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Express Appreciation and Build Business Profits
The Secret to Attracting More Customers
As I travel around the country and the world, I am constantly struck by the lack of manners today. Few business people seem to place any value on common courtesy, which translates into customer service, which then translates into profits. The lack of business etiquette skills runs the gamut from polite dining, professional dressing to such simple acts as saying "Thank you" to a customer or an employee. Very few people bother with expressing any sort of appreciation. Every customer needs to hear those words whether they come from the top executive of the car dealership that sold you a new BMW or the cashier at the check out counter who rang up your toothpaste.
Customers should to be thanked for coming in, waiting to be helped, holding for you on the phone, making a purchase or simply showing interest in a product or service. It is not rocket science and requires no advanced degrees. It is easy to implement when it comes from the top down. When the CEO thanks his employees, those people are more inclined to thank the customers. It is "viral" as we say. When the organization offers formal training in business etiquette, it makes an even greater impact.
The hospitality industry is the best at expressing appreciation to their clients. They actually spend the time and the money to train their employees in good manners. I recently presented a program at an association convention that was held at the Ritz-Carlton on Amelia Island. The effort that the Ritz puts into training its employees is obvious. It struck me that the courteousness of the staff carried over to the guests who interacted with total strangers in the same gracious way.
Something else that I have noticed in the hospitality industry is the emphasis that is placed on greeting guests properly and promptly. When you are on the road as much as I am, it makes a huge difference to be called by name each time you enter a lobby, pass by the reception desk or eat in the hotel restaurant.
Do you teach your employees manners that sell?
Then they go a step further. They teach employees the correct answer to a "Thank you." In 99% of the hotels where I have stayed while taking my "Manners That Sell" presentations on the road, when I thank an employee, their answer is either "You are welcome" or "It is my pleasure." The rest of the world seems to think that the response to a "Thank you" is "No problem." Who suggested that there was a problem?
You can be like every other company and disregard the simple "thank you" or you and your employees can make it a requirement. You'll be surprised at how those few words "thank you" and "you are welcome" will set you apart from your competitors and how adding a bit of polish will build profits. Be different from everyone else–be polite.
For a successful business and customer service, Click here to make sure the impression you leave is memorable for the right reasons.
Articles by this Author:
- The One Element That Can Cause a Business to Tank
- Email Etiquette: Don't Let Careless Errors Affect Your Profits
- How to Entertain Business Etiquette When Dining for Profit
- Seven Tips For Making The Most Of Business Meetings
- Create a Culture of Courtesy in Your Business
- Toasting Etiquette - Tips for Raising a Glass
- Customer Service Opportunity Missed
- Top 7 Etiquette Tips For Successful Meetings
- Choosing The "Hot" Seat At A Meeting
- Trade Show Etiquette
- Rules Of The Road
- Guidelines for Professional Gift Giving
- Maximize Press Coverage With Media Manners
- Can You Afford What Rudeness Is Costing Your Business?
- Keeping Your Cool When the Customer Gets Hot
- Making A Graceful Apology
- Business Manners Apply to Interviewers As Well As Applicants
- Working With The Disabled
- R.E.S.P.E.C.T. - Your Client's Communications Preferences
- Greeting Card Tango: How to Impress, Not Stress, During the Holidays
- Sending Out Business Cards And Notes
- The Top Twelve E-Mail Mistakes That Can Sabotage Your Career
- Got Voice Mail?
- Musical Phones
- Winning Customers Over The Phone
- Cell Phone Chaos
- Body Art In A Professional Setting
- Business Clothing Not Optional!
- Dressing Your Best For Women
- Dressing Your Best For Men
- Making Introductions
- Successfully Meeting and Greeting - Ten Strategies for Getting Off to a Good Start
- Trade Show Etiquette - Free Mints and First Impressions
- Stand Out at the Job Fair
- Lydia Ramsey's Six Secret Sales Weapons
- Priming the Sales Applicant Pump
- Don't Bring a Knife to a Gun Fight
- Attack Yourself
- Confirming Sales Appointments: Are You Asking For The Cancellation?
- What Not To Do On a Cold Call eMail
- I Just Called to See How Things are Going
- 5 Closing Questions You Must Be Asking
- Use the News: How to Create New Opportunities Fast
- 5 Secrets to Effective Email
- The 5 Best Openings
- 5 Ways To Keep Your Prospect Talking
- Protect Your Time
- Yes You Can!
- Secrets Buried In a Sales Person's Resume
- Define What You Want And Write It Down
- 10 Rules for Pricing Confidence
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