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Internal Customer Service
Explanation and Case Study
Article by Donna Earl
Recently the term Internal Customer Service has
become a buzz phrase. We hear that great customer service (for the external
customer) depends on excellent internal customer service. But what does
that mean? Let's start with some definitions.
1. The external customer is someone who signs a check, pays our
employer, and ultimately makes our paycheck possible. External customers
have choice, and if they don't like your product or service can take their
business elsewhere.
2. An internal customer or internal service provider can
be anyone in the organization. An internal customer can be a co-worker,
another department, or a distributor who depends upon us to provide products
or services which in turn are utilized to create a deliverable for the
external customer. In general, internal customers don't have a choice.
For example, if the sales department doesn't like accounting's credit
policies, they can't fire that department and hire another.
Great (external) customer service creates customer satisfaction, customer
loyalty, and customer retention. So why all the fuss about internal customers,
especially when retention isn't an issue?
Outstanding internal customer service is simply good business. Internal
customer service can flourish only in high communication environment.
To create positive internal customer service, all departments work together
cooperatively, agree on processes and procedures, and negotiate expectations.
Like gears meshing in sync, interdependent business units meet each others'
needs, work productively together to meet common goals, and deliver high
quality products and service to the external customer.
The focus on developing effective internal customer service helps organizations
cut costs, increase productivity, improve interdepartmental communication
and cooperation, boost employee morale, align goals, harmonize processes
and procedures, replace interdepartmental competition with interdepartmental
cooperation and deliver better service to the external customer. Excellent
service to the external customer is dependent upon healthy internal customer
service practices.
Internal Customer Service Case Study
The customer advocate for a large manufacturing company
was concerned about the organization's reputation for excellent products,
but terrible customer service. The company mentality was "Customer
service is just a department!"
During the interactive exercises in the Internal Customer Service Seminar
presented by Donna Earl, many expensive lapses in the company's internal
customer service came to light. One example involved Engineering's lack
of response when Customer Service reps required an engineer's input. (In
this case Engineering is the internal service provider and the Customer
Service reps are the internal customers).
The Customer Service reps were responsible for problem solving and taking
orders for highly technical, often customized parts. Sometimes the reps
needed clarification from an engineer to process a customer order for
the correct part. Engineers viewed information requests from Customer
Service reps as low priority, uninteresting, and annoying.
During the class, we calculated the cost to the company of one incorrect
shipment was approximately $125,000 in wasted labor, materials, and other
expenses. In addition, the cost of frustration and delayed deadlines to
the external customer was damaging to the company's reputation.
At the end of the seminar, engineers understood what the Customer Service
manager had been preaching for years: responding to requests from customer
service reps is a priority and is good business.
For more about this topic, see related article,
Providing Excellent Internal Customer Service.
Copyright © 2004 Donna Earl. All
rights reserved.
Donna Earl
is an international specialist in Customer Service and Emotional Intelligence.
She offers an Internal
Customer Service Seminar through DonnaEarlTraining.com to help companies
improve their level of internal customer service. To use or reprint this
article, or for further information about Donna's consulting or training
services, contact us by phone or
email.
For more information about HelpDeskCoach.com training, see Programs.
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Copyright © 2005-2010 HelpDeskCoach
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