Although your customers won’t love you
if you give bad service, your competitors will.
- Kate Zabriskie
- Kate Zabriskie
To quote Jack Mitchell,
author of “Hug Your Customer” and one of the owners of a 65 million dollar
retail clothing business in a Connecticut town of 28,000 people, hiring to the
culture is “the big secret.” Hire well; surround yourself with good people who
take ownership and everything else becomes incredibly easier. The attributes
they look for at Mitchells and Richards in prospective employees are the
following:
2
Confidence
3 Positive attitude
4
Passion to be the
best
5 Integrity
Another company known for its
service and hiring practices is Enterprise Car Rental. There are some
similarities between Enterprise offices and golf facilities in that Enterprise
keeps their management pipeline, as well as their counters, manned by hiring
college interns who are then, when deemed qualified, offered positions with the
company as seniors. Many of these offers are accepted because the Enterprise
entry on a resume says all the right things about customer care. They ask open
–ended questions at the interview that require applicants to directly relate
examples of how they have helped people in the past. They look for the
following skills:
- A passion for taking care of customers.
- A willingness to be flexible. (Taking care of customers isn’t about reciting policy, it requires listening.)
- A work ethic based on dedication to the company and it’s mission.
- An eagerness to learn and work their way up.
- Self- motivation and goal orientation.
- Persuasive sales skills.
- Excellent communication skills.
- Leadership ability.
The attributes I feel are
most important to gauge during the hiring, interviewing process are the
following:
-
ATTITUDE,
ATTITUDE, ATTITUDE – Is it crystal clear that this candidate is bursting at the
seams to get this job? Body language is sometimes as revealing as their answer
in that everyone is trying to land the job or they wouldn’t be there. If they
are not super enthusiastic now they may be totally disinterested six months
from now. Do they look the part and seem like someone your customers will enjoy
getting to know? Most importantly, does their personality seem as though it
will mesh with and not perch itself above or fall below the culture. If the
prospective employee does not get along with the rest of the team they will
produce contention that will eventually become a priority that you as a Leader
do not need. The candidate will only improve your team by becoming an accepted
part of it.
-
ABILITY TO THINK
ON YOUR FEET – This is easy to determine if you include one or two open-ended
questions in the interview that can only be answered with a story that couldn’t
be rehearsed. When I first interviewed to be a golf rep 100 years ago I was
asked “What have you done in your life that you are most proud of.” That was
it, one question. I guess they liked my answer. I still use that question and
at times other than interviews. Another one I like is to ask the candidate to
sell me the pad I’m using to take notes.
EMPATHY – Empathy is an
important team value but more importantly if you believe in the maxim that
“people do business with people they like” then the genuinely empathetic
candidate is the only one to consider. Empathetic people are curious and good
listeners. They look you in the eye when speaking to you. They are creative
because it is part of their nature to put themselves in the customer’s shoes
and direct the conversation accordingly instead of reciting the script. Those
candidates who don’t convey this quality are usually doomed to shallow
relationships and are complainers and blamers rather than problem solvers.
During the interview ask them to describe the most empathetic thing they have
done lately either at the last job or with family or friends. If they don’t
know the definition of empathy help them with a synonym they understand but if,
at that point, they are still stuck for an answer – move on.
Any
golf facility can hire a great staff with some hard work, patience and a little
luck doesn’t hurt. Set the bar high from the first meeting not only about the
service culture but what will be expected from them as they fit themselves into
the team. Educate often, evaluate those sessions and empower when the time is
right.
Reward
employees for good service and for salesmanship. Cash incentives and spiffs
work well but are not the only way to say “job well done”. Awards, time-off and
recognition in a
newsletter
or at staff meetings are powerful culture builders. Treat your salesman of the
month to dinner and a movie for them and a significant other.
In
order for a culture dedicated to customer service excellence to thrive and
survive the Leader must have a burning desire that spreads to all staff members
on a daily basis. Everyone from day one needs to understand that they work for
the customer. You cannot have a great golf facility without having a great
staff.
In Summary, hiring good people is the most important part of
creating a winning culture.
Specific
actions to improve the hiring
process:
- Realize that resumes and references alone do not make all-stars and an all-star team is our goal.
- Structure the interview process to include the following:
1. More than one interview. We are not in a hurry. Think
of it more as due diligence.
2. Have sessions with key staff present as well as
yourself.
3. Ask open-ended questions that allow you to determine
the customer friendliness and team spirit of the candidate.
4. Lay the groundwork of an understanding of what will be
expected in terms of service and sales effort.
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