Atricle Dump
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Business > Customer Service > Would You Like FRIES with That? Giving Customers What They Love

Tags

  • record
  • article
  • helps
  • business acronym
  • friendly staff
  • towards customers

  • Links

  • Diesel Truck Exhaust Stacks, The Hottest Thing On The Road
  • Should I Refinance my Adjustable Rate Mortgage Now or Wait for the Interest Rates to Drop?
  • How to Use an Editorial Style Guide to Enhance Your Company??™s Image
  • Atricle Dump - Would You Like FRIES with That? Giving Customers What They Love

    Shopaholics - Now Get Paid As You Shop
    Shopping need not mean only shelling out of the bucks on the part of the shopper. With mystery shopping tools being utilized by several market research concerns you, the shopper, may actually be getting paid as you shop around. As a professional shopper or mystery shopper you will be permitted to eat out at restaurants, visit local attractions and shop for books, clothes, baby products and other cool things while not having to bother about the financing. The funding of all this is well taken care of by the company on behalf of whom you are spying on employees and ev
    xample, one of my favourite business gurus is Robert Middleton, who helps independent professionals to market their business. When you buy his services, you can read testimonials, take advantage of his money-back guarantee, and get access to ongoing support. These are all great forms of reassurance.

    I is for Information. OK, we're all drowning in

    Are You Referable?
    Technical competence alone does not make you ‘referable’, no matter how good you are.My friend Treva recently experienced a car breakdown in Los Angeles. Her vehicle was towed to a nearby service station where the manager put her at ease with his comfortable style and obvious expertise. He promised to call her the next morning with an evaluation and an estimate.She took the bus home. The next morning, he did not call. She called him in the afternoon. He apologized and agreed to call her back by the end of the day. But he didn’t. She reached him again t
    It used to be hard to buy books from Foyles, the world-famous bookshop in London's Charing Cross Road. The building was a warren; the layout was haphazard; staff were hard to find. To buy a book, you had to queue twice -- once to pay and get a receipt from some hapless cashier in a barred cage, and a second time to collect your books. No fun at all.

    Nowadays, it's a different store. There are friendly staff, clear signs, lifts, air conditioning, author events, a jazz caf?, a helpful website, the works. It's a pleasure to shop there.

    Somewhere along the line, Foyles realised it had to offer FRIES to its customers. French fries? No -- ketchup and grease on the books would be a bad idea. I'm talking about FRIES, the hugely popular business acronym that I've just invented.

    F is for Friendliness. The simple act of smiling and being friendly towards customers makes an incredible difference. The world's friendliest man works in MVC, a record shop near where I live. You can't walk out not smiling. (By contrast, I always used to walk out fuming from the local branch of Dixons electrical store. Before it was shut down.) And it's not just people - marketing materials, shop fronts and websites can be friendly or hostile too.

    R is for Reassurance. When you invest in a one-off product or service, it really helps to have some sort of reassurance about what you’re getting. For example, one of my favourite business gurus is Robert Middleton, who helps independent professionals to market their business. When you buy his services, you can read testimonials, take advantage of his money-back guarantee, and get access to ongoing support. These are all great forms of reassurance.

    I is for Information. OK, we're all drowning in

    Effective And Affordable Types Of Advertising
    First of all, every type of media has pros and cons. Here are a few:Billboards work okay if they are in a high-traffic area and have a short, easy to read message, but they could be very expensive, and many times your ad is moved from a good location to a bad location, especially if you are advertising on a limited budget and utilize this type of program. The better locations are normally the most expensive. Also, you must remember that the prospective new customer has only a fraction of a second to see your message as they speed by, and the amount of tra
    >

    Nowadays, it's a different store. There are friendly staff, clear signs, lifts, air conditioning, author events, a jazz caf?, a helpful website, the works. It's a pleasure to shop there.

    Somewhere along the line, Foyles realised it had to offer FRIES to its customers. French fries? No -- ketchup and grease on the books would be a bad idea. I'm talking about FRIES, the hugely popular business acronym that I've just invented.

    F is for Friendliness. The simple act of smiling and being friendly towards customers makes an incredible difference. The world's friendliest man works in MVC, a record shop near where I live. You can't walk out not smiling. (By contrast, I always used to walk out fuming from the local branch of Dixons electrical store. Before it was shut down.) And it's not just people - marketing materials, shop fronts and websites can be friendly or hostile too.

    R is for Reassurance. When you invest in a one-off product or service, it really helps to have some sort of reassurance about what you’re getting. For example, one of my favourite business gurus is Robert Middleton, who helps independent professionals to market their business. When you buy his services, you can read testimonials, take advantage of his money-back guarantee, and get access to ongoing support. These are all great forms of reassurance.

