The Power of Energy,
Enthusiasm and Passion
T
Many companies are finding it difficult to hire
employees who have all the characteristics they need. In
many cases now they simply take whatever they can get
and hope that through training and on-the-job coaching
they can fill in the gaps. But can you really train
someone to be more enthusiastic?
Who would you rather work with? Someone
who hates what they are doing, or someone who loves what
they are doing? And who would you rather do business
with? Someone who’s just punching a clock for a
paycheck, or someone who loves the job so much they
would probably do it for half the pay they’re receiving?
The answer is obvious. People who love what they do have
a certain energy and enthusiasm about them. Their
attitudes are contagious, and for obvious reasons, they
are simply more enjoyable to be around.
Obviously one of the key characteristics
of a good customer service representative is enthusiasm,
and `you would expect that companies who view quality
customer service as a priority would hire only those
individuals who project natural enthusiasm. But as the
labor market tightens, many companies are finding it
difficult to hire employees who have all the
characteristics they need. In many cases now they simply
take whatever they can get and hope that through
training and on-the-job coaching they can fill in the
gaps. But can you really train someone to be more
enthusiastic?
The good news is that customer service
managers CAN affect the level of motivation and
enthusiasm of their staff. The bad news is that few of
them are actually doing it. A recent survey of customer
service employees produced the following results:
-
·72% of customer service employees indicated their
direct supervisor either had no motivating influence
(46%) on them or was in fact a negative motivating
influence (26%).
-
65% of customer service employees indicated that
their direct supervisor had little or no enthusiasm
for his or her own job.
These findings are particularly troubling because when
it comes to motivating your customer service staff, the
first place to look is within yourself. Successful
customer service managers have qualities and skills that
create enthusiasm in their employees.
Here
are several ideas to help you develop more enthusiasm
and motivation in your customer service staff:
Build on your competency.
Know more about your field, products, and
services in your business than those who work for you.
Share this knowledge with your staff. Encourage your
staff to have the same enthusiasm for knowledge that
will help them on the job. Constantly work to improve
your own knowledge, then bring the best ideas back to
your staff. Find non-threatening ways to quiz your staff
on product or service knowledge.
Manage with integrity.
Live by your word, and manage by example. Always project
the enthusiasm you expect in others, know your goals and
live by them, and help your people do the same. And when
you fall short, admit it, and move on. People respect
and appreciate honesty. Quality relationships with
employees can take years to develop and minutes to ruin,
all based on our integrity.
Practice empowerment. Let your customer service
team know that you want them to grow. Give recognition
when it's deserved, and if you have to give criticism,
make it constructive. Using a positive style of
management to encourage improvement is much more
motivating and empowering, and you will increase the
odds of the other person listening to what you are
saying.
Give 110% automatically.
While employees expect their requests to
management will be addressed in a timely and proper
fashion, managers can go the extra mile by giving a fast
response to employee concerns and offer additional help.
Listen with your ears and eyes. Part of your job
is to be a counselor, to listen without prejudice,
putting yourself in the other person's shoes and trying
to understand why they did or said something. Being a
great listener is one of the highest compliments you can
give another person, because it says, "I care about what
you're communicating, and it's significant to me."
Share your vision. Look beyond today's and
tomorrow's challenges and see the big picture in
strategic terms. Then share your vision with your team
that everyone can see. It's always exciting and
invigorating to hear someone who really believes in
something and how we fit into that picture.
Set high standards. These are for you and your
customer service staff. Quality control works for the
good of everyone involved. Be a stickler for perfection,
while acknowledging human limitations. Start by showing
how you achieve high standards. Lead by example and go
that extra mile all the time. And when you and your
staff reach those standards, it's time to set new goals.
Be solution oriented. Let your customer service
staff know that you're there to be a coach, leader and
teacher. Encourage them to come to you with possible
solutions for problems they are having. This encourages
them to think on their own and to become creative
problem solvers. People take pride and become
self-motivated when they can tell a supervisor how their
initiative solved a problem.
When you do the above, you can expect your staff to
treat customers with greater respect, because that’s the
way THEY are being treated. You will find them listening
to customer requests more carefully, and, most
importantly, you will see how employees will better
handle interpersonal communications with customers. In
other words you treat every customer service employee as
YOUR customer, and train them to follow your example.
As a customer service
leader, you're there to offer assistance and
encouragement. You hold the keys to help your people do
their best. For some, it might be letting them take
center stage. For others, it might be to help them build
confidence and feel more secure. All of us like to feel
important and needed, and to be part of the team. When
we continue to motivate our teams, it's bound to result
in an energetic and enthusiastic work environment.
  
Whether your training need is small and focused, or
enterprise-wide, you can count of Frontline Learning to deliver.
For more than 20 years we have been helping organizations
achieve their business objectives with targeted training
initiatives.
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