How would you like to know what made a customer angry or sad, leading them to leave a negative review? You might say, “I’ll just ask them,” and that’s a great answer. Direct feedback is a gift. But maybe there’s another way.
I had a sit-down with Michael Podolsky, the CEO of PissedConsumer.com, a sounding board for consumers to leave comments and reviews when they can’t get the customer service they want or deserve. In our Amazing Business Radio interview, he suggested that a proactive approach to handling complaints is more than just meeting with your team to discuss what you’re hearing from customers or what you think makes them unhappy. Take the guesswork out of it. Short of direct feedback, which in my opinion is still the best way to learn if your customers love you (or not), read competitor reviews on their websites or in the B2B world and partake in industry forums to find out what customers are saying about the companies they do business with.
In addition to looking at competitors’ websites and industry forums, monitor social channels for mentions of your competitors. While most companies practice “social listening” for their own brands, paying attention to social mentions about your competition gives you a broader insight into what’s happening in your industry.
Based on what you learn, create a Complaint Prevention Checklist. For example, if customers frequently complain about long hold times when calling your competition’s customer support, examine your company’s response time. If customers are frustrated by your competition’s complicated return policies, make sure you aren’t guilty of the same.
This isn’t a “do it once” exercise. Take time each quarter – maybe even each month – to examine this type of feedback. Share insights with your team and use them to stay customer-focused and ahead of your competition. Recognize that there are two areas in which you want to compete: providing a better customer experience and having fewer complaints. In a perfect world, you would have no complaints.
In my book, I’ll Be Back: How to Get Customers to Come Back Again and Again, one of the six strategies I cover in the final chapter is to find out what your competition does well and adapt it to your company. Don’t copy, but use their ideas for inspiration to make it your own. And if you pay attention to Podolsky’s advice, you’ll also want to find out what your competition isn’t doing well. Of course, you’ll want to determine if your organization is guilty of the same behaviors or operational snafus and proactively seek to eliminate or mitigate the problems.
Shep Hyken is a customer service/CX expert, award-winning keynote speaker, and New York Times bestselling author. Learn more about Shep’s customer service and customer experience keynote speeches and his customer service training workshops at www.Hyken.com. Connect with Shep on LinkedIn.