Organizational Customer Momentum

Brave pizza
Yesterday’s lunch at Disney Springs.

Did you know that:

  • 99.9% of front-line employees have no idea what a customer service bullseye is, let alone be able to hit it every time.
  • Going the extra mile is a hopelessly flawed proposition?
  • Focusing on customer satisfaction is dangerous?

Imagine if you could:

  • Equip every employee at every level with a battle cry worth defending?
  • Find the pervasively abundant solution that every employee can use every day, all day, to overcome mediocre customer service?
  • Learn the one secret to ensuring your exceed your customer expectations at every customer touchpoint?

• • • • •

This website is about our SPIRIT. To enjoy posts about our WORK, click here.

 

Sustainable customer trust

Disney Cruise Line app
Free in-house (Ship) texting service.

 

Sustainable customer trust?

 

Today’s posts were inspired by this one.

(the repetition in today’s posts is intentional and by design, to illustrate why it’s important, and why it’s challenging – people do not like seeing the same thing over and over – one of your first organizational hurdles is solving for this)

Most executives, most staff, and most organization spend the majority of their days doing good or very good work.

This creates a leadership culture where good, or very good, is the bullseye by default.

What if excellence was the bullseye, by design?

What would it take for executives, staff, and the entire organization to spend most of their days doing excellent work?

The “what would it take” is precisely what my Disney-inspired corporate architecture solves for.

 

__________

 

This website is about our spiritual health. To leave this site to read today’s post on jeff’s career health website, click here.

 

Serve like you mean it

Disney keynote speaker
Photographer was instructed to have fun with picture taking…no typical photos please.

 

Serve like you mean it.

 

__________

 

This website is about our spiritual health. To leave this site to read today’s post on jeff’s career health website, click here.

 

The Art of Disney Customer Service

Disney customer service author jeff noel
How a business that serves customers yet operates without processes and structure to intentionally creates Magic moments, is, well, weird.

 

The Art of Disney Customer Service: World-class strategies and tactics learned from 30-years at Disney

 

• • • • •

This website is about our SPIRIT. To read today’s post on my WORK website, click here.

 

Disney Customer Service summary

Disney Customer Service summary:

 

Customer Service:

 

If you convince your customers they are loved, they will return. The harsh reality of most customer service programs, however, is that they focus on customer satisfaction, which is actually detrimental to your reputation.

Program Overview:

The Bullseye | 360 Analysis | Unifying Goal | Decision Tree

There’s a goal, a bullseye, a sweet spot when it comes to customers, and most companies assume their staff understands this goal. But if you ask, you’ll get a different answer from every employee because the vision and culture is unclear; it was never explained well during training. Customer satisfaction, most would say, is the goal. And that’s where most businesses fail. Customers want to be delighted and surprised, and the way to make that happen, every time, is to be sure your entire team understands one unifying, common goal. Can you imagine your entire staff doing “extra” even though they aren’t getting paid for it? It can happen with a system of decision-making techniques that are passed down to your staff, and Jeff walks you through step-by-step. One goal + decision-making matrix = customer satisfaction and brand loyalty.

 

__________

 

This website is about our spiritual health. To leave this site to read today’s post on jeff’s career health website, click here.

 

On April Fool’s Day 2009, jeff noel began writing five daily, differently-themed blogs (on five different sites). It was to be a 100-day self-imposed “writer’s bootcamp”, in preparation for writing his first book. He hasn’t missed a single day since.