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Quality
Lives in the Eye of the Beholder
by Adele Sommers, Ph.D.
Regardless of how good you
believe your offerings or solutions are, your clients and customers
will be responding to quality in perception even more
than quality in fact. Quality in perception refers to
things like courtesies, special considerations, a caring and personalized
attitude, and a host of other subtleties that can lead us to believe
that we are receiving something above and beyond what we're paying
for.
Those things speak just as loudly,
if not more loudly, to our customers and clients than the actual
quality in fact we provide through our products, services,
and project solutions. Effective quality in perception
can help compensate for any gaps in quality in fact that could otherwise
irritate or inconvenience consumers.
Through examples, this article
explains how to recognize deficiencies in quality in perception,
and what to do about them.
Example
1 - Driving Your Customers Away
Imagine
a car repair service that repeatedly fails to diagnose a problem
with a car and cannot fix it correctly after numerous attempts.
The car is in the shop off and on for days; the customer, who is
a single mom, misses time from work from having to shuttle the car
back and forth. The car repair shop has no loaner vehicle, and it
does not offer a pickup or drop-off service. The car owner cannot
afford a rental car, nor does she have insurance coverage for this
need.
In addition to not getting her
car fixed, the customer is having her pay docked for missed time
at work, plus she's been given a reprimand. To top it off, she cannot
respond to an emergency call from her child's school when her child
is injured on the playground and has to be taken to the hospital.
This example shows how a set
of poor quality-in-fact circumstances can compound,
as the ripple effects expand outward. Yet even with poor quality
in fact (the inability to fix the car), the repair shop might have
been able to salvage the customer relationship if it had increased
its quality in perception, such as by offering sympathy
along with a loaner vehicle.
Example
2 - Often, Its Not about Cost
Some time ago, I was a volunteer
mediator in the Small Claims Court system. Over a period of months,
I was fascinated with the proportion of cases involving alleged
wrongdoing or incompetence. People were suing businesses such as
termite services and auto body painters, and even former best friends
and health care providers over a variety of grievances. The suits
often sought fairly small amounts of compensation, which meant that
the financial aspects were not the primary concern.
What
repeatedly emerged in the mediation sessions was that each plaintiff
felt that the vendor, service provider, health care provider, or
ex-friend had not listened to his or her concerns. The plaintiffs
frequently believed that their complaints about shortcomings in
services, products, or communications had been dismissed.
Had the defendants in these
cases earlier offered something as simple as an apology and
had they made a sincere effort to communicate while taking timely
remedial action I believe the resulting quality in
perception could have prevented many of these lawsuits,
even if the quality in fact still left something to
be desired.
Example
3 - Honest Communication Matters
A group of consultants took
on a major project (a Web site to collect and process data) that
their clients truly believed would be easy. The group had not tackled
anything like it before, but they, too, thought it would be possible
to complete the project quickly. After all, it looked simple. How
complicated could a Web site be?
Little did they realize it would
be many times more complex than the clients basic home page.
The project finally turned out to be nearly impossible for the consulting
group to complete. The consultants finally got the system to work
after many delays and dozens of mishaps. The clients, however, were
very unhappy, even though the consultants ultimately fulfilled the
project requirements (quality in fact).
Whose fault was it? The
clients didnt understand what they were asking
for. To top it off, they insisted on a short schedule that reflected
their simplistic view of the effort. The consulting group, on the
other hand, was not forthright about its own limitations. The partners
scurried to find people who claimed to be able to do the work. They
kept quiet about their own difficulties and did not reveal their
growing problems. The groups ongoing failure to communicate
greatly reduced the clients confidence, and drastically shortchanged
their quality in perception.
In conclusion, quality
in perception can profoundly affect your customers and clients
experiences with your products, services, and project solutions.
To make sure youre not overlooking opportunities to create
quality in perception, consider:
1) Special courtesies that can
set your offerings apart from your competitors
2) Your ability to listen to
and handle complaints quickly and diplomatically
3) Your willingness to be honest
with clients about problems and shortcomings
Remember that quality in
perception is not a substitute for quality in fact. But it can
go a long way toward minimizing customer and client dissatisfaction,
as well as powerfully reinforcing stellar quality when you ultimately
deliver it.
~~~~~~~~~~~
About the Author
Adele Sommers, Ph.D. is author of Straight Talk
on Boosting Business Performance: 12 Ways to Profit from Hidden
Potential. To learn more about her book and sign up for more
free tips like these, visit her site at www.LearnShareProsper.com
This article may be distributed freely on your Web
site, as long as this entire article, including the links and full
About the Author section, are unchanged. Please send
a copy of, or link to, your reprint to Adele@LearnShareProsper.com.
Copyright 2006 Business Performance Inc., Adele Sommers, All Rights Reserved.
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