1001 Newbie - Friendly Tips by Bob McElwain - HTML preview

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I Need Help Right Now!

Many business have gone to the elevator-music mode in answering their support lines. You dial, get a recording, and get to guess which is the best button to push. Guess wrong, and you get to hear more music. You may get a recording: "Our average wait time is 20 minutes." This shows you what they think of your time. Is this a good business practice?

Lots  of  companies  must  believe  so,  for  many  have  implemented  such  a system with a vengeance. They appear to be doing all possible to avoid dealing with  customer  support.  They  seem  to  believe  the  name  of  the  game  is  more sales. Period. They continue to erect ever greater barriers to block out unwanted pleas for help.

The Online Parallel

Online, the situation is often worse. As a customer, email may be the only contact you have. If a company representative hits the Delete key to avoid a reply, you're dead. Then there are filters. A company I had been doing business with for three years apparently took offense  to  a  couple  of  questions  I  asked,  and  filtered  out  my  email  address. There is no longer a mailing address or phone number on the site.

The  impact  of  such  strategies  on  large  companies  may  be  uncertain,  but they will quickly kill a small one. Web surfers are getting smarter. And while each day brings a flood of newcomers, they learn fast.

Go For The Gold!

There  is  an  enormous  potential  in  all  this  for  small  businesses.  Simply  by providing  truly  great  support,  you  can  improve  your  position  effectively  and generate a much greater flow of repeat business.

Email

Answer  it  quickly,  completely,  but  succinctly.  As  with  product,  over-deliver. That  is,  seek  to  anticipate  subsequent  questions  and  include  the  necessary information right now. And do it all cheerfully, while demonstrating strong interest in the needs of your customer.

If you are working a day job or simply haven't time for this, hire someone to do it. Spam will disappear for you. Requests for information or directions will be handled appropriately. And you will receive only key messages that require your personal response.

Before discarding this idea as nonsense, give it a try. When you are able to get an answer to a customer thirty minutes after their message was sent, you are at  some  point  going  to  get  a  prompt  reply  that  begins  with,  "Wow.  That  was quick." You will become a believer when an order follows minutes later.

An 800 Number Is A Must

An 800 number for orders has been required for years. One for support is not common in small businesses. The mode seems to be to let the customer pay if they want help. It's a bad move. Use your 800 order number for support as well. If you need to keep the order line available, add a second 800 number. Either way, make sure a real live person answers promptly.

Again,  if  you  work  a  day  job,  hire  someone  to  take  calls.  A  professional service is not required. Check with your neighbors and friends. Look for someone who would like to make a few extra bucks without leaving home.

Provide 24-Hour Support

People shop the Web at all hours, if for no other reason than differing time zones. Your 800 support number should be available on every page, particularly your order form.

If you are just getting started, you won't have many calls. Consider taking the off- hours calls yourself. Even let the late night calls ring through into your bedroom. This may seem a step too far, but it will demonstrate the need for this level of support. In time you will decide to hire out this service.

Q&As Help

A great way to cut down on support requests is to create and maintain an up to date Q&As section on your website. While many sites have such a page, it is often inadequate and/or old stuff. A support page that is well organized and easy to navigate is a real plus. Many visitors prefer to find answers themselves, rather than make a call or send an email.

Every  support  question  becomes  a  candidate  for  a  Q&A.  Given  even  one repeat, get it up there.

Shopping Guidance

If  you  offer  a  variety  of  products,  visitors  may  become  confused.  Set  up  a page  of  suggestions,  and  comparisons  if  appropriate.  And  include  that  800 number with good answers when the phone is picked up.

Shipping:

Offer at least UPS. Many are turning against the US Post Office. Priority Mail boxes  often  arrive  squished.  More  and  more  people  now  live  in  housing developments  in  which  they  must  go  to  a  central  site  to  pick  up  their  mail.  A package  too  large  means  a  trip  to  the  post  office.  The  same  is  so  for  rural delivery.  If  it  won't  fit  in  the  curb-side  mail  box,  I  get  that  ominous  little  bit  of yellow paper and get to drive eleven miles to pick up the package. UPS comes to my door, and does so even with a foot of snow on the mile-long driveway.

Guarantee:

You've   got   to   give   one,   and   deliver   as   promised,   else   the   dreaded chargeback. So make it a good one. 90 days at least.

If  you  ship  product,  consider  including  a  UPS  return  voucher.  It  costs  you very  little  unless  the  product  is  returned.  And  if  you  are  getting  many  returns, something is wrong elsewhere, as in over-selling, under-delivering, and so forth.

Sure It Costs

Price does  not sell. You probably can safely raise prices to cover costs of support.  But  increased  sales  of  themselves  are  likely  to  cover  any  additional costs. Include the benefits of such support in the first fold on your home page. And remind of it throughout the site, as in posting that 800 number.

When a customer demands help right now, provide it. If you don't, chances are someone else will do so. They'll get the sale, and the customer. You lose.