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information and resources to help you build and retain a
high-performance company
Volume 1 |
Issue 15 | March 2008
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FROM
JIM SIRBASKU’S DESK
Crisp and Vivid High Def Customer
Service
That's a great
picture on your new HD television,
isn't it? The images are sharp and
crisp and the colors so vivid. It's
grand to kick back and watch a
sporting event when you feel as if
you are in the middle of the game or
on the golf course. But wait. Why is
the screen breaking up and going
dark? Somebody DO something – before
we see only a test pattern and a
"technical difficulties" message!
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Most of us give no thought to the parts
responsible for that beautiful TV image until
something goes wrong. Then disbelief and
disappointment set in and sometimes we get an
education we never dreamed we would need, with a
vocabulary revolving around such things as
resolution and pixels, those tiny dots that make
up an image.
Customer service in our companies can fail in
just the same way: Business seems to be humming
along. You've told workers that customer service
is your number one goal, and you hung the plaque
on the wall in your office. Complaints are
non-existent, and the financial reports are
good. No news is good news, right?
Companies gladly accept traditional marks
that they are doing well – such measures as few
complaints and customer retention. But
sustaining the big picture requires more than
happy numbers. There's competition out there for
whatever you do, and it's trolling for your
customers. If you want to keep customers happy
and your company healthy, you must nurture and
maintain the individual attitudes that form
employee behaviors, starting with top
management.
Think of your customer service as a picture
made up of thousands of tiny dots, or pixels.
These combine and align to form a complete,
brilliant image that pleases the eye. But if
part of them malfunction, the picture might blur
or break up in areas. It might even disappear
completely, collapsing into a muddy smudge.
The first step in creating crisp, vivid
customer service is developing a framework that
describes the behavior surrounding customer
service excellence. This includes getting down
to the nitty-gritty of actions we expect from
employees, such as urging customers to ask
numerous questions, training workers how to
develop rapport with their clients, or
instructing employees to take the time to
understand what a customer needs.
This framework must show how a company's
desired behaviors align to its business goals,
thus illustrating the bigger picture of what you
are trying to achieve, and showing how these
practices compare to those of other companies.
Do your practices depart from industry
standards? This could be problematic – or it
could be just fine if your service behavior
encourages excellence and supports corporate
goals. Either way, it's good see how you are
doing in the broad scheme of things and note
"why we do it this way" if you differ from
national norms.
The next step in your customer service plan
is an internal behavior audit. You need to
measure attitudes toward the specific behaviors
in your framework so you will know if workers
are with you or not. Do they believe in the
importance of following up with customers to see
if they are satisfied with the service they
received? Do they think good customer service
includes telling a customer why he or she is
wrong?
Once you have the numbers in front of you,
it's time to mend the gaps in places where
behaviors have broken down. Think of it as
fine-tuning of individual employees or perhaps a
whole department, if you discover a large
percentage of staff with behaviors/attitudes
outside the zone of acceptable customer
service.
If you think of your framework in broad
terms, it will help you hire the right people by
exploring the attitudes of job candidates to
ensure their beliefs about customer service
mirror the company's.
Finally, remember that almost nothing thrives on
neglect. The companies that perform the best
measure often. They regularly "fine-tune" their
image through training in areas where the
picture is blurry. Through regular maintenance,
they can kick back and watch the show without
fear of technical difficulties or a distorted
picture.

Jim Sirbasku, CEO
Profiles International
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Spelling Out
Good Customer Service
T elling employees what you
expect removes all doubt
A iring customer service
complaints allows employee to find solutions
L osing customers is not
acceptable
K nowing what's best should not
be a mystery
A iming high works well if
you have a target
B urying a problem rarely makes
it go away
O wning the business makes
everyone successful
U nderstanding creates a common
language
T raining employees is an
ongoing event
I ngraining good service
makes it part of the culture
T alk is not cheap when
accompanied by action

Gaining Confidence with ProfileXT™ Job Match
In the highly competitive advertising sales
arena, a productive sales staff is crucial to
growth. Although success in sales is measurable,
productivity is difficult to spot during the
hiring process. How do you gauge the energy and
effectiveness of people you do not know?
An advertising sales organization discovered
that ProfileXT's™ Job Match Pattern provides
clear answers and infuses hiring leaders with
more confidence.
Participants
The company chose 26 advertising sales
representatives to participate. Managers
administered the ProfileXT™ to each employee,
and also recorded the number of each worker's
new customers, the ads each one sold, and each
one's overall dollar volume.
Job Match Pattern
Four salespeople ranked highest in each of the
three areas (new customers/ads sold/dollar
volume). Fifteen employees ranked in the middle,
and seven ranked lowest.
