - https://theunnoticed.cc/episode/does-your-pr-start-at-the-back-of-the-queue-8-ways-you-can-win-over-customers-while-they-wait-for-you

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Jim James is the Founder and Managing Director of the EASTWEST Public Relations Group. He recently returned to the UK after 25 years in Asia where he was an entrepreneur. Whilst running EASTWEST PR, he was the Vice-Chairman of the British Chamber of Commerce in China, he also he introduced Morgan sports cars to China, WAKE Drinks, founded the British Business Awards, The British Motorsport Festival, EO Beijing, and was the interim CEO of Lotus cars in China. 

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Jim James:

Hello, my name is Jim James and I'm your host on this speak br podcast. Now on the show, I like to help entrepreneurs and business owners to unlock the value in their business by providing some free and some effective communications experience and advice. Now, I've been an entrepreneur and API agency owner for over 25 years,

Unknown:

serving over

Jim James:

500 clients, large and small around the world. Today, I'd like to talk about how PR starts at the back of the queue. Now, I raised this because I recently went shopping, as most of us are doing now that lockdown is coming over and, and was just so struck by the difference in the customer experience. Now that we're starting to go back into the market, but also these tools and these thoughts apply just as much to business to business as they do today. humour. Now I say PR starts at the back of the queue party or sir, because I've been having some conversations with people who have said to me that if they could, they wouldn't do public relations, that it's really just a, you know, a necessary evil that they feel it's too much like hard work that you can't prove the results, and that they're kind of worried that they might be saying the wrong thing. And I'd like to visit that as a definition because public relations isn't just about media relations, public relations is about influencing and engaging with all of our publics that are responsible for the well being of our business. In our speak PR methodology, which stands for Storify, personalise, engage, amplify and no, we talk about personalization being for the different audiences and we categorise them as One is the internal audience, those staff members or people that we pay. The second are our partners, people that we have a relationship with that we rely on to help provide our company's support. And thirdly, for the external for the people that pay us our customers. Now, the the idea that public relations really should be at the front of the queue, not the back of the queue came to me, as I say, when we were at the back of the queue. Last week, going downtown. Now, there is a there's a maitre D in London, who was interviewed called Fred Syria, and he's a French major D. And he said that, you know, when you talk about hospitality, you're talking about connecting with people. It's about giving first and giving generously. And I thought, well, that's that's a nice way to think about all of our customer service should be about hospitality. It's not just about the restaurant business that should apply, regardless of our business. They plan on there being five smiles, from the staff on route to the table from reception, five smiles and I'd read recently, as well, on an e commerce website, that this particular provider believes there should be three wins before you ask a potential customer for money when it comes to in their case buying a CRM system, five smiles, three wins. The point is that we, as businesses, we should be giving first, to give people the sense that we are inviting them to do business with us and not just once but multiple times so that we are genuinely seem to be engaging with these people that are potentially going to be customers for life. So I'm Mind is the author of a great person in the public relations and management consultancy field called David Meister. And David Meister and I had the good fortune I had the good fortune, I should say to correspond with David, back in the mid 90s, when he was still writing. And he wrote many books including managing the professional services firm and the trusted advisor, which are really guidebooks for anyone that's interested in running a consultancy firm. But in in his website, he has an article called the psychology of waiting lines. And I was looking for this because what I realised from the experience of going downtown to do some shopping. I had very different experiences depending on the shop I was in, but I'm also having very different experiences when I'm bringing different people. I rang a bank the other day and the conversation got cut off midway But they didn't bring me back in because they'd run me through one of these sort of private phone numbers, I have no way to call them back. So on David Meister, his website, he talks about how products are consumed, and services are experienced. Now, I went to the Apple store, and it makes me feel that it's certainly in the case of Apple, it's a service. And the overall experience was fantastic. Because outside the store, they'd set up some waiting lines, but also they had people outside to greet us and give us the instructions before we went into the store. Now, I was noting that all the other stores in the high street, people were waiting in line, there was no queue and no attempt to engage people until they sort of got to the front door. So really, the journey on This customer experience starts well before our clients or customers are inside our office, our restaurant, our store, our factory or wherever it is we're doing business with them. So David Meister, reflects on a Federal Express advert where it says that waiting is frustrating, demoralising, agonising, aggravating, annoying, time consuming and incredibly expensive. And this calls into question what David calls the first law of service. And he defines it as S equals p minus E, where S stands for satisfaction. P is for perception and E is for expectation. So if we expect a certain level of service and perceive the service that we get to be higher, then we're satisfied. In other words, if I go in expecting something medium But I get great service, I'm going to be satisfied. If I'm expecting a higher level of service, and I'm treated poorly, I'm going to be dissatisfied. Now this matters because in this day and age of social media, as I've shared earlier on, in this time when people can leave reviews on TripAdvisor, Google My Business, there are more and more ways that consumers can leave notes directly for our own companies, but also can share those experiences through their own social media channels. And when they do that, they're perhaps on Facebook or Twitter, or LinkedIn. And then out of our controller quite possibly out of our even purview unless we use some of these sites like talk Walker did, I'd mentioned in an earlier podcast so all service managers, all of us as entrepreneurs need to pay attention to To the satisfaction levels, but also the perception levels and the expectation levels of our clients. So it's not just about what was actually done for the client. But it's what was perceived by the client before they were taken care of, and what the client was expecting. Now, these can all be managed, which is good news.

