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71 – 5 Ways to Quickly Improve Your Real-Life Customer Experiences

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Replaced by: Building a Remarkable Brand

When? This feed was archived on September 26, 2017 15:50 (7y ago). Last successful fetch was on April 22, 2017 18:52 (7+ y ago)

Why? HTTP Redirect status. The feed permanently redirected to another series.

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Manage episode 170270000 series 1105259
Content provided by Patrick McGilvray. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Patrick McGilvray or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
5 Ways to Quickly Improve Your Real-Life Customer Experience

Episode Recap

In this episode of the podcast, we’re taking a deep dive into some very simple and practical ways you can create a more remarkable experience for your customers in real-life.

A few recent trips to local coffee shops has me scratching my head at why they can’t provide a better overall experience for their loyal customers.

5 ways to quickly improve your real-life customer experiences.

1. Create a mood that suits your brand

We want to feel like we’re someplace special, remember that all 5 senses are at play here. What does it look like, smell like, feel like, sound like? It’s a great idea to hire a professional commercial interior designer, one with experience in your category to create the right mood. We don’t want it to be too loud and not too quiet either; it’s not a nightclub and it’s not a church.

2. Encourage communication

People come to your place because they want to talk to each other. You should encourage this by providing large open areas for social gathering and mingling, but also intimate spaces where people can talk quietly. Lots of small tables vs a few big ones is something Starbucks has done recently to provide more intimate seating.

3. Provide amazing WiFi

People come to hang out, do work, surf the web, check in on social media, etc. and there is no excuse for poor WiFi connections. It’s a utility expense like water or electric, and you should treat it as such. I’ve met with clients at coffee shops and tried to show them their new website or maybe a website I built for another client and they are ridiculously slow. It’s actually embarrassing.

4. Keep things tidy and in good working order

The entire place needs to be impeccably clean at all times. Dirty bathrooms seem to be an afterthought but they are definitely a part of a customer’s overall experience of your brand. Wobbly tables and rickety chairs are seriously uncool. Fix that stuff right away. Because wobbly tables and full cups of boiling hot coffee isn’t just an annoyance, it could be the makings of a lawsuit.

5. Hire great people

This is a huge one and is often easier said than done, but it is critical to the life of your business. Hiting great people is probably the most important factor in a customer’s experience with your brand. Remember that your people are the main contact point between your brand and your customer, in essence, they ARE your brand. A server or barista having a bad day can ruin a customer’s experience forever.

Don’t hire for experience, hire for personality. You can always train someone to do a job, it’s much bigger challenge to train someone to be a nice person, or positive, upbeat, friendly, or not a jerk. They should also wear clean clothes, they should not smell bad (cigarettes, too much patchouli, not enough patchouli [read BO]).

They should know their stuff. They are representing your brand so they should have a wealth of knowledge about your food, your coffee, the roasting process, the origin of the beans, etc.

Podcast

The Building a Remarkable Brand podcast is all about giving you valuable insights and practical tips to help you build a remarkable brand.

Have a question you’d like answered on the show? Click here to submit your question.

Subscribe to the podcast: iTunes | Android | Soundcloud

Rate and review the show: If you like what you’re hearing, head over to iTunes and click that 5-star button to rate the show. And if you have a few extra seconds, write a couple of sentences and submit a review. This helps others find the podcast.

How do you rate and review a podcast in iTunes? Check this out.

  continue reading

75 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 

Archived series ("HTTP Redirect" status)

Replaced by: Building a Remarkable Brand

When? This feed was archived on September 26, 2017 15:50 (7y ago). Last successful fetch was on April 22, 2017 18:52 (7+ y ago)

Why? HTTP Redirect status. The feed permanently redirected to another series.

What now? If you were subscribed to this series when it was replaced, you will now be subscribed to the replacement series. This series will no longer be checked for updates. If you believe this to be in error, please check if the publisher's feed link below is valid and contact support to request the feed be restored or if you have any other concerns about this.

Manage episode 170270000 series 1105259
Content provided by Patrick McGilvray. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Patrick McGilvray or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
5 Ways to Quickly Improve Your Real-Life Customer Experience

Episode Recap

In this episode of the podcast, we’re taking a deep dive into some very simple and practical ways you can create a more remarkable experience for your customers in real-life.

A few recent trips to local coffee shops has me scratching my head at why they can’t provide a better overall experience for their loyal customers.

5 ways to quickly improve your real-life customer experiences.

1. Create a mood that suits your brand

We want to feel like we’re someplace special, remember that all 5 senses are at play here. What does it look like, smell like, feel like, sound like? It’s a great idea to hire a professional commercial interior designer, one with experience in your category to create the right mood. We don’t want it to be too loud and not too quiet either; it’s not a nightclub and it’s not a church.

2. Encourage communication

People come to your place because they want to talk to each other. You should encourage this by providing large open areas for social gathering and mingling, but also intimate spaces where people can talk quietly. Lots of small tables vs a few big ones is something Starbucks has done recently to provide more intimate seating.

3. Provide amazing WiFi

People come to hang out, do work, surf the web, check in on social media, etc. and there is no excuse for poor WiFi connections. It’s a utility expense like water or electric, and you should treat it as such. I’ve met with clients at coffee shops and tried to show them their new website or maybe a website I built for another client and they are ridiculously slow. It’s actually embarrassing.

4. Keep things tidy and in good working order

The entire place needs to be impeccably clean at all times. Dirty bathrooms seem to be an afterthought but they are definitely a part of a customer’s overall experience of your brand. Wobbly tables and rickety chairs are seriously uncool. Fix that stuff right away. Because wobbly tables and full cups of boiling hot coffee isn’t just an annoyance, it could be the makings of a lawsuit.

5. Hire great people

This is a huge one and is often easier said than done, but it is critical to the life of your business. Hiting great people is probably the most important factor in a customer’s experience with your brand. Remember that your people are the main contact point between your brand and your customer, in essence, they ARE your brand. A server or barista having a bad day can ruin a customer’s experience forever.

Don’t hire for experience, hire for personality. You can always train someone to do a job, it’s much bigger challenge to train someone to be a nice person, or positive, upbeat, friendly, or not a jerk. They should also wear clean clothes, they should not smell bad (cigarettes, too much patchouli, not enough patchouli [read BO]).

They should know their stuff. They are representing your brand so they should have a wealth of knowledge about your food, your coffee, the roasting process, the origin of the beans, etc.

Podcast

The Building a Remarkable Brand podcast is all about giving you valuable insights and practical tips to help you build a remarkable brand.

Have a question you’d like answered on the show? Click here to submit your question.

Subscribe to the podcast: iTunes | Android | Soundcloud

Rate and review the show: If you like what you’re hearing, head over to iTunes and click that 5-star button to rate the show. And if you have a few extra seconds, write a couple of sentences and submit a review. This helps others find the podcast.

How do you rate and review a podcast in iTunes? Check this out.

  continue reading

75 episodes

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