From this scale, the company developed a Job
Match percentage and matched all 26 employees
against it. An 86 percent or better match most
strongly identified top performers. Leaders
chose this percentage as the company's
breakpoint for hiring.
Results
Of the 26 employees in the study, eight met or
exceeded the benchmark. All four of the top
performers ranked in this group. Only one of the
seven low performers displayed the same match.
Thus the pattern differentiated between the top
and bottom performances made by the company's
own evaluations, with these results:
- Top performers correctly identified by
the pattern: 4 of 4 (100 percent)
- Bottom performers incorrectly identified
by the pattern: 1 of 7 (14 percent)
This pattern now serves as the company's
benchmark for matching employees.
Summary
Using the ProfileXT's™ Job Match, the
organization has developed the ability to screen
sales representative candidates with success.
Leaders believe their hiring practices show more
consistency with ProfileXT™. Their knowledge
that the PXT is based on employee attributes
gives them more confidence in hiring decisions.
This process demonstrates how employee selection
practices can improve using Job Match Patterns.
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Do You Own or Rent Your Customers?
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Kindness is not a new value, but in the
arena of customer service, it might be
one whose time has come/gone/is
returning.
Author Ed Horrell, in his book THE
KINDNESS REVOLUTION: THE COMPANY-WIDE
CULTURE SHIFT THAT INSPIRES PHENOMENAL
CUSTOMER SERVICE, recalls an era when
businesses were smaller and managers or
owners knew their customers, called them
by name when serving them and urged them
to button their coats against the cold.
Compare that with today's
indifference. Is personal service
possible in 2008?
Yes, says Horrell, who gives numerous
examples. One is a department store with
legendary customer service. The store's
company "handbook" is one paragraph
long, thus ensuring that employees will
read it. The gist of the handbook
message is that the company stands for
service excellence, and Horrell relates
several tales that back up the store's
reputation.
One widely circulated story says a
clerk at the store returned a customer's
money for tires that he was dissatisfied
with – even though the store does not
sell tires. The organization's customer
service is so highly thought of that
when Horrell was writing the book,
people asked him repeatedly if he was
including this particular store. The
continuing refrain intrigued him, so he
studied the store and found many gems of
wisdom. It proves one of the points of
his book – that people are loyal to
service excellence, and they will talk
about it.
The author makes several points that
seem simple. He discusses four values
that make customer service come alive
when they replace indifference: dignity,
respect, courtesy and kindness. Put into
practice, this means going beyond giving
customers what you THINK they want and
actually ASKING them what they want.
He also asserts that good customer
service is a practice that everyone
inside a company must adopt. "The way
you treat your employees will be the way
they treat your customers. I have found
this to be a universal truth; it never
fails."
Good customer service separates the
companies that merely rent their
customers from those that actually own
them, he writes. And a primary rule of
ownership is that you take better care
of something you own.
ABOUT THE BOOK
THE KINDNESS REVOLUTION: THE
COMPANY-WIDE CULTURE SHIFT THAT INSPIRES
PHENOMENAL CUSTOMER SERVICE
208 pages
ISBN 978-0814473078
Publisher: AMACOM
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The single most important thing to remember
about any enterprise is that there are no
results inside its walls. The result of a
business is a satisfied customer.
-- Peter Drucker, management guru
Do what you do so well that
they will want to see it again and bring their
friends.
-- Walt Disney, film
producer/director/screenwriter
In business you get what you
want by giving other people what they want.
-- Alice MacDougall, businesswoman

If you make customers unhappy
in the physical world, they might each tell six
friends. If you make customers unhappy on the
Internet, they can each tell 6,000 friends.
--Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon
Well done is better than well
said.
-- Benjamin Franklin, founding father, inventor,
politician, satirist
You are serving a customer,
not a life sentence. Learn how to enjoy your
work.
-- Laurie McIntosh, write |
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New CSP Report
Shines Light on What Customer Service Means
For years, Customer Service Profile™ has waged
war against poor treatment of the people your
company needs to survive. Managers use CSP's
placement, coaching and individual reports to see
which job candidates' attitudes best match the
organization's expectations for excellent customer
service. For employees already on the job, CSP
reveals which areas and/or individuals would benefit
from more training.
Now a new CSP report gives organizations one more
strategy to use in battling poor customer service.
Called the alignment report, this
revealing survey gives managers a dual-screen view
of both marketplace attitudes and those of their own
employees in one convenient document.
The alignment report works in two specific ways.
First it shows Company ABC how well its customer
service standards match those typical of other
companies. Second, it reveals to Company ABC how
closely its own employees agree with ABC's customer
service values.
After viewing the results, Company ABC may want
to make some changes – or may choose to do nothing
at all. As with other reports, this one's power lies
in the information it provides.