Unknown:

So

Jim James:

there was a case in a hotel. Apparently were waiting times were being complained about what they did was they they installed mirrors on either side of the, of the lift so that people could check what they were doing. I remember being at a hotel in Beijing, where it was all dark and gloomy inside and and mentioning to the manager afterwards that you couldn't see any of the signs next to the buttons because the light was so good. Should have low mood that anybody could get lost. I went back another time and they put in some rather larger, larger signage, small things like this now in restaurants, and I remember, for example, going to Hong Kong to the Waterworld with my daughter's last summer. And every, every waiting line there, it'll, it'll say something like, you'll be waiting at this point for 30 minutes. And then of course, the irony of that was there were no queues. So it made a bit of a mockery of the 30 minute wait time because we could see the ride with no queues in front of us but the idea of setting expectation that there will be a wait and of course,

Unknown:

ironically enough, we were

Jim James:

we felt like we were getting ahead because it said 30 minutes and we got on in no time at all. So we felt like we were winning. Every time we got a ride with no queue. No, David Meister says there's a second law of service and That is that if we start Well, with a client or a customer, then it's much easier to keep them smiling. But if we start badly, and we've all known the expression, you know, you can't make a good first impression a second time. So this idea that if you were to settle down, and this one waiter said, you know, if you sit down customers in a good mood, it's much easier to keep them happy than if they start off in a bad mood. They're always looking for reasons to be upset. So here are some eight ideas or thoughts that David Meister then goes into, and I share with you now, with full credit that number one, unoccupied time It feels longer than occupied time. So boredom is watching the passage of time, as Henry James once said, We're thinking about what else could be done, what else we could be doing instead of waiting for either the service the phone to be picked up or to get service at the counter. People want to get started, there's a delay. If you're waiting outside that shop, or that restaurant, the idea that you're sort of not doing anything with your time for most people, that's pretty frustrating. Now on Singapore Airlines, the moment you get on the plane, they sit you down and within minutes of the door shutting, they will hand out menus, but also hand out a hot towel to everybody, not just business, but economy, the whole of the cabin. they realise that people want to get started on their journey. So they settled them down by giving them a steaming hot towel, and a menu. Number three is anxiety makes waiting times seem longer. If we're worried about what we're going to be doing For example, at the dentist or the doctors or waiting for an answer somehow, if there's a sale on, you're worried about missing out what we're worried about, are they going to be enough of the of the phone that we want to buy, for example, another thing that happens, of course, can be cognitive dissonance. In other words, questioning our own purchase. Now, this happens, not just in consumer but in business, too. There's an anxiety that we all have when we're about to make a purchase. Although my daughter's might disagree with you on that, but they don't seem to have any anxiety at all about purchasing, but most of us worry a little bit about either spending the money or the decision we've taken on on the purchase, is it the right one can we afford it and so on. And in an industrial setting where a purchase can affect can affect a business and there'll be other people in oversight. We could be making a purchase that makes a difference to our job or not to sell is then thinking about if anxiety, what could your customers be asking themselves about whilst they're waiting? And how can we reassure them? Maybe while they're waiting? Can we have signage, waiting the other day at home base, for example, I didn't know that they actually had installed what I was looking for. I was going to have to wait for half an hour to get inside the store to find out that they did or did not have, in that case, rat catching traps. They did have them by the way, and I looked to be the only person buying rat catching traps. But how can we reassure our customers that while they're waiting, they're not wasting their time, but also they're gonna have a good result. When they when they actually go inside our store, our factory, clinic, whatever it is, the fourth on the list is that uncertain weights are longer than