Have you been disturbed with the lack of customer service from an organization that you’ve told yourself that you will never buy anything from them ever again?
Have you ever decided not to buy a product or service because of the reputation of the organization?
I recently ordered some workout gear from an organization that I often do business with. I ordered the products and received the shipping information and for a week with no shipment info. When I reached out to this organization, they informed me they would ship out a new order for me. A week later nothing. I tried to give them the benefit of the doubt, but after weeks of trying to figure out why my products were not shipping, I reached out once more to find out that the replacement order was never placed. Now I may in the future decide to purchase from them, but it will be a while.
If an organization builds a reputation of poor customer service, unethical practices, bad quality, etc. they are not going to be the organization with the largest value to customers. They have a business plan to be low value and low cost. What I have found that cheapest price is not necessarily the best value. Organizations that cut corners to save a few dollars end up sacrificing millions in the long run. Truth be told that if organizations are not providing exceptional value they are a commodity.
With the onset of Millennials in the workforce we are seeing a trend of them working for organizations that align with their values more so than just a paycheck. This same demographic is also the largest demographic of individuals in US history. This demographic of individuals strive to work for organizations that align with their personal mission statements. Millennials want to make sure they are going to help society by working with and for these organizations. It is imperative that organizations recognize this and make sure they are selling themselves as well as their products.
So how do organizations do this? How do organizations make sure they are selling what makes them unique to the customers? Organizations should use the same process they use to sell their products and services correctly. They answer the needs of the customer. What does the organization offer that will help the customer “WIN?”
When we look at our organizations whether they are for profit or non-profit, we need to see what we do well. Do we offer online SEO plans to help customers get quicker growth on the internet marketplace? Do we have solutions to handling e-commerce for the customer’s products and services online? What does our organizations do to enable growth of our customers? Do our organizations donate a large part of our profits to help society? Each of our organizations offer solutions that are vital, but it is up to us to define those game changer answers to the customer’s needs.
What does your organization do well to help it’s customers and society? Put your answer in the comments below in this blog.
P.S. If you would like to take the online training to learn all five buying decisions click the image below:
Sincerely,
Kevin Sidebottom
“Businesses wonder why the majority of their sales teams struggle at winning profitable business. I teach your sales team to walk with the customer through the five buying decisions, and in the correct order to generate more sales with high margins!”