Five Keys to Creating an Uplifting Service Culture
You
can unleash superhuman strength in your company's culture by following simple
instructions on a safety poster, says consultant Ron Kaufman
Recently I was walking through a
distribution warehouse to meet a client. Hanging on the wall were safety
posters instructing employees how to lift heavy boxes. Most of us have seen
these posters many times. This was the first time I stopped to read one.
"Ron, are you ready to get
started with the meeting?" asked the vice-president showing me around the
building.
As you can imagine, the VP's facial
expression registered confusion over my interest in a standardized safety
poster.
Soon I was seated in the boardroom
with a table full of executives. The conversation focused on an obvious lack of
performance that was affecting the company's bottom line. "Mr.
Kaufman," said the chief executive. "You're a service guru. We
already have a fantastic service department. And we don't get many customer
complaints. But this is a cultural issue. Is this really something you can help
with?"
Don't
Leave It to a Department
I've heard these types of comments
for more than 20 years, in all corners of the globe and inside some of the
world's most recognized heavyweight organizations. The perception of many
companies is that service is something handled by a department or a specific
job title. It's something only necessary to customer satisfaction.
"Would you mind if we talked
about your safety posters?" I asked the CEO.
My seemingly odd question captured
the CEO's attention. Safety posters offer a simple, best practice to lift
anything heavy, like a package, a tool—or even an entire culture. The posters
instruct employees to stretch properly, position their body carefully, and use
their strongest muscles. Plus, they tell employees to study and practice proper
habits continuously.
When it comes to uplifting a
culture—engaging people, motivating people, building loyalty, increasing performance,
and creating a sustainable advantage—many companies pass by service as a
solution, because somehow the concept has been improperly labeled.
I define service like this: 'taking
action to create value for someone else'. Those are powerfully simple words. So
consider the impact of an uplifting service culture, a shared purpose within
every aspect of your business, interaction, and transaction, from the boardroom
down through the front line, where everyone focuses on creating value for
someone else both internally and externally. Imagine the effect on performance,
engagement, customer loyalty, employee retention, value, and competitive
advantage.
"Let's talk about the basic
instructions for lifting anything," I said to the group. "Let's use
the instructions of a safety poster to talk about building an uplifting service
culture."
1. Stretch. Yes, there are calisthenics for your culture. Stretch your
mind and your old habits. Get the creativity flowing. Ask the big questions of
why: Why do we need to change? Why service? Why now?
2. Position yourself. Lifting a culture requires proper positioning and support
from all levels. Leadership must lead service. And everyone else must make
himself or herself a service leader.
3. Use your strong muscles. The architecture of your company is akin to physiology.
Muscles need flexing. Blocks need building. The building blocks of your
culture, such as communication, recognition, vision, and metrics, need shaping.
Analyze each block to understand which needs improvement.
4. Study. Educate your team with continuous exercise and
understanding. Just because I read the safety poster once doesn't mean I will
perform properly. True education means I can perform based on the knowledge I
have acquired and the practices I have learned.
5. Practice. Results really pay off here. Practice is the action of
continually seeking improvement. It's the correcting, steering, and adjusting
to find continued success.
No comments:
Post a Comment