
Also: if you have any stories about exemplary customer service that you've experienced personally, lay 'em on me.
And thank you, from the bottom of my heart, for helping me with my homework.

Moderator: Orlion
High Lord Tolkien wrote:I once worked at a company where the sales dept (3 people) complained about their computers all the time ie: slow.
So we gave each of them a UPS (battery) and told them they were "Pentium Accelerators".
They couldn't thank us enough after that and 2 said their computers were running better!
Is that good customer service?
People hate e-mail newsletters, trust me. A 20-30% open rate is considered fair. And that's for ones that they've asked for.Menolly wrote:How does your office feel about non-business email, ali?
Is there an office newletter that is sent out around holiday time with recipes, bargain shopping hints, hot gift ideas, etc.? Would such an idea fly?
Hold on...Stonemaybe wrote:- make surprise cups of tea (this might be an English one!)/get the coffee when it's not your turn/it's not expected of you
Lord, honey, no!Menolly wrote:But, doesn't everyone take such things on if they see they need doing?
Yeah, people take turns. There's substantial friction between the vast majority of my coworkers and I (vindictive ex-wives play hell on office politics and friendships), but there's no question about coffee etiquette. You're in first, you make it. You finish the pot, you ask if anyone wants more and make it if so, clean it if not. We rotate through who buys the coffee. When the pot broke earlier this year, we nearly got into an argument over who was buying the replacement (3 people offered).Menolly wrote:Hold on...Stonemaybe wrote:- make surprise cups of tea (this might be an English one!)/get the coffee when it's not your turn/it's not expected of you
People take turns doing this?
When I was working and I saw the coffee pot was low, I always poured out the dregs, washed (OK, so I admit I may have been the only one who actually washed the parts. That thing was nasty whenever I did it) the coffee maker, and put on a fresh pot to brew.
I also would make sure to turn off, empty and wash the pot if I was in the office after hours and no one else had remembered.
But, doesn't everyone take such things on if they see they need doing?
Absolutely. I lived by this when I had office jobs, and while some people didn't mention it, many did. It's such a simple thing. People like to be kept informed; they like to know you're actually working on the task; and they like to know you can be relied upon to keep your word.Stonemaybe wrote:-always always ALWAYS phone someone back if you've said you will, even just to say 'i'm still working on it' or 'sorry, I tried but couldn't do it'.