Here is a picture of the report at work: It takes
Company ABC's answers to 50 important statements and
matches them with industry norms. A sample statement
says: "All of a customer's concerns are important;
never dissuade them from asking questions." In
column format, Company ABC's yes-or-no response to
that statement is compared with that typical of
other companies. Differences are highlighted. A
third column shows whether a selected group from
Company ABC agrees with the company's perspective.
This answer is given in percentages when employees
disagree. No percentage means overall agreement.
If Company ABC's answer to the statement differs
from that typical of the marketplace, it may or may
not be a cause for concern. A company might want to
change its response to the statement. Based on
corporate goals, only that company can determine
what constitutes its best customer service
practices.
Large percentage differences between a company's
agreement with a statement and that of its employees
might be of more concern. If Company ABC believes
that all of a customer's concerns are important and
50 percent of employees surveyed disagree, more
exploration is necessary, and perhaps more training.
The alignment report is one more nail in the
coffin of poor customer service and one more step to
establishing a customer-oriented culture in your
organization. Call us at (254) 751-1644.

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Of
Course I Remember You!
Nothing is More Important to People than
Their Names
"Hey Bud, let me introduce you to someone
I've just met. That is…um…I'm sorry, what
did you say your name was again?"
Embarrassing? No, that's too small a
word!
Take heart! Unless you're one of a small
number of people worldwide suffering from
prosopagnosia, a neurological
condition rendering a person incapable of
recognizing faces in spite of having good
eyesight, then the following steps will save
you the embarrassment of ever forgetting
anyone's name again.
A
Personal Story from Bud Haney
Almost everyone struggles with
remembering the names of people. I
was helped when I learned that if
you have empathy for people, you
will have an easier time remembering
their names. I think I learned this
principle by observing Jim Sirbasku
in action. Jim used to have a
problem remembering names because
his "E" was bigger than his "EM."
Here's what I mean: When he met
people, his focus was on himself, or
his ego, which I call the "E." Jim
was more focused on "telling" people
than he was on "learning" from
people. I decided the way to help
Jim start remembering names was to
remind him to "Use your EM
(empathy), not your big E." It was
my way of reminding him to pay
attention to people's names and what
they did, and put his ego aside.
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The biggest payoff for learning to remember
people's names is the embarrassment you avoid. This
chapter is full of ideas to help you improve your
memory when it comes to recalling the names of the
people you meet.
1. Switch Off the Internal Dialogue
As you're reading this strategy, take a moment to
examine what else is flying around in your mind.
It's no different in social or business situations
where you're meeting people for the first time.
Instead of focusing solely on the person you're
meeting, your mind is filled with snatches of other
concerns flying through it: "…mmm, the food
looks good…when she's finished speaking, I'm going
to say…" With all of that internal dialogue, it
should come as no surprise that you find yourself
embarrassed to have "forgotten" someone's name. In
reality, you just didn't bother to try to remember
it in the first place. Become conscious of your
internal dialogue and make a conscious effort to
focus your attention exclusively on the external
dialogue. Every time you find yourself drifting
inward, step out. Stay external – prepare to
remember.
2. Listen
Hey, come back! Just because I'm repeating Rule #1
of good communication, a rule you've had hurled at
you time after time, don't ignore this key element.
Good listeners rarely forget names. Learn to listen
actively by applying the next few steps which focus
your active listening engine. Then when a person's
name is introduced into the conversation, be sure to
hear it!
3. Bury the New Name in Your Memory
First, repeat it in a sentence. Plain and simple
everyday courtesy phrases like, "It's a pleasure
to meet you, Marie" will do
it. This has two effects: it puts the name
immediately into your short-term memory and it makes
the new person feel good – most people love the
sound of their own name. If it's an unusual name,
ask her to spell it: "Is that N-I-L-G-U-N?"
This implants it even deeper in your memory and
builds further rapport. Finally, think about the
name itself. Does it sound like anything else? Is
there any way you can make a memorable association?
Names like Wood, Holly, Marsh, Guinness, or Green
are made for memorable association. If there's no
obvious association, then consider what their names
sound like: McCann (My Can), Harrison (Hairy Son),
Kendall (Candle). The process of trying to make
these connections helps to bury names further in
your memory.

4. Make Eye Contact
When meeting someone, look at him. Make eye contact
and smile. Imagine the name of your new acquaintance
is written in big luminous letters across her
forehead. Then observe: What makes her face
interesting and different? Has she a parting in her
hair or a gap in her teeth? Eyebrows that meet? A
long nose? You don't have to stare them out to do
this effectively. All of this can be picked up in a
few quick glances, if you're prepared to make the
effort.
