The one common denominator when it comes to retail sales is...people. And how those people interact with each other.
Retail has always been about people - how you get them to take action on the desire they have to purchase, how you make your employees feel they are the most important people in the world, so they will make your shoppers feel the same way - you get the idea.
Customer service isn't a new concept. Customer service and human interaction are as old as time; however, how humans interact is continually evolving. That means you must also change and evolve; otherwise, your sales might fall behind.
A global consumer pulse survey performed by Accenture shows that in the US, the estimated cost of customers switching from retailer to retailer due to poor customer service is $1.6 trillion! For perspective, that’s almost a third of sales affected by poor customer service.
How do you make your shoppersfeel?
This is important because if your customers don't connect with you, feel they are bothering you, or just don't feel welcome; they will go to another store.
Are you unintentionally rubbing your customers the wrong way? If you don’t have a formal retail sales process in place, I bet you are.
What do your associates do when they see a shopper approaching?
Do they stand behind the counter and wait until the shopper approaches them? Do they genuinely smile and make your customer feel welcome? What body language are they displaying that might give the customer the wrong first impression?
The entire sale is in jeopardy with a bad greeting; shoppers simply keep their guard up no matter how manyclosing techniquesyou try on them. Survey after survey confirms the one thing that bugs shoppers the most is not receiving a greeting in a store.
Timetradefound that 85% of shoppers “buy more than they intend to when they go to a store without knowing exactly what they want.” That’s why you don’t greet with, Can I help you find something?
Instead, here is what you and your associates should be doing when a shopper enters the store:
How would you feel if you walked into a store and no one acknowledged you or just looked at you without smiling? Always approach and greet your customers without making them come to you. And never yell a greeting across the sales floor.
Your body language needs to match your words. If you are being friendly, but your body language is saying something else, you dismiss your shoppers without realizing it.
YES, it is that important. Why? Because it is a form ofacknowledgment.
Think of how you feel when you're talking with someone, and they’re looking around the room for someoneelseto ditch you, or their eyes are down, totally engrossed in their smartphone. You feel offended.
You must explain to your team how important eye-to-eye contact is and why. Then make them aware of whether or not they are doing it.
Eye-to-eye contact is important because it:
And smiling along with that eye contact just adds another layer of trust and another layer of human interaction. So make a conscious effort to smile as well.
Exceptional customer service is the holy grail of any business. If you have it, the sky's the limit. If you don't, you’re doomed.
The good news is that you have complete control over it. Exceptional customer service can be achieved with consistent training, so your team knowsexactlywhat to do. Role play to ensure they can do what you taught and hire mystery shoppers to inspect what you expect.
Here are some good customer service techniques you should consider including in your monthly training meetings. Explore the following questions in more detail, then include them in your routine training sessions.
What’s the biggest mistake you can make?Taking your customers for granted.
Your shopper no longer has to come into your store, or for that matter, has to buy from you. There are plenty of online retailers they can visit and buy from.
You have to make that one shopper believe - from the second they walk into your store until they leave - that they are the most important person to you. My SalesRX.com retail sales training program can help you consistently create that feeling.
Put these customer service techniques into action, and you'll experience better relationships with your shoppers. One woman who used SalesRX called to tell me, “Since using your program, our customers all got nicer.” I had to correct her and replied, “No, your customers didn’t get nicer. Your employees got nicer.”
Great customer service starts with creating a process, addressing shoppers' key pain points, and training your crew. When you do that, shopping in your store becomes easy, and customers rave about your service.