known finite weights. I've mentioned already how themes Parks, we'll put up Marcus, if you go on the Vodafone website it says, it always says our call centre is experiencing unusually heavy demand. One wonders when they don't have that, but waiting times that can be finite, not just longer than and he will wait but five minutes, 10 minutes and some of the more sophisticated call centre chatbots tell you, for example, that you're going to be in a queue, and how long that's going to take. What can we do for our own businesses to reassure people that they're going to get an answer to their phone call, or to the customer query before they need to leave. For example, if we've got customers who have parked in a car park, they need to know or for parents that are going to go off to pick up children for example, they need to know when they're likely to get an answer. Now another point Is the unexplained weights are longer than the explained weights. So everyone is using the current due to COVID. Our wait times are longer. We've all got used to that now we're becoming perhaps even immune to those. But if we can explain the weight, we're sorry, because either somebody has not come back from their shift or the product hasn't arrived in shipping, or there's been some sort of a delay. People want to have both the part of their brain that needs resolution met, but the part of their ego that needs to know they're being taken seriously. So being ignored and being disrespected, are really great causes why people then actually might turn away and leave the queue and go somewhere else. Number six is that unfair weights are longer than actual weights. So this idea of FIFO first in First out, that whoever comes in first gets to go first. Now, in bigger queues, right now, we're currently still doing social distancing and waiting a metre to two metres behind one another. But when the crowd starts to head towards the front of the line, there's an anxiety about missing out. We've all seen this on the aeroplanes, I used to laugh about this, especially in China. I used to say to everyone, you, you've all got a seat allocation. So you're going to get on the plane, there really is no need to rush. But people worry about there being an unfair weight or of missing out. And in theme parks and ski resorts, sometimes they now do the priority pass where if you pay extra money, you get to go to the front. If you're going to do that, personally, my recommendation is that that's a slightly different place where they actually get in because all that does is to make those people slightly embarrassed or, or high and mighty, but it certainly creates sort of an antipathy amongst those people that are waiting, and this sort of sense of a two class system. So if they're going to have a two class system, at least don't make it obvious for those people that have paid a normal fare, but just don't feel like they can afford the premium fare. Number seven is the more valuable the service, the longer the customer will wait. Now, if you want to wait for dog grooming at the moment, that can be almost six months right here. Obviously dental appointments people, the children wait 12 months for a dental appointment, but we expect to go to McDonald's and drive through. So the more valuable the service, the longer the customer will wait. But let's understand how long that should be against their expectation, not against our own expectation of how important we are. And that eighth one is that the solar wait feels longer than the group wait. I've been kind of amazed. When I've been waiting in queues that it's not just social distance, it's almost like social isolation. In the UK, we have a reputation for having a fantastic sense of humour. And yet, people are standing around in absolute silence. It's almost like they're afraid to talk to each other from two metres apart. If that's the case, and you have a facility or venue, can you somehow reassure people by either having performance for example, if there are children waiting? If it's a business, can we have music playing? Can we go out and give people samples? Can we go out and give people conversation starters or have a greeter? Someone who reassures people and ask them what they're looking for? Because the waiting on our own gets us then to start to think about what we're waiting for, while we're waiting, and whether we're making the right choice. These are three public relations ideas, because public relations isn't all in the media. It's in the mind of ourselves. And in the Mind of our partners and our staff and our customers. So I hope these tools and these ideas may be something that you can use for your business. And in the meantime, I wish you the best of health, a profitable business and that you keep on communicating