5. Bring it All Together
Finish the job of remembering them forever. You've
got the name, you've got some memorable association,
and you've got some distinguishing physical
features. Now, construct a mental picture for this
person. Connect his or her unique physical features
with the name's association to create a picture that
will pop into your mind next time you meet. The
sillier the picture, the better.
This is an absolutely infallible system. Apply it
and you'll never forget someone again. With a little
practice, this process becomes so automatic and
instantaneous that you will find a mental picture
pops into your head right away for every new person
you meet, ensuring that every new face and name is
filed away in your mental Rolodex. Forever.
*From the book 40 STRATEGIES FOR
WINNING IN BUSINESS by Bud Haney and Jim
Sirbasku. © S&H Publishing Co., 5205 Lake Shore
Drive, Waco, Texas 76710-1732. All rights
reserved. Contact S&H Publishing Co., (254)
751-1644, for reprint permission.
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Full Speed Ahead at Planet Tan
EDITOR’S NOTE: St. Louis, Mo., native
Tony Hartl, CEO and founder of Texas-based
Planet Tan, describes his 120 employees as
"talent." Strategic thinking keeps this
forward-moving executive at the top of his
game. Planet Tan's awards include Profiles
International's 2007 Client of the Year,
The Dallas Business Journal's Best
Places to Work in Dallas-Fort Worth for 2006
and 2007, and INC Magazine's
designation of an INC 500 Company
for 2007.
Q. How did you create the name
"Planet Tan"?
A. When I was starting Planet Tan, there
were similar names out there -- Planet
Hollywood was popular. And there were other
tanning firms with "global" and
"international" in the name. I wanted to
take something to infinity so we would not
fall victim to the "one-up" concept. I chose
"planet," which matches the logo design.
Q. How many Planet Tan locations
do you have, and where are they?
A. We have 12 with the 13th being built
right now. All are in the Dallas-Fort Worth
area. Within the next 30 months, we will add
20 additional stores.
Q. Were you living in Dallas at
the time you founded the company?
A. I was living in Denver. I'd gotten a
classic education in marketing and at age
23, I was the vice president of a
corporation. My position gave me an
understanding of trends, as well as an
access to research and data in tanning and
an understanding of clients' lifestyles. So
I studied where this type of client might
live. I also looked at where I wanted to
live. Dallas was the answer. It's a great
market, a great city from a cosmopolitan
standpoint, and it has the traditional
values that I grew up with in the Midwest.
Q. What are those values?
A. When you say you are going to do
something, you do it. You don't need a
contract. I seal many of my deals with a
handshake. Also, I appreciate people. That
doesn't mean taking them for granted, but
appreciating what they do. The overarching
thing is the work ethic. I have been in many
markets where there is a cultural difference
when it comes down to accountability and how
people work. The Midwestern ethic, shaped by
farm life, is that you work all day and all
night. I was exposed to that at an early
age.
Q. Besides that hard work, what
makes Planet Tan successful?
A. There are two points of difference
between Planet Tan and our competitors. We
established our brand as fun, energetic and
relevant. We sponsor three sports teams. We
are the official tanning center of The
Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders, The Dallas
Mavericks Dancers and the NHL Dallas Stars
Ice Girls. We are one of the few businesses
to sponsor all three major sports franchises
in Dallas and this makes people think we are
larger than we are. The second thing is our
size. Our average stores have 50 tanning
beds, where others might have 10 or 12. We
have the largest tanning facilities in the
world and we are open from 7 a.m. to 11 p.m.
seven days a week. We have so many beds that
we gain market share very rapidly.
Q. Did you know the business
would be successful from the outset?
A. Yes. I never thought I would do something
that would not be successful. There is a
certain level of optimism, enthusiasm and
energy that entrepreneurs bring to the
table. There is a real bias for action. It's
like a 16-foot speedboat. You think at
lightning speed. It's in the DNA – you've
got it or you don't. It's not learnable or
teachable
Q. Why did you contact Profiles
International?
A. We had a need. We had 88 percent
attrition in 2006. We needed better
assessment tools. A friend referred me to
Profiles.
Q. What assessments do you use
and what have you seen as a result?
A. We use ProfileXT™, ProfileXT Sales™ and
Step One Survey II™. In one year, I saw a
drop in attrition from 88 to 72 percent. I
knew we were onto something.
Q. Have you seen other changes in
your business as a result of your
relationship with Profiles?
A. We take more of a deliberate approach to
our hiring process now. We understand that
there's not any one piece we want to do
without. We use Profiles assessments,
multiple interviews and reference and
background checks. We have 120 employees and
that will grow to 170 by end of the year. We
call people "talent," and the difference
between talent and people can be a strategic
initiative for a business. |
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