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December 6, 2007

* Innovation: 5 Things Customer Service Can Learn from SANTA CLAUS

You’ve read me write that before -- customer relationships are conversations, and customer service is the new marketing. One very important part of conversation is the spirit in which we approach it. In many ways, children got it right -- they approach every wish as possible. What do you want to be when you grow up? An astronaut!

The other important part of conversation is listening. What would you like Santa to bring you this year? Is the often unspoken question children begin to think about right about now when it gets chilly outside (well, in my part of the world) and signs of the holidays are starting to be everywhere you turn. Children look clearly into your eyes and tell you they are making their list for Santa.

Let’s take a look at five things that customer service can learn from Santa Claus:

1. Santa exists in the minds of those who believe in him. It’s the same for corporations. No matter what you think you are, you're only what your customers believe you to be.

2. Santa knows what kids want. Customers aren't children (usually!). But think about the last conversation with your best client. Was it about something they wanted -- or you?

3. Santa reads your list. More importantly, he checks it twice. What's worse than missing the opportunity to delight your customer? Letting a sloppy mistake ruin it. Accuracy is the star of your marketing team.

4. Santa rewards good behavior. In these days of increasingly compressed budgets, it's certainly easy to justify skipping the little things: sending a valued client a nice holiday gift, rather than the cheapest thing that will hold a logo. These economies are false savings.

5. Santa delivers -- every single time. Check the history books and you'll find Santa has never sent his regrets due to scheduling difficulties or bad flight weather. Find your Rudolph. Being there isn't half the battle. It's everything.

"Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus.” Or there should be, when it comes to customer service. And, just like Christmas, the spirit of customer service excellence really should go on long after the wreath is boxed and you've taken the tree to the curb.

Regardless of which holiday you celebrate this month, may your days be filled with success, and your homes with peace.

Valeria Maltoni • Conversation Agent • Philadelphia, PA • www.conversationagent.com

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Posted by Valeria Maltoni at December 6, 2007 6:46 AM | Topic: innovation | * 4 Comments

* 4 COMMENTS

Posted by: Valeria Maltoni at December 6, 2007 1:03 PM

Hello Jack:

Welcome to the conversation! Well, you know that Santa has the right attitude for sure. And wishes are personal, that's why they call it customer "service" and it needs to be about the customer ;-) I am sure you will find a great way to customize the spirit of your message to your customers.

Posted by: Jack Jeffries at December 7, 2007 12:08 AM

Well, this is an interesting list. Might be the first time I've seen
ole Saint Nick used as a business example.

Thank you, Valeria, for this fine article. I am considering adapting it
for my firm's Holiday greeting cards.

A Merry Christmas to all, and to all a goodnight!

Posted by: Marc Karasu at December 7, 2007 10:49 AM

Very funny article.

we have a sixth reason to throw in as sameless self promotion.

6. www.Measuredup.com a user based customer service review site where consumers tell companies how their customer service is.

Tanks

Posted by: Jeff Hilton at December 12, 2007 4:19 PM

A timely metaphor!

There is also a fun leadership book and training resources based completely around Santa Claus and his workshop theme. Check it out: http://www.walkthetalk.com/santa-claus-softcover-p-54.html There's also a hardback version that makes a great gift book.

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