    I is for Information. OK, we're all drowning in

    Executive Search Firms
    Executive search firms for job analysis use several techniques. The most important among them are interviews, direct observations, maintenance of long records, questionnaires and critical incidence techniques.There are two types of interviews that can be used for job analysis: individual interviews (with a group of employees who do the same job) and supervisory interviews (with one or more supervisors who are thoroughly knowledgeable about the job being analyzed). The interviewer has to collect accurate and complete data and information by creating a favorab
    dea. I'm talking about FRIES, the hugely popular business acronym that I've just invented.

    F is for Friendliness. The simple act of smiling and being friendly towards customers makes an incredible difference. The world's friendliest man works in MVC, a record shop near where I live. You can't walk out not smiling. (By contrast, I always used to walk out fuming from the local branch of Dixons electrical store. Before it was shut down.) And it's not just people - marketing materials, shop fronts and websites can be friendly or hostile too.

    R is for Reassurance. When you invest in a one-off product or service, it really helps to have some sort of reassurance about what you’re getting. For example, one of my favourite business gurus is Robert Middleton, who helps independent professionals to market their business. When you buy his services, you can read testimonials, take advantage of his money-back guarantee, and get access to ongoing support. These are all great forms of reassurance.

    I is for Information. OK, we're all drowning in

    Home Builders and Remodelers - Two Simple, Low-Cost Profit-Building Strategies
    In a previous article (How One Builder "Made the Most Money I've Ever Made") I wrote how a builder dealt with his resistance to raising prices and properly charging for all the work he performed to create his most financially successful year ever.The one of the greatest points to that article is those changes came at little-or-no cost to him, neither in time or money. Virtually all the increased revenue from implementing those strategies will translate directly into profits for that builder!Along the same lines, here are tw
    alk out fuming from the local branch of Dixons electrical store. Before it was shut down.) And it's not just people - marketing materials, shop fronts and websites can be friendly or hostile too.

    R is for Reassurance. When you invest in a one-off product or service, it really helps to have some sort of reassurance about what you’re getting. For example, one of my favourite business gurus is Robert Middleton, who helps independent professionals to market their business. When you buy his services, you can read testimonials, take advantage of his money-back guarantee, and get access to ongoing support. These are all great forms of reassurance.

    I is for Information. OK, we're all drowning in

    Customer Service is a Huge Part of Success
    I know some of you are thinking... duh! But, I have been working from home for about 7 years and it still amazes me how many companies slack on their Customer Service duties. I have worked for a few Direct Sales companies as well as owing my own business. I still have much to learn about running a business, but I do know that you have to please your customer in order for them to return. Of all the Direct Sales companies I’ve been with, the main problem seems to be slow shipping. Of course, it depends on what is being sold. However, when a customer has to wait over a
    xample, one of my favourite business gurus is Robert Middleton, who helps independent professionals to market their business. When you buy his services, you can read testimonials, take advantage of his money-back guarantee, and get access to ongoing support. These are all great forms of reassurance.

    I is for Information. OK, we're all drowning in too much data. (My digital camera came with 13 leaflets!) But helpful and relevant information is always welcome. Buy a book from Harper Collins' Perennial imprint and you may well find a 16-page P.S. section at the back. There might be an author interview, a book-club guide, suggestions for further reading, and so on. Like DVD extras, the quality is variable, but when it works it's great.

    E is for Extras. It's nice to get more than you expected. When you sign up for an online bank account with Egg, you get an online money manager, which can keep track of all your accounts - even those with other banks and building societies. It also gives you one point of access to all of them. It's a fantastically useful service which really reinforces the benefit of opening an Egg account in the first place.

    S is for Simplicity. Some industries delight in making things complicated for their customers. (Mobile phones come to mind.) Go the other way – make it simple. When I needed a new PC at the start of this year, I read a magazine review of a promising machine made by Evesham. PCs are assembled from many components (processor, RAM, graphics card, screen etc) and specifying one takes time and research. Evesham’s website makes it easy. There is a list of reviewed machines, which you can order as they are, or which you can use as the basis for changing specific components as you see fit. Simple and brilliant.

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.articledump.net/article/15665/articledump-Would-You-Like-FRIES-with-That-Giving-Customers-What-They-Love.html">Would You Like FRIES with That? Giving Customers What They Love</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.articledump.net/article/15665/articledump-Would-You-Like-FRIES-with-That-Giving-Customers-What-They-Love.html]Would You Like FRIES with That? Giving Customers What They Love[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Business Opportunity

    The Importance of Client Contracts

    Career Path: How Do You Find It?

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com